Home Projects Piercy&Company + Material Architecture Lab Designs Brick Shelter Using AR
ProjectsDesignPavilion

Piercy&Company + Material Architecture Lab Designs Brick Shelter Using AR

Share
Code Bothy
Share

Code Bothy

An experimental digital approach to conceive a brick shelter takes more than one hand. It is also known as Code Bothy Brick Shelter fruited at Grymsdyke Farm in Buckinghamshire, hand-built using an AR headset. An innovation of collaborative research by Material Architecture Lab and architects Piercy&Company.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Code-Bothy fuse digital technologies with traditional bricklaying, proposing a transformed vision of the future. In addition, heralding an opportunity albeit obsolescence for this ancient craft. The structure bases on a bothy – a classic shelter of the remote areas open for anyone to use. Simultaneously a traditional bothy incorporates intuitively simple geometries. The design team curated parametric modelling into the laying process to spawn a highly complex configuration.

Piercy&Company + Material Architecture Lab Designs Brick Shelter Using AR

Code Bothy

AR (augmented reality) headset displays the data from the 3D model, each brick with its position and angles, often working against intuition. The project oscillated between the digital vision and manual craft throughout the construction course. The initial hand sketched concepts captured a sense of enclosure within the landscape, coupled with aligning openings for maximum sun infiltration through an expansive overhead oculus.

Piercy&Company + Material Architecture Lab Designs Brick Shelter Using AR

Brick By Brick

The parametrically modelled design sets each brick at a unique angle without repetition. The bricks then rotate along with the model, thus sculpting the complete form. The bottom layer bricks placed 45 degrees to one another gradually shifts the geometrical relationship. As such, the bricks are parallel to one another as you move up.

Code Bothy

The bricklayers using AR headset progressively ‘switched’ each layer of bricks, placing real bricks seeing through the HoloLens virtual display. The mortar spaces display gaps between the bricks in the model since it is one of many characteristics where the bricklayer’s skills are vital. The project concedes the social and economic implications of technological change, yet it proposes a new language amid human-computer interface, contributing to brick architecture an insightful and inspiring future.

Code Bothy

Code Bothy

Architects: Material Architecture Lab, Piercy&Company
Area: 9 m²
Year: 2020
Photographs: Naaro
Manufacturers: Petersen Tegl
Design Team: Guan Lee, Daniel Widrig, Adam Holloway
City: Lacey Green
Country: United Kingdom

Share
Written by
Jayakrishnan Ranjit

Jayakrishnan Ranjit is an architect from India with a passion for writing and storytelling. He focuses on scripting rich imagined stories on architecture, design and human nature. He researches on various facets of design and loves to explore the diverse nature of reality and fiction. He has written and published over more than 100 articles on architecture and design for various magazines around the globe.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Related Articles
Woven Narratives: Inside the Philippine Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka
Pavilion

Woven Narratives: Inside the Philippine Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka

​At Expo 2025 Osaka, the Philippine Pavilion, titled “Woven”, presents a compelling...

Luxembourg Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka Fuses Japanese Rhythm with Luxembourg Identity
Pavilion

Luxembourg Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka Fuses Japanese Rhythm with Luxembourg Identity

At Expo 2025 Osaka, the Luxembourg Pavilion presents a compelling fusion of...

Bahrain Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka: Weaving Maritime Heritage into Sustainable Architecture
Pavilion

Bahrain Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka: Weaving Maritime Heritage into Sustainable Architecture

At Expo 2025 Osaka, the Kingdom of Bahrain presents “Connecting Seas,” a...

MVRDV and Zecc Architecten Transform Heerlen Church into Public Swimming Pool
Projects

MVRDV and Zecc Architecten Transform Heerlen Church into Public Swimming Pool

MVRDV and Zecc Architecten have won the competition to transform the St....

Subscribe to all newsletters

Join our community to receive the latest insights and updates!

© 2025 ParametricArchitecture. All Rights Reserved. By utilizing this website, you are consenting to our User Agreement, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Statement. In compliance with the privacy laws of Turkey and the United States, we recognize and respect your rights. Please be aware that we may receive commissions for products bought through our affiliate links. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of any material from this site is strictly forbidden without prior written permission from ParametricArchitecture.

ad blocker mark

AdBlocker Detected!

Help Us Keep Our Content Free

Your support helps us continue delivering high-quality resources at no cost to you.

We’ve detected that you are using an AdBlocker. We completely understand the need for a clean browsing experience, but ads help us keep this platform running and continue providing you with high-quality content at no cost.

If you enjoy our content, please consider disabling your AdBlocker or adding our site to your whitelist. Your support allows us to create more valuable articles, tutorials, and resources for you.

Thank you for being a part of our community!