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Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL

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Sarotis

Sarotis

In 2016, a range of commercially available mobile devices arrived in the market carrying integrated 3D Cameras capable of depth perception and object recognition. If 3D vision technologies turn out to be as successful as their 2D predecessors, we should expect 70% of the world’s population capable of scanning, storing and analysing their environments. Our project began with the question, how could this technology change the way we see and interact with the world around us?
The Sarotis Project explores answers to this question beyond the era of the mobile phone, towards more intimate wearable technology futures. Where advanced vision systems and other sensor technologies are connected directly to body through softer interfaces.

Sarotis Experimental Prosthesis

Sarotis Experimental Prosthesis

Here we present a two phased study. a series of technical experiments and a speculative film. First an experimental prosthesis was designed to study whether a person’s awareness of space could be amplified using live 3D scanning technologies controlling the inflation and deflation of our soft robotic wearable. Results were successful and suggested possible applications for people with visual impairments. It also revealed the possibility of constructing virtual spaces within physical space that could be sensed through it.

Still 01 from Sarotis Speculative Short Film

Still 01 from Sarotis Speculative Short Film

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Still 02 from Sarotis Speculative Short Film

To express the Sarotis vision of future soft wearable technologies, a speculative film provokes us to consider how fluidic hydrogel interfaces may dissolve the distinction between our own physiology and that of the softening machines that will extend our bodies.

Sarotis Making Of

 

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