An award from Guardian will result in two architectural research studies as a part of the new Guardian–Taubman Research Alliance. The projects will draw on Taubman College’s design and fabrication expertise, enhanced by an interdisciplinary team of researchers from engineering, robotics, and sustainability science, as well as experts in the construction, real estate, and building industries.
“Experimental projects are exciting because they show us a future in which architecture enhances our experience and our lives in powerful new ways,” said Jonathan Massey, dean of Taubman College. “To move from our fabrication lab out into the bigger world, however, where it can yield tangible change for people beyond our campus, architectural innovation needs pathways to deployment and partners from other fields.”
The first study is a collaboration between Taubman College and U-M’s School of Information. “Biometric, Communicative, and Environmental Interfaces: Expanding the Functional Integration of Glass in Promoting Health and Wellness in the Workplace” is led by Robert Adams, associate professor of architecture and director of Taubman College’s M.S. in Design and Health program.
The second, “Design Ecologies of Glass” is a collaboration between Taubman College and U-M’s College of Engineering. Led by Kathy Velikov and Matias del Campo, both associate professors of architecture, the project will explore how changes in thermal resistance for glazing can be applied to new building envelope systems made of glass and new glass-skinned building materials.
Geoffrey Thün, associate dean for research and creative practice, said, “We are reimagining how we engage companies and how we think about new ways of pursuing these kinds of relationships together. We want to co-create trajectories that produce mutual benefit, produce and share new knowledge, provide advanced training for our students, create an opportunity to engage our alumni network — which includes many leading practitioners around the globe — and translate new findings into the world, into the built environment.”
Sheldon Davis, vice president for research and development at Guardian Glass, a subsidiary of Guardian Industries, said, “Guardian prides itself on its innovation. Employees throughout the company, including those beyond our R&D capability, take pride in our innovations. We push to find new ways to create value for society and to reduce the resources used to do so.”
The 18-month research projects are the first in the Guardian–Taubman Research Alliance, which builds on a long history between the company and U-M. More information on the Taubman and Guardian relationship can be found here.