top of page
PEOPLE
PHILOSOPHY

DOSU Studio Architecture brings active systems to sustainable design far beyond the simple "greening" of a building. With the belief that buildings can be more sensitive to the changing environment like human skin, DOSU seeks ways to make the building skin dynamic and responsive. Through grant-funded research, DOSU is developing smart materials, such as thermobimetals, to self-ventilate, sun-shade, self-structure and self-assembly in response to changes in temperatures--all with zero-energy and no controls.

info@dosu-arch.com

Doris 2.jpg
Doris 1.jpg

Doris Sung
Principal

IMG_3418.JPG
IMG_3419.JPG

Ryan Chang
2022-2025 Research Associate

Ali Banitaba A.jpg
Ali Banitaba B.jpg

Ali Banitaba
2025 Intern

Dongze Li B.jpg
Dongze Li A.jpg

Dongze Li
2025 Intern

Esther Ho
2018 to 2021 Research Associate
IMG_5179.JPG
IMG_5132.JPG

Indie Bloom
2023-2024 Intern

Xiaotong Ni
2019 Intern
Eric Yu b.jpeg
Eric Yu a.jpeg

Eric Yu
2024 Intern

IMG_3412.JPG
IMG_3413.JPG

Daniel Yoo
2022 Intern

Jiansong Yuan
2019 Intern
IMG_5149.JPG
IMG_5132.JPG

Akshay Atapattu
2024 Intern

IMG_3428_edited.jpg
IMG_3429_edited.jpg

Vivan Bose
2022 Intern

Adelfrid Ramirez
2016-2019 Head Researcher
IMG_5120.JPG
IMG_5121.JPG

Justin Zhu
2024 Intern

IMG_7181.heic
IMG_7180.heic

Erin Light
2021 Intern

Lisa Phillips
2018 Research Associate
Unknown-2.jpeg
Unknown-3.jpeg

Bwana
Pain in the butt

Unknown.jpeg
Unknown-1.jpeg

Kubo
Troublemaker

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

​

 

 

 

We are working on representing all our fabulous past employees. Stay tuned!

Subrina Lu A.jpg
Subrina Lu B.jpg

Subrina Lu
2025 Intern

Noah Seador 2a.jpg

Noah Seador
2020-2021 Intern

Noah Seador 1a small.jpg
Noah Seador 2a.jpg

Noah Seador
2021-2024 Research Associate

Dylan Wood
2011-present Computation Specialist
Homie Chen
2018 Intern

RESEARCH GOALS


INTRODUCTION

Concern for the environment, climate change, global warming, carbon footprint, and the Heat-Island Effect has risen to the forefront of politics in recent years. The demand for materials and processes to become more sustainable, green, and zero-energy has escalated. As transportation and industry have made progress in lowering emissions, building energy usage continued to use the bulk of overall energy in the United States. For many years architecture’s main culprit has been the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems (HVAC). I have dedicated the last half-decade of my research (both in my creative practice and within the efforts of my funded academic research) to advancing the “hard tech” side of building design. It is my strongest belief that, if we are to develop truly sustainable architecture, we don’t necessarily need more materials. We need smarter ones.

SMART MATERIALS

This interest led to my inquiries into the use of smart materials, i.e. materials that require no added energy and no computer controls to operate. I have been focusing my work on the testing of thermobimetal, a smart material that curls when heated. Developing a diverse range of projects through various types of geometric manipulation and computationally aided fabrication, I have established myself as a leading scholar in this area of study. It is through the intensive exploration of thermobimetal that I have been able not only to expand the potential use of this product, but more importantly, to expand the conceptual foundation of materials research in my field by including the study of self-initiating dynamic operations.

RESPONSIVE FACADES

Within the growing field of kinetic adaptive facades—a new segment of the building industry committed to the incorporation of moving parts on buildings for performative qualities—my work falls into a new category of responsive systems that can be termed active-passive. I have developed various innovative architectural applications using thermobimetal (a lamination of two alloys of nickel, manganese and iron with different thermal expansion coefficients), some of which are patented and being commercialized for market use. A core element of my research is based on the technical performance of the product and its ability to solve larger problems such as self-shading, self-ventilating, or self-assembling. However, I go beyond the application level to explore how geometric morphologies influence the behavior of smart materials for potential architectural applications.

IMPORTANCE OF GEOMETRY

In the development of responsive materials for building application, geometry plays a significant role on two levels: (1) in full range of dynamic motion, and (2) in the behavior of smart materials. These issues are specific to designing with shape-changing materials and are additional to the standard problems of digital fabrication. To consider the multitude of positions of the curl of each cut-out, the use of computational tools is critical to augment the limitations of the human intellect.  The operation of a single piece in a tessellated matrix, relative to the source of heat and location of neighboring pieces, has major impact on the performance of the entire system.

​

--Doris Sung, 2016

 

GET IN TOUCH:

T: +1.310.722.4458

E: info@dosu-arch.com

A: Los Angeles, California

FOLLOW US:

  • White Instagram Icon
  • White Twitter Icon
  • White Facebook Icon
  • White LinkedIn Icon

© 2018 by DOSU Studio Architects

bottom of page