Portfolio 2018

Page 1

AASIYA MAAVIAH | B.ARCH PORTFOLIO | 2014-2018


AASIYA MAAVIAH Student of Architecture

COVER LETTER

To the Admissions Committee,

PROFILE A creative dilettante with critical interests in architecture, art, editorial design and digital media design. I received my design training during my Bachelors in Architecture; however, I am always striving to create work that combines strategic design with compelling visuals and attention to detail in every field of design. I am always excited to work in a creative environment with like-minded individuals that are passionate about innovation and design. My core belief is that design is successful when it makes a difference to a person’s life, and moves them to reevaluate their perspectives. To me, a design is an experience.

CONTACT Hyderabad, Telangana, India

I have always been fascinated by the art of creation. I am passionate about design, whether it is architectural, product or industrial design. I am a visual thinker, and architecture further broadened my horizons by expanding my knowledge of how the built environment affects the individual. The projects that I worked on during my academic course have significantly added to my skill set, and that has helped me gain insight into what I love doing. The ability to showcase consistent growth in my work and adapt to the environment are my strongest assets. During my undergraduate, I have worked on projects of various scales and technical intricacies. To expand my understanding of the principles of design, I have invested time in illustrations and editorial design. As an intern, I was responsible for preparing a full complement of construction documents for high- and mid-rise commercial, residential, and mixed-use properties. In addition to my experience with design, I’m also proficient with the major CAD software systems, including AutoCAD, Revit, Rhino, and SketchUp. The excitement of knowing that proper design will help meet an individual’s requirements is the only sentiment I wish to hold as my own in the years to come. I have passionately committed myself to design and to further develop myself in the art of creating an environment for the society in the years to come. Granted admission into your university, I will strive to outperform myself along every step of the way. Thanking you for your time and consideration, Sincerely,

+91 8688098077 aasiyamaaviah@gmail.com

Aasiya Maaviah www.behance.net/aasiyam

REFERENCES • Prof. Kalpana Manchali (Principal) +91 9866389888 • Prof. Shalini D. Reddy (Thesis Coordinator) +91 9849122728


LANGUAGES English

Fluent

French

Proficient

Arabic

Proficient

Hindi

Native Language

Urdu

Native Language

Telugu

Native Language

EDUCATION 2015-19

Bachelors in Architecture JNAFAU / Sri Venkateshwara College of Architecture / India

2015

High School CBSE / Delhi Public School / Jeddah / Saudi Arabia

2011

Middle School CBSE / Al-Ain Juniors School / United Arab Emirates

SOFTWARE SKILLS AutoCAD

CERTIFICATIONS 2018

Certificate of Completion - 3D Studio Max Engineers CADD Centre (P) Ltd / 99653

Revit 3DS Max

2017

Engineers CADD Centre (P) Ltd / 99653

Adobe Illustrator Adobe Photoshop

Certificate of Completion - Revit

2016

Certificate of Completion - AutoCAD (2d & 3d) Autodesk Authorized Training Centre / 17OAUT0OA7

Adobe InDesign

WORKSHOPS

Rhinoceros 2016

V-Ray Microsoft Office

Study, Use and Conservation of Brick Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage

INTERESTS

SKILLS & EXPERTISE Typography

Free-hand Sketching

Vector Illustrations

Editorial Design

Performance Art

Logo Design

Communication

Public Speaking

Photography

Working in groups

Graphic & Web Design Illustrations


Aasiya Maaviah | B.Arch


CONTENTS 04: Library Restoration A dissertation on the restoration of the State Central Library

12: Musi Redevelopment A water-front redevelopment proposal for Urban Design

18: Hospice Design A hospice design proposal for senior citizens

20: Alaphuza House A sustainable vacation home in Kerala for star gazing

24: Wilderness Pavillion A personal project in a Kenyan Reserve



Portfolio

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RESTORATION OF THE HYDERABAD STATE LIBRARY Afzal Gunj, Hyderabad March 2018 - July 2018 Academic Project | Semester 8 | Dissertation

CONTEXT | The Hyderabad State Central Library, looking over the banks of the River Musi across the stream from Salarjung Museum, was designed by Architect Aziz Ali in 1891. Completed in 1936, it stood for decades as a belt in the city dedicated to higher learning. Almost a century later, the monument has retained its significance but has declined in its ability to contribute to the intellectual needs of the city’s population. Attempts at restoring the library have caused further degeneration. In parallel, the city has lost its place alongside the educationally advanced states in India. CONCEPT | Restoring the library required studying it as civic, academic, historical, and cultural infrastructure. The library had to be connected to all its counterparts throughout the city to re-establish its relevance in the current dynamic and urban context. The redevelopment program incorporates a distinct hierarchy of proposals that concentrate on the unique aspects of the overall project to actualise this connectivity. PROGRAM | The project has been compartmentalised into four phases depending on the aspects of the library that require refurbishment. The stages include an Adaptive Re-use Proposal, a Building Extension Project, the Repurposing of the Library as a Cultural Centre, and the Development of Public Spaces. PHASE 01 | The proposal aims to repurpose the historic structure as a tourist attraction and redevelop significant parts into research centres for scholars. Such a plan could regulate access to the vulnerable infrastructure and efficiently govern its maintenance. PHASE 02 | One of the critical inadequacies in the existing building is its inability to accommodate the growing needs of the more educated and diverse population. An extension proposal has been incorporated as a design solution that aims at sharing the responsibility of functioning as the State Library. The extension proposal seeks to serve as an annexe to the Library envisioned to serve as a visible statement about the value of reading, education, and lifelong learning. [Left] Photomontage For the sake of the slate of the state

