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New collaboration to explore future of AI within architectural practice

Monash Architecture has announced a new partnership with Jackson Clements Burrows (JCB) Architects to investigate the future of AI in the architectural profession. According to a release from Monash University, the research project draws on a collaborative approach between industry and academia to better understand the opportunities and challenges around integrating AI in practice.

Led by associate professor Duncan Maxwell, director of the Future Building Initiative, and Dr Camilo Cruz, the project will involve a PhD researcher working with the JCB team to identify the skills required to introduce emerging AI technologies. The researcher will observe JCB’s current workflows across the entire lifespan of the firm’s building projects, and will then prototype and test digital tools within the practice environment.

According to dean of Monash Art, Design and Architecture professor Mel Dodd, “Design-led applied research, where academia collaborates with industry, offers immense value in exploring issues that are directly relevant to architectural practice.” Maxwell agreed that practicing architects should have an active role in guiding AI’s development in the industry.

“It is crucial that these emerging technologies improve, rather than compromise, architecture’s human-centered approach,” Maxwell said. “AI has an important role in Australian architectural practice and the broader construction sector, particularly in addressing unprecedented challenges to decarbonise while responding to the housing crisis in a resource-constrained world.”

Cruz said the Future Building Initiative is currently conducting three projects that explore AI methods for different applications, including design coordination using traditional optimisation methods, spatial planning using novel machine learning techniques and an architectural design automation tool that uses a combination of parametric and AI methods.

In Cruz’s view, the preliminary findings show that AI has the potential to transform the architectural profession by streamlining design processes, making them more efficient, and enabling deeper analysis of spatial, environmental and material factors.

“However, the research also highlights that without a strong understanding of architectural principles in developing AI tools, there is a risk of oversimplifying complex design challenges,” Cruz said. “This could lead to overlooking the profession’s human-centred needs, and neglecting critical social, cultural and ethical dimensions.”

Director of JCB Jon Clements observed that there is a huge shift in AI being introduced in the sector. “There is obviously great potential in the technology, however, we are also keen to understand the role of design in the future and the way in which AI might support or potentially compromise creative processes.”

“We are hoping to establish a better understanding of the potential advantages for architecture through AI technologies and how we can support practices to improve their workflows and efficiency through the use of AI,” Clements said.

The project is set to begin in May 2025.


Source: Architecture - architectureau

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