Jusik max lee architectural portfolio

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W W W. L J S 8 8 0 3 . C O M

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“PORTFOLIO” 2 0 1 6 architectural proejcts by Lee Jusik .B Arch 2007-2013 / M Arch 2014-2015.


TABLE OF CONTENTS

.PORTFOLIO. architectural projects by Jusik Lee 02


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Information name date of birth nationality email i phone homepage facebook/pinterest/issuu

Lee Jusik 14 march 1988 Republic of Korea_South Korea ljs8769@gmail.com +82 01 2566 8769 www.ljs8803.com ljs8803@naver.com

Education 2014-2015 2012 autumn semester 2012 summer 2012 spring semester 2007, 2010 - 2013

master’s course / Kyungpook National University_KNU, School of architecture, professor Choo, Seung-Yeon, DADL (Digital Architecture Design Lab), South Korea exchange student ARFU 11/ Vilnius Gediminas Technical University_VGTU, Faculty of architecture, Lithuania Seoul National University summer school, South Korea exchange student architectural design course/ Seoul National University_SNU, School of architecture, South Korea bachelor’s degree / Kyungpook National University_KNU, School of architecture, South Korea

Thesis 2015 2015 2014 2014

An Analysis of Facade Elements for Energy BIM-based Facade Design / Architectural Institute of Korea / Lee Jusik, Lee Kweon Hyung, Choo Seung Yeon Status on Green BIM Data Utilization of National BIM Architectural Competitions in Korea / Society of CADCAM Engineers / Lee Jusik, Choo Seung Yeon, Lee Kweon Hyung, Ryu Jung Rim, Lee Yun Jeong A Study on Quality Index of BIM Model Guideline for Architectural Design Quality Check of licensing / Architectural Institute of Korea / Lee Kweon Hyung, Lee Jusik, Kim In Han, Choo Seung Yeon Analysis on the relation of ‘cooling and heating loads’ and ‘window to wall ratio’ by slenderness in the Energy BIM Simulation / Architectural Institute of Korea / Lee Kweon Hyung, Lee Jusik, Kim In Han, Choo Seung Yeon

Professional Experience 2013 2013 2013

Design camp moonpark dmppartners, Seoul, South Korea, (1 month internship) Resolved drawings for Naver Datacenter project, Develope 3D model Design a pamplet of DMP annual report

Languages Korean (native) English

IT Skills AutoCAD Revit Architecture Rhinoceros Sketch Up Adobe Photoshop Adobe Illustration Microsoft office Energy Plus

05


architectural projects by Jusik Lee

06


ABOUT CONCRETE WORLD

07


01. S P I R A L S Tutor : Lee, Jeong-Ho / School of Architecture KNU

Draw a concept from artist and his or her philosophy to build a museum was the main purpose of this class. I designed a museum of Hundert Wasser who lived in Vienna Austiria. Spiral is the core philosophy of his life and he believed eternal recurrence of life, death and nature. This project was exhibited at the Kyungpook National University School of Architecture in October 2010.

08


09


Envelope

Interior Walls

Structure

Circulation

Base

HundertWasser is an Artist and an Architect and Social activist. For him the NATURE is a layer which is changing everytime and has a number of identities and has a lot of value and latency. And as a living existences inside of NATURE, every HUMEN have their own identities that make them differnt from each other. So the ARCHITECTURE which made by humanbieng is the another layer same as the nature and must be seen by means of the changeable thing. As a result the facade of the architecture must be changeble every time and Wasser tried to show this in his architecture. He placed some public designed artifacts on his architecture and this attempt become an epicenter of the regions cultural development.


11


1

2

Publicity with the REAR of the road

3

Arouse the NATURE

OMNI directional elevation

2 1

3

4

12

Open views from the CAMPUS


대지 분석

4 Open views from the CAMPUS

13


N

original passway

park

square

ramp passway

coat room lobby

ticket

ramp exhibition

20m width road

14


15


N

Cafe

Office Storage

Director’s Office

Staff Lounge

Ramp Exhibition Hundert Wasser Room

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Patio

Void

Ramp Exhibition Permanent Exhibition

Special Exhibition

Roof Terrace

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Permanent Exhibition

Special Exhibition

Ramp Exhibition

Hundert Wasser room

Ramp Exhibition

Cross Section 1:200

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Permanent Exhibition

Special Exhibition

Hundert Wasser room

Lobby

Cafe

Staff Lounge

Longitudinal Section 1:200

19


02. COMMUNAL STEPS Tutor : Yoon, Cheol-Jae / School of Architecture KNU

The meaning of living with community is the subject of this project. I focused on to make publicity and privacy on our own living culture, and the public places as living space simultaneously private places are the main purpose of this project. This project was exhibited at the Kyungpook National University School of Architecture in May 2011.

