At Autodesk University 2020, Autodesk CEO Andrew Anagnost delivers the usual keynote, but in a prerecorded talk. Image courtesy of Autodesk.

AU 2020 Virtual: AI-related acquisition, AEC digital twin, CFD-based generative design, and more

Company pushes for digitization and data as the key to resilience.

At Autodesk University 2020 Virtual, Autodesk announces Spacemaker acquisition, previews Autodesk Tandem, highlights flow-based generative design in Fusion 360.

Ordinarily, Autodesk users would be gathering in Las Vegas, NV, this week for the annual Autodesk University (AU) conference, with the crowd surging toward the Sand Expo inside the Venetian for the front-row seats during the keynote. But this year is anything but ordinary.

Due to the pandemic and the travel restrictions, AU2020 takes place this week as a virtual event, with a mix of live-streamed sessions and prerecorded keynotes devoted to the three industry segments Autodesk serves: AEC (Architecture, Engineering, and Construction); Product Design & Manufacturing; and Media & Entertainment. 

Appearing in a video keynote recorded at Autodesk's Pier 9 tech center in San Francisco, CA, Autodesk CEO Andrew Anagnost says, “What we all consider normal has changed. Wherever you are, each and everyone of you have seen how important resilience is, how fragile our processes and supply chains are ... Early in the pandemic, especially with none of us going anywhere, product demand took a hit, from phones to cars ... Now production is ramping up as demand grows again. But production will be forever more distributed.”

The key to survival and resilience, Anagnost suggests, is data and digitization.

Autodesk Tandem is the AEC-centric digital twin solution from Autodesk. Image courtesy of Autodesk.

AI Acquisition and AEC Digital Twin

During the keynote, Autodesk announced the acquisition of Spacemaker, an AI-powered generative design software for urban design.

The Norway-based Spacemaker “uses cloud-based, artificial intelligence (AI), and generative design to help architects, urban designers, and real estate developers make more informed early-stage design decisions faster and enables improved opportunities for sustainability from the start,” according to the announcement.

In the era of social distancing, where many existing spaces need to be reconfigured and repurposed to prevent the spread of Coronavirus and overcrowding, Spacemaker is a timely and smart acquisition. 

The conversion of the London ExCeL conference center into the NHS Nightingale modular hospital is one such example. In the project, Autodesk customer BDP employed Autodesk's generative design technology and Autodesk BIM (Building Information Modeling) software Revit 

“Revit’s ability to have a design change propagate across the system was extremely helpful,” said James Hepburn, BDP's Principal Engineer in the keynote. “We were designing spaces where sick people would be cared for, so we had to make sure every part of the space was accounted for.”

During the keynote, the company also announced Autodesk Tandem, an AEC digital twin software. According to the announcement, “Autodesk Tandem connects the digital world with the real world, creating an up-to-date reflection of a model’s physical self. This provides unique operational insight into a facility, building, bridge, or any structure, as well as its components, including, for example, the performance of heating and cooling systems, escalators, and electrical systems.”

In the post-keynote Q&A with the press, Anagnost was asked about plans for a similar digital twin solution for manufacturing. He offered no details but suggested it's part of the company's vision.

Fusion with CFD-Based Generative Design

Up to now, generative design solutions allow users to investigate the best (or optimal) topology based on stress loads and structural deformation, but Anagnost revealed CFD (Computational Fluid Flow) studies may soon become the basis for generative design.

“Until today generative design was focused on structure forces. Now you can explore fluid forces,” he says in the keynote. 

Later in the Product Design & Manufacturing keynote, Stephen Hooper, VP and GM of Autodesk Fusion, also points out, “This year we added a fluid solver, enabling generative designs to include pumps and valves.” 

To bolster the software's tools for electronics design and manufacturing, Autodesk has also incorporated its Moldflow solver, SPICE analysis, automatic circuit routing, and instant connections to on-demand manufacturer Xometry into Fusion 360.

Among the speakers for the keynote is Charles Cambianica, Advanced Design Project Lead for the sporting goods manufacturer Decathlon. In designing the frame of its iconic bike, Cambianica says he and his team consider “What the performance bike of the future world would look like, from how they might unbox the bike to how they might ride it.”

Aside from design aesthetics, the company is also devoted to minimizing its impact on the environment. “The dirty secret about carbon fiber is, it’s wasteful to use and difficult to recycle,” he remarks of the material many might consider ideal for lightweighting. “We think we can cut the carbon footprint by printing [the bike frame] in metal instead.”

Decathlon designers use Autodesk Fusion 360's generative design to explore ideas for “the frame and fork, initially taking into consideration the significant dynamic forces the fork would be subjected to under braking and at speed, as well as aerodynamics, and many other factors,” according to Autodesk's Decathlon case study published online.

Sporting goods manufacturer Decathlon uses Autodesk Fusion 360's generative design to design lightweight bike frames that can be 3D-printed in metal. Image courtesy of Autodesk.
The fluid solver added to Autodesk Fusion 360 allows you to conduct CFD-based generative design, says the company during AU 2020. Image courtesy of Autodesk.

A Four-Legged Vehicle

Another speaker, John Suh, VP, Hyundai Motor Company, shows a car that can stand up and walk. In conceiving a futuristic offroad vehicle that can operate on various terrains, he and his engineers gave birth to Elevate, which can transform itself from a four-wheeled vehicle to a four-legged walking transporter. 

“It can overcome obstacles, cross gaps, and go where even offroad vehicles will have a difficult time going,” he says. It can be deployed in resource delivery, search-and-rescue missions, and even lunar exploration, he points out.

The project involves the use of lattice structures, additive manufacturing, and multidisciplinary collaboration, facilitated in Autodesk Fusion 360.

“Generative design allowed us to tackle a lot of complex problems that would have taken somebody a long time to solve manually,” he recalls. “I call it a mind multiplier.” 

Elevate is a marriage of robotics and automotive technologies. It's currently a scale model and a concept, not yet a product. 

Hyundai Motor Company developed a concept vehicle that can walk, offering new possibilities for search and rescue operations. Image courtesy of Hyundai.

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Kenneth Wong

Kenneth Wong is Digital Engineering’s resident blogger and senior editor. Email him at [email protected] or share your thoughts on this article at digitaleng.news/facebook.

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