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'''Computerized Approach to Residential Land Analysis''', known as '''CARLA''',
==Overview==
[[File:CARLA brochure 01.tif|thumb|right|CARLA Brochure]]
[[File:CARLA brochure 02.tif|thumb|right|CARLA Brochure]]
In the 1970s, there were not many architectural and engineering firms that recognized the computer’s potential as a tool for financial evaluation. [[Reynolds,
==Software Development==
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[[File:060 CARLA plotter.jpg|thumb|right|CARLA Plotter]]
[[File:062 CARLA Drainage.jpg|thumb|right|CARLA Drainage Plot]]
CARLA was a customized software program conceived by [[Beverly Willis]] and written in house by a [[Harvard Graduate School of Design]] student, Jochen Eigen, designed to analyze prospective land parcels for their development potential as large-scale multi-unit complexes. Jochen Eigen wrote the programming scripts that directed CARLA as the managing software to interface a variety of planning unit concepts with a mapping program that could then process a variety of planning proposals against the site’s fixed fields of relevant data. The data was extracted from traditional analog topographical maps soil analysis, and marketing information.
Once the physical characteristics were entered into CARLA, the computer could generate contour perspectives of the site from any point plotted along an x, y, x axis and help identify areas of common building suitability, natural drainage patterns slope analysis and areas requiring cut and fill. Using the CARLA grid as a structural template, multiple planning unit concepts were introduced and profiled against the site’s fixed characteristics and CARLA would then determine what plan, how many building units and of what variety could be successfully integrated into designated areas within the site. These tests were repeated until a match that produced environmentally and economically sound results was identified.
The computer graphic information reports were represented either in the form of topographical site perspectives, contour maps or as a sequence of numeric values organized within a template matrix that allowed the architect to identify the optimal relationships and planning concept. This work then became the basis for presentation materials that were used to introduce the client/developer to the proposed designs.
==Selected Projects==
===IRS Computer Center Building (unbuilt)===
In 1976, Willis & Associates was awarded a federal building commission from the General Services Administration (GSA) in [[Washington, D.C.]], representing the [[Internal Revenue Service]] (IRS), and administered by the GSA office in [[Kansas City]], [[Missouri]].
===Aliamanu Valley Community for Military Family Housing (1978)===
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{{Uncategorized|date=October 2015}}
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