20


21


MASS PRODUCTION

When is the starting point of Korean modernization? Korea has opened its doors in the early 20th century forced by foreign influences. Japanese imperilalism colonized Korea and the western style buildings were constructed. After the independence from Japan, the tragedic war which broke out between South Korea and North Korea. Through the war time, almost of national land has been ruins. After war in 1970s, the main issue for living was the efficient supplying of houses. People not only to be accustomed with the huge machines and industrial environment, which called ‘modern’ style, but also shifted to new generation. These were the trigger for the mass production and south Korean politicians had no chice but to built standardized residential units such as apartment complexs. Mass production changed our landscape and city and values about living.

22


tra

dit

ion

a

v l li

ing

un

its

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A comparison between Plan voisin & paris & daegu in same scale Plan Voisin

Paris

paris, france, 1922, Le corbusier Le corbusier’s Plan Voisin and his idea about contemporary city inspired South Korean military regime in 1960s. The first apartment in South Korea which called ‘Ma-po apart’ was planed by an officer who inspired by an American magazine which introducing the apartment when he was study abroad. After he came back to South Korea and engaged for military regime, he realized his ideal of MASS-PRODUCED residances for people. And that is the birth of the Apartment culture in South Korea. small area for one person but semi-publicity makes extensive shared area.

Paris city block

public patio for one community

196 people per acre (2m² for one person)

block community

skyscrapper : 3,000 people per ha ‘ㄹ’shaped residances : 300 people per ha ‘blocked’ residances : 305 people per ha

228.11m² (2.09m² for one person)

109 people per 1patio (1,505 people per ha) patio blocks in paris

24


South Korea

large area for one person but too much publicity.

large area for one person but only for private space. never share the space.

traditional Korean house(18c)

1 family per 1patio

personal houses

1 family per 1patio

large family

typical apartments in Korea

private patio for one community 132 family per 1patio 396 people per 1patio small family

27.20m² (9.06m² for one person)

small families

5,902.20m² (14.09m² for one person) semi public patio

private patio

...

private patio

private patios

semi public patios The way of using space and patio and way of sharing a place with other people is different between Paris and South Korea. In South Korea, the two phase of patio is too much different. The balance of patio needs to be adjusted in urban perspective.

25


26


35째51'55.68"N128째36'33.84"E Samduk dong, Middle district of Daegu, South Korea.

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28


Perforated shape The patio and community spaces are subdivided into four phases public, semi-public, semi-private and private. The perforated form of long building shape can contain these diversity of spaces.

29


Concept sketch of play grounds The shape of buildings and additional facilities in the housing complex can be a places of memory for a man. And the meaning of living define on a good memory of that places

30

Access Road

Public Community Spaces Belonging to the Neighborhoods

Semi-Public Spaces for the Residents

Open Play Grounds

Semi-Private Spaces for the Residents

Private Units


Medical Collage

Dong-in Elementary School

General Hospital Public Parkinglot

Apartment Complex

Community Service Center

Dong-duck Elementary School

River Shin-Cheon

Sam-duck Elementary School

Church

Site plan 1:3000 31


32


33


1

34


2

35


1

36


1970s Mapo-Apartment

A huge nultifamily housing complex as an Island in the city do not resonate with the little houses of traditional style. It just seperate each other.

Communal Steps

The steped places make the boundary to be blur and deseperate flows of city itself.

37


Communal Steps

Step 1. Step 2. Step 3. Step 4.

The existing concept of private and semi-private Blur the boundary of housing complex. It’s not walled anymore and opened to public society Sunken garden makes the semi-public spaces for inside community residents For the residents, vertical roof garden patios as a semi-private place will be constructed

private

private

semi-private

public

Step 1.

Step 2.

semi-private

semi-public public

private

Step 3.

