TY - CHAP
T1 - Integration of a parallel cable-driven robot on an existing building façade
AU - Izard, Jean Baptiste
AU - Gouttefarde, Marc
AU - Baradat, Cedric
AU - Culla, David
AU - Sallé, Damien
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2013, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - In order to use a cable-driven parallel robot to inspect an existing surface, a straightforward solution consists in fixing the robot components on this surface. In most cases, however, there are conditions that limit these fixations, for example structural reasons since the frame of the surface has probably not been specifically calculated to withstand the forces generated by the parallel cable-driven robot. In the particular case of inspection of the façade of a building, civil engineering specifications apply, which may drastically reduce the engineering possibilities from the point of view of the parallel cable-driven robot designers. This paper introduces a detailed example of implementation of a parallel cable-driven robot on the Media-TIC building located in Barcelona in Spain. In this highly technological building, the main façade parallel cable-driven robot in intended to work as a sensor for monitoring the environment, but also as an interface between the building and its occupiers. The various constraints—due to normative, structural and aesthetic reasons—that were tackled are described in the paper, along with the elected detailed design of the robot that complies with these constraints.
AB - In order to use a cable-driven parallel robot to inspect an existing surface, a straightforward solution consists in fixing the robot components on this surface. In most cases, however, there are conditions that limit these fixations, for example structural reasons since the frame of the surface has probably not been specifically calculated to withstand the forces generated by the parallel cable-driven robot. In the particular case of inspection of the façade of a building, civil engineering specifications apply, which may drastically reduce the engineering possibilities from the point of view of the parallel cable-driven robot designers. This paper introduces a detailed example of implementation of a parallel cable-driven robot on the Media-TIC building located in Barcelona in Spain. In this highly technological building, the main façade parallel cable-driven robot in intended to work as a sensor for monitoring the environment, but also as an interface between the building and its occupiers. The various constraints—due to normative, structural and aesthetic reasons—that were tackled are described in the paper, along with the elected detailed design of the robot that complies with these constraints.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84885592368&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-642-31988-4_10
DO - 10.1007/978-3-642-31988-4_10
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:84885592368
T3 - Mechanisms and Machine Science
SP - 149
EP - 164
BT - Mechanisms and Machine Science
PB - Springer Netherlands
ER -