PHASES 03 & 04 | The absence of public spaces and cultural centres in one of the world’s most historically significant and populated cities is alarming. By expanding its infrastructure beyond the limited scope of an academic centre, the library strengthens its contribution to the city and further justifies the space it occupies.


Restoration of the Hyderabad State Library 0km

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MACRO ANALYSIS | SITE ANALYSIS

MICRO ANALYSIS | SITE ANALYSIS

+S original site

+H historical belt +M musi belt

The site is located in Afzal Gung with a total area of 22,486 m2.

It is recognised as a part of Nizam’s historical belt along Musi.

Nizam ordered all the city’s icons to be designed along the river.

+C Connectivity The State Library is located 7.7 km from the centre of the city.


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CLIMATIC ANALYSIS | SITE CONTEXT Sunny

Partly Cloudy

Overcast

Precipitation

30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Jan Feb Mar April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec

SPATIAL ANALYSIS | FORM GENERATION

LIBRARY STAFF

STUDENT

The establishment is understaffed, and the librarians are overworked. They catalogue books, organise content and users, maintain decorum and provide data. They form 3% of the footfall.

Most of the students are preparing for their high-school and college entrance examinations. A handful of students are also enrolled in higher education programmes.

Senior Citizens mostly require rare books and newspapers. They take an early walk and prefer to read the day’s paper. Most users come in groups and use it as a place of gathering.

They are infrequent visitors who need to procure a specific book or document from the library archives. The more frequent visitors spend their time in the editorials or enjoy the public space.

age

age

age

age

22-60 YEARS

16-25 YEARS

average stay

average stay

12 HOURS

6-8 HOURS

SENIOR CITIZEN AVERAGE READER

60+ YEARS average stay

2-4 HOURS

25-40 YEARS average stay

1-2 HOURS

usage of public space usage of public space usage of public space usage of public space

privacy requirement

privacy requirement

privacy requirement

privacy requirement

book preference

book preference

book preference

book preference

SENSE OF SPACE | EXISTING LIBRARY CATALOUGES

TEXTBOOKS

frequent book update frequent book update

PUBLIC DEMAND | LIBRARY FACILITIES

NOVELS

NEWSPAPERS

frequent book update frequent book update

SWOT ANALYSIS | SCOPE AND PROSPECTIVES STRENGTHS

2030 information desk

gallery spaces

2010 seminar hall

digital library

public spaces

office spaces

1990 multi-purpose hall

1970 1962 1950

editorial

children’s library

server room women’s library

parking

S

student’s library

kannada library

WEAKNESSES

W

1910 increase in demand

urgency

public spaces

cultural spaces

utilities

The densely populated site location creates opportunities for economically self-reliant design. Connectivity to different modes of transportation makes it easily accessible.

urdu library

cafe

1930

• •

The historical building design is not accessible to users with disabilities. The site is located in a conservative locality library access is limited for women.

library spaces x: demand y: time

OPPORTUNITIES

PROJECT KEY | SITE ANALYSIS 1.

city level zoning

2.

reverse figure ground

4.

landuse regulations

6.

water networks

3.

accessibility

5.

green spaces

7.

landuse regulations

8.

building heights

9.

site vegetation

10.

building ages

+ linkages + brownfield

O

T

• •

• •

To redefine the architectural identity and relevance of a historic structure by integrating it with modern design. To redevelop civic infrastructure as a public space. To increase employement opportunities for the locals.

THREATS The existing structure is crumbling due to poor restoration. Crime is common in the area but can be resolved with good design. A secured public space in a crowded area could encourage more spaces to follow suit.


Restoration of the Hyderabad State Library

AXO 01 | ADAPTIVE RE-USE PROPOSAL

PLAN 00 | GROUND FLOOR STACK ROOM

STACK ROOM

3 S-3

ARCHIVES

2 S-2

ARCHIVES

4 S-4

4 S-4

1 S-1

1 S-1

READING HALL KANNADA ROOM

STACK ROOM SEMINAR HALL

3 S-3

2 S-2

3 S-3

ANNEXE BUILDING

2 S-2

URDU ROOM

PLAN 01 | FIRST FLOOR

ORIGINAL BUILDING

MAIN IDEA | CONCEPT EVOLUTION

2

BUILDING EXTENSION PROJECT: As the existing building is inadequate to serve as a City and a State Library, the extension proposal is meant to cater to the growing demands. REPURPOSING THE LIBRARY AS A CULTURAL CENTRE: The deterioration of the building can be regarded as a sign of social neglect and the proposal to repurpose the building aims to rectify this drawback.