38

private public

Step 4.

semi-public


2

39


Security office

Staff house

Kindergarden

Magojae (existing Korean traditional cottage)

Bitssal Muse

(existing Japanese collon

40


Restaurant

Playground

eum

nial cottage)

Security office First floor plan 1:500

41


Type E Type F Type D

Type A Type B Type C

Type E

Type E

42

Type F

Type C


C

Type F Type C

Type D

Type D

Type G

Second floor plan 1:500

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Type B Type F

Type A

Type A

Type D

44

Type C

Type B

Type A


Semi-private roof garden

Type H

Third floor plan 1:500

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Type H

Type G

Type G

Type D

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Type C

Type F

Type E


Type H

Type D

Type H

Forth floor plan 1:500

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Section 1:500

A

Section BB

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Sixth Floor Plan

B

A

B

Fifth Floor Plan

49 Section AA


D Section 1:500 C

C

Forth Floor Pl

Third Floor Pl

E

50


D

lan

E Section CC

Section DD

lan

51 Section EE


03. SELFISH HOLDERS Competition : Crystal Scale Prize 2012 / Special Selection with Kim, Jae-Jun

What kind of architecture can accomodate the neo-prisoner who has escaped from the everyday life by himself? Our question terminated in this boutique hotel as a neo-prison where accomodate this people. Design a boutique hotel in the city was the theme of this project. This project was exhibited at the Korean Institute of Culture Architecture in November 2012.

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53


United States of America

JAPAN

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

CHINA

TAIWAN

HONGKONG

PHILIPPINES

RUSSIA

The Rate of Increase in Foreign Tourist of Asian Countries (%)

The Number of Hotel Rooms in Korea

*2007 to 2012

*unit : ea, ( ) is the Number of Hotels, 2010

80

72.77

Seoul

23,645(137)

70

61.93 60

5,618(81)

Kyung-ki

54.55

50

6,746(52)

Busan

38.57

40 30

1,957(24)

Daejeon

20 10

5.49

0

Korea

54

Vietnam

Taiwan

Hongkong

China

7,541(67)

Jeju 0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000


Russia

Japan

China

Taiwan

Hongkong

The Hotel Supply Prospect of Seoul *reference : 2008 demand forecast result of tourism, Korea Culture & Tourism Institute 80,000

supply

overs and shorts

70,000

Philippines

60,000

50,000

40,000

30,000

20,000

10,000

0

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

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.1. Garosu-gil

.2.

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Serosu-gil


Garosu-gil

Han River

Garosu-gil is a boulevard of shopping and rest. Various kind of retail shops are concentrated in this place and young people and travelers find here to enjoy the special scenery of it. Serosu-gil is a stretched roads from the Garosu-gil and it’s a rear side of main boulevard. Unique shops are opened here and it’s quite place. But people hardly find the hotel near the Garosu-gil. I planned a hotel at the starting point of Garosu-gil and it will be a still place for rest and meditate.

Garosu-gil rosu-g

37°31'04.8"N127°01'23.3"E Sinsa-dong, Gang-nam district of Seoul, South Korea.

57


Garosu-gil

Serosu-gil(Future Access) Dosan Road

58


Rooms

Each rooms are connected with elevators and guests can get in to the room straight through the elevators from the hall. And people can use the stairs which connected incidentally to go to common spaces.

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60


Vertical Diagram

One-story Duplex

Structural System and Vertical Circulation by Elevators

Elevator Entrance

Community Spaces

Vertical Circulation

61


Concept model

The ground level of hotel is a meaningful place bewteen Dosan boulevard and Garosu-gil, since it located on the starting point of the Garosu-gil. It resonates with the flows of city just like absorbing water into the cracked rock.

62


First floor plan 1:500

Serosu-gil(futre access) storage

shop

square

tourist information cener

Garosu-gil

63


64


3rd floor

4rd floor

Restaurant - 5th floor

Lounge - 6th floor

7th floor

8th floor

Lounge - 9th floor

10th floor

11th floor

12th floor

Lounge - 13th floor

14th floor

65


66


Stairs

People who stay in each rooms can use the stairs which connected incidentally to go to common spaces.

67


04. THE CITY STRIPED BY COLLAGED WALLS Tutor : Park, Yong-Seo / School of Architecture KNU

Buksung-ro is an old place where the modern history remaining. Daegu opened it’s door to world in the early 20th century by foreign forces. Original city was walled by the rampart and it was destroyed by Japanese colonial forces. In the right place of the rampart a new boulevard was constructed and it was a starting point of modern city plan. This project focused on how can we reuse the old buildings and define the relation between contemporary culture and modern buildings. This project was exhibited at the Kyungpook National University School of Architecture in September 2013.

