Some cool fast prototyping price images:
Denver – CBD: CCC – I See What You Imply
Image by wallyg
I See What You Imply, supersized sculpture of a blue bear by Lawrence Argent, was installed along the 14th Street Side of the Colorado Convention Center as portion of Denver’s % for Art Program on June 23, 2005. Originally commissioned in 2002, the 40-foot higher, 10,000 pound sculpture, was constructed of molded polymer concrete and steel at a expense of 4,400.
The bear evolved from a tiny plastic children’s toy, scanned with a with a three-dimensional laser-scanning device from Cyberware Inc. The Cyberware device converted the shape into a CAD file, which Argent repositioned using an animation plan from Newtek, which transformed the 3-D hape into hundreds of thousands of tiny triangles, using about 400,000 reference points, and generating movement by altering the triangles’ shapes. Argent lowered the file down to four,000 or so triangles, which he then sent to a a design and style firm, which employed a fused deposition modeling (FDM) speedy-prototyping machine manufactured to generate a small three-D scale-model plastic maquette. Argent then hired architectural composite fabricator, Kreysler and Assoc., to fabricate the structure produced up of thousands of faceted triangles of distinct sizes. The components had been created in California and transported to Denver on four trucks. For the duration of installation it suffered an abrasion on its left haunch even though being hoisted off its back by a crane. The scratch was painted over.
The Colorado Convention Center (CCC), positioned amongst 14th Street and Speer Boulevard, and among Champa Street and Welton Street, was opened in 1990. In 2005, an expansion doubled the size of the facility and the center now consists of 584,000 square feet of exhibit space, one hundred,000 square feet of meeting rooms, and 85,000 square feet of ballroom space. Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects, was the architect of both the original design and style as effectively as the expansion.