Robot Made 2024: Digital fabrication brings Engineering and Architecture students together

This story was originally published by the Department of Civil & Mineral Engineering

Collaborative workshop brings Engineering and Architecture students together for computational design and digital fabrication of timber systems

Robot Made is an innovative hands-on project combining research and active learning to involve both Engineering and Architecture students, at undergraduate and graduate levels, in the process of computational design and digital fabrication. This unique initiative’s 2024 iteration focused on exploring techniques for designing, simulating, and digitally fabricating timber systems.

The course kicked off with classroom sessions – workshops, where participants delved into advanced wood design, robotic kinematics and systems, exploring digital workflows and engineering tools like parametric robot control (PRC) and COMPAS_FEA. The course then shifted into high gear as students moved to their computers, crafting custom designs through scripting and hands-on modelling.

The real excitement unfolded when digital met physical — students stepped into the Kuka robotic cell, driving industrial robots to fabricate their creations. In the final days, the digitally crafted design came to life in a thrilling build, as the class collaboratively assembled a full-scale structure, experiencing the transformative power of digital fabrication and automation.

The Design Build course was designed by Nicholas Steven Hoban from John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design at the University of Toronto; Professor AnnaLisa Meyboom from School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture at the University of British Columbia; and Professor Aryan Rezaei Rad from the Department of Civil & Mineral Engineering in the Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering at the University of Toronto and associate professor at the University of Toronto Robotics Institute.