68


The Reversal In the dawn of 20’s century, Chosun Dynasty opened to foreign intercourse and the Japanese Colonial perioud(1910 ~ 1945) started. Daegu was a walled city, but in 1908 Japanese invaders broke the ramparts and constructed a boulevard that has never seen before. The Solid Line became Road as a Void. This made the city’s boundary ambiguous.

.1. Southern Gate of Daegu rampart

.2. Japanese Colonial Prioud

.3. Boulevard as VOID

.4. New buildings and New city

Solid

Void

Ramparts of Daegu in Chosun Dynasty

Buksung-ro as a NEW road in Japanese Colonial period

69


Impression Collage

70


Perspective View of Ramp Square

71


Urban Tissues Cut-offs

Roads and Pathways

Open Spaces Around

Underground Pathway

Buksung-ro and Taepyung-ro

Grid-Lined Modern City Area

Seosung-ro and Korean Traditional Cottage Area

72 Kyungsan Gamyoung Park


Figure-Ground 1:3000

35째52'29.16"N128째35'39.17"E Buksung-ro, Middle district of Daegu, Buksung-ro

South Korea.

Seosung-ro

Dongsung-ro

Namsung-ro

73


10

9 5-1 5-3 3-5 4-1 4-4

14-1 15-3 16

14-2

10-29 10-1 10-10

10-25

21-13

10-3 10-26

10-11 10-12

18-1 17 20

18-2

13 10-27

10-18

10-13 10-15 10-14

18-3

21

81-1

74

75

77

1

74

81-3

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Figure-Ground 1:1000

Abandoned City

Perspective view is never seen in the south Korea before Modern times.

13 17

21

21

20

21

21-13

9

5-3

75


Phase I Cross connection between Hyangchon dong and Daegu Citizen Hall

Daegu Station

Daegu Citizen Hall

Hyangchon dong(Old town)

76


Phase II

Phase III

Approach from Taepyung-ro through the Pilotis Square

The Ramp Square connects Buksung-ro and the Daegu Station through the underground pathway

77


Typology A typological ananysis of old buildings in Buksung-ro.

.5. .6. .7.

.2. .1.

.1. .8.

.4. .3.

.1.

Stand in Line

Backyard and Connection

.2.

Between Spaces Pilotis and Entrance

.3.

Block Mass + Long Shaped Block

.4.

Block Mass

78

Networking Back Side


Old with New

.5.

New Walls and Stairs and Air Streets

Long Shaped Block

.6.

Between Space

Frontyard and Volume

METHOD I : Forming a road right through the center of the block in front of the road and the connection is made through leading directly to a building of the air-street.

Phase Shift VOID and SOLID

.7.

Isolated Volume METHOD II : Using the space between the building and the building is a method of inserting a new volume and used as a parameter in connection with the center of this area and a building block.

Complex

.8.

Stacked and High Volume

79

METHOD III : The ground floor of the building open to the public and connected with the back of the building leads to the backyard and other buildings the air horizontally.


Passage Buksung-ro square where is located in the middle of the Passage way between Daegu’s historic old town district and Daegu citizen hall.

N

14

15 9 7

Site Plan Air Streets

1:600

12

8 1. Taepyung-ro Square 2. Ramp Square 3. Middle Terrace Garden 4. Pilloti Garden 5. Stair to Underground Auditorium 6. Cafe 7. Information Center 8. Auditorium Hall 9. Lecture Room 10. Office 11. Office Entrance 12. Library 13. Storage 14. Underground Pathway 15. Forum Entrance 16. Buksung-ro Square

5

4 3

2

2 11

6

Middle Terrace Garden 10

13

METHOD VI : Association formed in the center of the square and Buksung-ro blocks from ground level, and abandoned traditional brick building will be a symbolic connection hall space by the stairs which of the main entrance to volume of main gallary.

6 6

16

Forum

METHOD IV and V : Forum will be used as a part of leading people to large spaces such as auditoriums utilizing the penetration of new and existing buildings of symbolic volume.

