• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: website

The Digital Junkyard will transform your unwanted vector files into new real-world objects

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Jul 27, 2015

Screenshot via djunkyard.com

No, this isn't some snarky Craigslist ad. The Digital Junkyard is a website with a mission to transform as much of your unwanted vector files into a new physical object or creative idea of sorts, via digital fabrication tools, in the real world. Recently launched by architecturally trained designer and artist Car Martin, the Digital Junkyard can be a helpful tool for architects and designers eager to clear up their digital workspaces, and at the very least pique one's curiosity to see how their original idea gets recycled.

Read on for more.

In addition to dumping their files, users can "salvage" and download donated files, and can eventually check out the resulting "artifacts" — although that section of the site is yet to be filled.

The Digital Junkyard accepts a maximum of 250 MB and is mainly looking for vector files. More specifically:

  • Adobe (.ai .eps .pdf)
  • Autodesk (.dwg .rvt)
  • Mcneel/Rhino (.3dm .gh.ghx)
  • Sketchup (.skp)
  • GIS (.mxd & shapefile folders)
  • Other (.svg .dxf)
Screenshot via djunkyard.com

Martin reveals an introspective side to the Junkyard that is greatly relevant at this point in our tightening relationship with information technology. In a way, it also celebrates the creative process itself.

In a reflective blog post about "thought ecology", Martin writes that she got inspiration for the website from Susan Sontag’s collection of essays, "On Photography", which explores the relationships between physical things and information production/reproduction.

Martin writes:  "We have reached an age with information technology where the split between the virtual and the real has become blurred, as we witness potentially the third great technological revolution, the lines between physical production and idea generation have never been so thin...However, as we make things, we also make mistakes, we throw things away before they are produced, we make changes and then we scrap parts of ideas. It is possible that there are tiny fragments, physical ideas that we put intellectual energy into creating, that could be saved and clustered into something useful, or something brilliant, or beautiful."

Check out the website here, and start dumpin' away.

Related

website ● thought ecology ● technology ● recycle ● information technology ● information age ● ideas ● digital fabrication ● car martin

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

The Digital Junkyard will transform your unwanted vector files into new real-world objects

Cooper-Hewitt Launches New Online Guide to Design Week NYC

U.S. Pavilion at 13th Venice Architecture Biennale Launches Website and Open Call for Projects

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

The Digital Junkyard will transform your unwanted vector files into new real-world objects

By Bustler Editors|

Monday, Jul 27, 2015

Share

Screenshot via djunkyard.com

Related

website ● thought ecology ● technology ● recycle ● information technology ● information age ● ideas ● digital fabrication ● car martin

No, this isn't some snarky Craigslist ad. The Digital Junkyard is a website with a mission to transform as much of your unwanted vector files into a new physical object or creative idea of sorts, via digital fabrication tools, in the real world. Recently launched by architecturally trained designer and artist Car Martin, the Digital Junkyard can be a helpful tool for architects and designers eager to clear up their digital workspaces, and at the very least pique one's curiosity to see how their original idea gets recycled.

Read on for more.

In addition to dumping their files, users can "salvage" and download donated files, and can eventually check out the resulting "artifacts" — although that section of the site is yet to be filled.

The Digital Junkyard accepts a maximum of 250 MB and is mainly looking for vector files. More specifically:

  • Adobe (.ai .eps .pdf)
  • Autodesk (.dwg .rvt)
  • Mcneel/Rhino (.3dm .gh.ghx)
  • Sketchup (.skp)
  • GIS (.mxd & shapefile folders)
  • Other (.svg .dxf)
Screenshot via djunkyard.com

Martin reveals an introspective side to the Junkyard that is greatly relevant at this point in our tightening relationship with information technology. In a way, it also celebrates the creative process itself.

In a reflective blog post about "thought ecology", Martin writes that she got inspiration for the website from Susan Sontag’s collection of essays, "On Photography", which explores the relationships between physical things and information production/reproduction.

Martin writes:  "We have reached an age with information technology where the split between the virtual and the real has become blurred, as we witness potentially the third great technological revolution, the lines between physical production and idea generation have never been so thin...However, as we make things, we also make mistakes, we throw things away before they are produced, we make changes and then we scrap parts of ideas. It is possible that there are tiny fragments, physical ideas that we put intellectual energy into creating, that could be saved and clustered into something useful, or something brilliant, or beautiful."

Check out the website here, and start dumpin' away.

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Marketing + Communications Specialist

Trahan Architects

Marketing + Communications Specialist

New York, NY, US

Architectural/Structural Drafter

New Beginnings Engineering

Architectural/Structural Drafter

Irvine, CA, US

Senior Designer / Architect

NardiHaus

Senior Designer / Architect

Pasadena, CA, US

Architectural Designer / Architect (3-5 Years Experience)

Andrew Magnes Architecture

Architectural Designer / Architect (3-5 Years Experience)

Brooklyn, NY, US

Healthcare Project Manager

NK Architects

Healthcare Project Manager

New York, NY, US

Job Captain

Studio AR&D Architects

Job Captain

Los Angeles, CA, US

Senior Landscape Designer

Surfacedesign, Inc.

Senior Landscape Designer

San Francisco, CA, US

Intermediate Architect - Retail (AutoCAD-based)

O'Neil Langan Architects

Intermediate Architect - Retail (AutoCAD-based)

New York, NY, US

Junior Designer/Architect

O'Neill Rose Architects

Junior Designer/Architect

Brooklyn, NY, US

Architectural Designer II

mdg | m-design group

Architectural Designer II

New York, NY, US

Next page » Loading