Architectural forms as complex as snowflakes? Here’s what they look like up close
Architect Michael Hansmeyer is not one for the T-square. As he explains in a fascinating talk from TEDGlobal, this “computational” designer took inspiration from nature -- specifically from morphogenesis, aka the splitting of cells -- and created algorithms that help him design highly unusual shapes. Instead of the same old boring Doric, Ionic and Corinthian columns that have been around since ancient Greece, Hansmeyer’s columns contain fascinating folds, curves and cuts -- more akin to the snowflakes you made in elementary school than to traditional architectural forms.





