Reduction of waste produced during construction.
‘One informs the other,’ says Trotman.‘There are lots of benefits...while my team work on the menu design, signage and website, etc., Anna’s team is concepting the interior.’.
Their GWS tenure began in 2012 when they simply rented two single desks in a shared space.Now, having grown in size, they occupy two adjoining studios.Anna tells me, ‘We love being on the ground floor.
You see other people, their shopfronts.We like feeling part of the action.
It’s a great space to work in.’ Whilst not having an external canalside view like the studios on the opposite side of the building, the central atrium floods the tables in the communal area outside their space with lots of natural light.
‘In the summer, it’s so sunshiney, some people wear shades,’ she says.The complexity involved in construction processes.
The requirement of specialist robotic programming skills.Technical and financial risks that limit the possible uses of robotic arm technology.
To address these issues and to connect robotic technology to Bryden Wood’s ‘Platform Approach’ to Design for Manufacture and Assembly (P-DfMA), our Creative Technologies team has developed F.R.A.C.– a Framework for Robotics and Automated Construction.. F.R.A.C.