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pass

entrance

interiority

.......

int entrance

int

ent ent

pass

81


82


4

5

3

6

7

1

2

2

9 8

10 9

Second floor plan 1:500

N

1. Lobby 2. Buksung Museum 3. Gallery 4. Staff House 5. Guest House 6. Hall 7. Air Street 8. Reading Space 9. Office 10. Kitchen

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7

2

3

7

1

4

5 7

6

Third floor plan 1:500 1. Buksung Museum 2. Attic Room 3. Guest House 4. Reading Space 5. Archive of Buksung-ro History 6. Meeting Rooms 7. Roof Garden

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85


Longitudinal Section 1:300 1. Taepyung-ro Square 2. Archive 3. Middle Ramp Square 4. Auditorium 5. Stair Hall 6. Forum Entrance 7. Guest House

2

1

3

4

86


6

7

5

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05. ISLAND (RE)USES Tutor : Kim, Sung-Woo / School of Architecture Seoul National University

Korea is a peninsula surrounded by many small islands. These islands for centuries have survived on fishing and other local trades, yet following Korea’s rapid modernization the communities that populate these islands have been slowly declining, to the extent that today there is a risk that they will become uninhabited, marginalized and ultimately forgotten. This semester’s project will be to revive one of these islands, specifically the island of Anjwa off the south western coast of Korea. The studio takes a radical approach to the theme of re-modeling and re-use, rather than focusing on a single building or city block we will remodel an entire island. This project was exhibited at the Seoul National University School of Architecture in June 2012.

88


89


Impression Collage

This collage shows impression about Anjwa island. The maximizing productivity of tidal flat is the main issue and I think the tidal flat as a huge factory for tremandous producion of the sea food. Island is a supplier of sea food for urban city life but it’s been abandoned because of the migration. In 1960 to 80 government reclaimed tidal flats to be a farmland in the part of the reformation policy of rural area. Nevertheless, young people move to the city, and old people left in the island. Now the reclaimed farmlands are abandoned with the memories of past. How can we change this situation with architecture? What is the latency of Anjwa island?

90


NODU

Stone walls

The Island and urban city and sea

West coast of Korea with four thousand of islands

The City of Mokpo Anjwa island

Islands of Korea

Jeju island

South Korea has four thousand of islands. The NODU is the only way to get to the another island and land shore for the people of old days. When it became to high tide, the nodu ,that the only way, had shutted. So, the NODU is a connection and disconnection simultaneously and an old machine with ambiguous boundary for the people who lived in Anjwa island.

91


topography

The island and the food shortage 19c villages

Reusing the island is so important point of this project. And my project focuced on the role of the island for today’s society. The island is very important place for our future food supply. But the declining population of the island is a threat to us.

1960s

pathways 1980s

398

ricepods

219

5,701

40 0

4,276 2012.04

-139

landscape

2011.12 -2,859

2011.08 2011.04

2010.12 -318

2010.08

2010

-1,425

2010.04 The production of fiheries of west sea(reference : KOSIS) & declining population of Anjwa island

2005 2000 0

waterways

1995

mud and sand concrete salt pond farm land mountains and hills

92

landuse


Site annalysis drawing

The very clear boundary of the island and this is due to the reclamining for more arable area but this strict line of human ruined the nature of Anjwa. And the contamination of the island was caused by this. But this artificial thing was started for reusing the island ironically. So I tried to break the embankment of the Anjwa to make it return to the nature. It’s an reversal process.

93


The machine

The high tide and low tide, occurs due to the revolution of the moon and the earth, has been an ancient clock for islanders. For the reuse of island, this fundamental phenomenon need to be examined. The Machine, which can perform an action in the site, took the site records of tidal phenomenon. And it’s a device for reuse of island in a traditional way and the main idea for the Tidal Flat Factory that adjusts the new form of the tidal flat using. It’s an artificial “Tidal channel”. And it’s machanism is same as the tidal flat’s machanism.

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95


Reversing the island 0

0.1

0.5

1 km

Present situation

mountain

village river salt pond embankment(lined boundary) willl be explode

tidal flat

tidal channel

mountain

96

village

salt pond

river

embankment

tidal flat


Surfaced boundary 0

The lined boundary makes the island to maintain a same condition regardless of the tide’s phase. It ISOLATE the island’s natural environment from the sea. And it brings about contamination both of the island and the ocean. This present condition will be improved by changing of the “embankment”. After destruction of the “embankment”, original tidal channel will be recovered and new “hybrid embankment” which works as a surfaced boundary.

Future

0.1

0.5

1 km

The surfaced boundary not only connects island and the ocean, but also divorces them simultaneously as a buffer zone. This surfaced boundary is a hybrid embankment but it’s not just a surfaced area. Because it’s able to contain buildings and people’s daily life. And I tried to find what kind of architecture can make this “hybrid embankment” to be a new daily life machine for people who living in this island just like NODU.

mountain village hybrid embankment artificial tidal flat

tidal channel

tidal flat

mountain

village

hybrid embankment

artificial tidal flat

tidal channel

tidal flat

buffer zone

97


Section AA’ This section shows us the program under the “hybrid embankment”. The facility, contained in the embankment is activated by the power of tide. Fishermen store the seafood into the freezing storage through this tidal power using machine.

