Architecture students apply design skills to keep safe distance

Architecture students recently gathered behind Hayes Hall to test out their wearable spatial distancing devices. The exercise was part of an introductory graduate architecture course co-taught by Joyce Hwang and Surabhi Dhopeshwarkar. Photos by Douglas Levere

by Ioanna Dinoulis

Published October 12, 2020

A group of graduate architecture students recently gathered on UB's South Campus in graceful dance - all at a safe distance - as they tested out their creations in wearable spatial distancing devices.

From a shoulder-slung hula hoop to a protruding beak hat, the distancing devices served as an introduction to a core concept in architecture: the movement of the human body through space.

Of course, the study of "proxemics", which considers personal space in relationship to the built environment and cultural norms, takes on a whole new meaning in the world of COVID-19.

Joyce Hwang, UB associate professor and associate chair of architecture, designed the assignment for a first-year graduate architecture course that develops students' skills in architectural representation through visualization and fabrication. 

“Understanding human scale, proximities, and spatial relationships are critical to architectural exploration," says Hwang, who is co-teaching with adjunct instructor Surabhi Dhopeshwarkar. "The spatial-distancing devices assignment was a way to encourage first-year graduate students to confront these conditions in a palpable way. In the context of the current pandemic, the idea of physical presence and proxemics has become especially poignant."

Challenged to create comfortable, wearable devices that help users maintain six feet of separation, students experimented with materials and design on and around the human body. Design concepts shaped by current and historical precedents in wearable architecture evolved from graphic models to fabricated assemblies through a series of in-class critiques. 

"The Beak," by Jackson Gaylord, was inspired by a contraption donned by doctors in 17th century England to keep them safe from the Black Plague. Photo by Douglas Levere.

"The Beak," by Jackson Gaylord, was inspired by a contraption donned by doctors in 17th century England to keep them safe from the Black Plague. Photo by Douglas Levere

Their ideas manifested in a multitude of methods and materials that keep a safe distance. Consider "The Beak," by Jackson Gaylord. Constructed out of trace paper and wood, the head gear was inspired by beaked masks doctors wore in 17th century England to protect themselves from the Black Plague.

Victoria Gutierrez's Umbrella Coat fits neatly over the shoulders and opens at the hips into a umbrella-like skirt. Flexible tent poles were inserted into eight triangular sections around the coat to create a six foot diameter seam. 

The Socially Distant Tutu, by author Ioanna Dinoulis, weaves hundreds of multicolored threads through a hoop of PVC pipe to create a skirt that hangs from the shoulders in a kaledioscope of color. 

Donning their wearable architecture, students tested their devices in a series of random, patterned movements orchestrated in the quad behind Hayes Hall.

Victoria Gutierrez's Umbrella Coat fits neatly over the shoulders and opens at the hips into a umbrella-like skirt. Flexible tent poles were inserted into eight triangular sections around the coat to create a six foot diameter seam.

Victoria Gutierrez's Umbrella Coat fits neatly over the shoulders and opens at the hips into a umbrella-like skirt. Flexible tent poles were inserted into eight triangular sections around the coat to create a six foot diameter seam. Image provided by Victoria Gutierrez

The Socially Distant Tutu, by author Ioanna Dinoulis, weaves hundreds of multicolored threads through a hoop of PVC pipe to create a skirt that hangs from the shoulders in a kaleidoscope of color.

The Socially Distant Tutu, by author Ioanna Dinoulis, weaves hundreds of multicolored threads through a hoop of PVC pipe to create a skirt that hangs from the shoulders in a kaleidoscope of color. Photo by Douglas Levere