4.7 Article

Generalized Deployable Elastic Geodesic Grids

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS
Volume 40, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3478513.3480516

Keywords

geometric modeling; architectural geometry; fabrication; elastic gridshells; active bending; deployable structures

Funding

  1. Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWTF) [ICT15-082]

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The method proposed in this study approximates a given 3D surface by computing an elastic grid based on concepts from differential geometry, without the need for physical simulations. It allows for non-convex surface boundaries, creating complex and visually appealing shapes while ensuring the 2D grid remains perfectly planar.
Given a designer created free-form surface in 3d space, our method computes a grid composed of elastic elements which are completely planar and straight. Only by fixing the ends of the planar elements to appropriate locations, the 2d grid bends and approximates the given 3d surface. Our method is based purely on the notions from differential geometry of curves and surfaces and avoids any physical simulations. In particular, we introduce a well-defined elastic grid energy functional that allows identifying networks of curves that minimize the bending energy and at the same time nestle to the provided input surface well. Further, we generalize the concept of such grids to cases where the surface boundary does not need to be convex, which allows for the creation of sophisticated and visually pleasing shapes. The algorithm finally ensures that the 2d grid is perfectly planar, making the resulting gridshells inexpensive, easy to fabricate, transport, assemble, and finally also to deploy. Additionally, since the whole structure is pre-strained, it also comes with load-bearing capabilities. We evaluate our method using physical simulation and we also provide a full fabrication pipeline for desktop-size models and present multiple examples of surfaces with elliptic and hyperbolic curvature regions. Our method is meant as a tool for quick prototyping for designers, architects, and engineers since it is very fast and results can be obtained in a matter of seconds.

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