The machine

The embankment is a place of living for the people who occupying the island. once it blocked the sea water as a strict line but the new hybrid embankment as a surfaced boundary is a buffer zone where the sea and island encounter and a protection of people from the severe sea.

Section BB’

old traces

Section CC’

old traces

98

residences


Site plan Drawing of the “hybrid embankment” as a surfaced boundary. Along the embankment, there are some residences and traces of old structure which is replaced by the nature. And the machine is constructed on the middle of the embankment.

0 10

50

100 m

Site model

B’ C’

A’

B C The machine

A

99


Machanism

The tidal flat has a machanism. Two times of low and high tides are comming for every day. I find a latency of the Anjwa island from this point. Fishermen go to the tidal flat when it is low tide. And when it becomes to high tide, fishermen get back to the embankment, by using the force of nature, with their prizes such as fishes, crabs, shellfishes or even anchovies. This machanism has been existed for millions of years and fishermen load their prays onto the embankment and for now onto the machine.

low tide

100 high tide


The machine

101


Expanded Machanism

The expanded function of the hybrid embankment that is performing like a generator makes it possible to stock up fishery products without industrialized facilities. The power of nature trigger the fishery processing for fishermen by machine.

water way trigger

platform

102


wheel house trigger

water way

black house platform

trigger

103


packing room

gear house (abandoned church)

black house

freezing facility

cleaning room

shipping space

trigger

wheel house (abandoned house)

gear house (abandoned church)

104

level +2.30 1:500


shipping process

1. Hightide :

The trigger is moving by the force of water flowing through the canal

2. Wheel house and gear house : A dynamic motion of gears that intalled in the renovated abandoned buildings near the canal convey energy to the black house 3. Black house :

The main structural elements are black oil stained pine tree of local. The energy pass on through this building will conveyed to the storage.

4. Refrigerator :

The marine products loaded down on the shipping space will conveyed by the energy that caused by trigger, gears and black house’s operation into the refrigerator.

bridge

black house

shipping space

level +4.00 1:500

105


wheel house (abandoned house)

canal

hightide lowtide tidal flat shipping space

gear house (abandoned church)

staircase

canal

packing room flat belt conveyer gear flat belt conveyer

freezing freezing facility

refrigerators

shipping space

level -1.00

106

1:500

cleaning room

additional shipping space


black house

refrigerators

storage

107


06. VILNIUS JOURNEY Tutor : Gintautas Blažiūnas / School of Architecture Vilnius Gediminas Technical University

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1800s(Original building)

Present Situation

112

1900s


Design alt A

Design alt B

Design alt C

Design alt D

Restoration of urban context

The demolished part of palace due to the extension of the road is reconstructed on the standpoint of contemporary unban context. The FRUQHU RI .DOYDULMǐ URDG DQG äYHMǐ URDG ZLOO designed as the same traits of another buildings those standing in line along the street. Visitors can ILQG D VHUHQH FRXUW\DUG EHWZHHQ WKH ROG SDODFH DQG QHZ EXLOGLQJ RQ WKH FRUQHU DQG WKH VXUURXQGed space in the old palace changed into an atrium is continued from the courtyard. 113


Design Conclusion

114


1:2000 Site Plan

115


Colonnade plaza

The colonnade, constructed as the same way of vertical facade along the street, makes a harmounious contrast between the building and the plaza with Neris river.

4 1. Auditorium 2. Plaza 3. Lobby 4. Parking

3

1

2

116 New Extension Building

1:500 First Floor Plan


5

3

1

1. Kitchen 2. Hall 3. Courtyard 4. Office 5. Shop

2

4

117 New Extension Building

1:500 Second Floor Plan


Trakai castle

Atrium

The atrium, continued from the serene courtyard, is a main lobby of the building and it brings same impression of anothor local historical building - Trakai Castle.

118


1. Staff lounge 2. Main hall 3. administration office 4. Atrium 5. Exhibition hall

1

3

2 4

5

5

Original Building

1:500 First Floor Plan

119


1:300 Longitudinal Section BB

120

1:300 Longitudinal Section AA


121

1:300 Longitudinal Section CC


122



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