4

DEVELOPMENT OF PUBLIC SPACES: The project aims to rectify the shortage of public spaces by redeveloping the site surroundings as lung spaces for civic infrastructure.

SECTIONS | ADAPTIVE RE-USE PROPOSAL

4 S-4

1 S-1

1 S-1

3 S-3

3

4 S-4

2 S-2

ADAPTIVE REUSE PROPOSAL: This project phase aims to redevelop the existing infrastructure as a tourist attraction and restrict the access of rarebook rooms to research scholars.

PLAN 02 | SECOND FLOOR

3 S-3

2 S-2

1

4 S-4

4 S-4

1 S-1

1 S-1

3 S-3

SECTION 02 | NORTH | ADAPTIVE RE-USE PROPOSAL

2 S-2

SECTION 01 | NORTH | ORIGINAL DESIGN


Portfolio

[Top] View of the editorial rooms provided at the ground floor [Middle] Connecting space between the two libraries [Bottom] The reception, editorial rooms, and the service core

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Restoration of the Hyderabad State Library

SECTION A-A’ | EXISTING SITE SECTION

SITE LOGIC | ANALYSIS

site area:

SECTION B-B’ | NORTHERN SECTION

22,486 m2

site perimeter:

694 m

SITE BOUNDARY

SECTION C-C’ | SOUTHERN SECTION

pedestrian concentration access roads

SITE MOVEMENT

SECTION D-D’ | EASTERN SECTION original building annex building

BUILDING DEVELOPMENT

SECTION E-E’ | WESTERN SECTION syzngnium jambolonium enterolobium saman peltophorum enterolobium delonix regia syzngnium

SITE VEGETATION


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Redevelopment of the Musi Canal Lower Tank-Bund, Hyderabad October 2017 - January 2018 Academic Project | Semester 6 | Urban Design Elective

PROJECT | The object of this Urban Design project is the Canal connecting the Hussain Sagar Dam to River Musi which has a length of 2km. Several years of encroachment and waste dumping during festivals have polluted it to the extent that the area is being rendered inhospitable. A redevelopment proposal must consist of a long-term technical solution to clean and maintain the canal, and a design solution to repurpose it so it can benefit the residents living around it. CONTEXT | The Musi is the primary source of water in the State of Telangana. The Canal connecting the River to the Hussain Sagar Dam was initially inaugurated to beautify the growing Urban Landscape in Nizam’s Hyderabad and as a reminder of the contribution of the Dam in regulating the flooding. However, in recent years it has suffered severe interventions such as flooding, construction works, waste-dumping and public works. Despite the government’s efforts at cleaning the canal, the situation has proven to get progressively worse. PROGRAM | An elaborate study on the canal and its surroundings concluded in the understanding that reclaiming the waterbody is impractical in isolation. Secondly, all the research was evaluated to circle out four distinct issues plaguing the area, and the connection between them was established. A resolute design solution required a pragmatic as well as a theoretical proposal. This strategy organised the green, the aquatic element, the connections with the city and the programmatic redefinition of each region. As a result, the new canal simultaneously emerges in 4 separate divisions, each repurposed to improve its surroundings and the lives of the people immediately and remotely associated with it. DESCRIPTION | The purification of the Canal is done as a part of the sustainable development project. Footover bridges are provided at required intervals, providing easy access for pedestrian crossings. Deck spaces are incorporated along with seating spaces, and stalls bordered by engaging viewpoints. Proposals are made for organic farming and recreational tracks.

[Left] Render of the cycling track for the project proposal

Market spaces have been proposed to rectify the traffic congestion and haphazard development caused by the squatting of hawkers. These irregulated market spaces choke the streets by creating bottlenecks as they encroach onto the main roads and cause dead ends in local colonies. Market areas are designed keeping the family as the basic unit of the client base, therefore, encouraging safer public activity by curbing the movement of any anti-social elements in the vicinity.


Redevelopment of the Musi Canal Activity Analysis

Key Plan

A

1689 B

A’

B’

1787 Section A-A’

1887

Existing Features

Section B-B’

1987

Musi - 1890

Tankbund - 1890

LOCATION: (17.4°N, 78.4°E)

700 600 500 400

Musi - 1920

Tankbund - 1920

300 200 100

AREA: 2074000 m2 PERIMETER: 8,100 m2 POPULATION: 17,000

VEHICLE MOVEMENT | PEAK FLOW | IDLE FLOW 700 600 500 400

AREA OF STUDY | PROJECT SCOPE

Bikes

Cars

Buses

Inlet

Outlet

Day

Night

300 200 100

Trucks

Autos

Bathukamma

Ganesh Immersion


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ROAD HEIRARCHY BUILDING HEIGHTS Ground Level Ground + 1 Ground + 2 G G+5

G+1

Ground + 3 Ground + 4

G+2

G+4 G+3

Arterial Roads

Sub-Arterial Routes

Local Roads

PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT OCCUPANCY High Density Medium Density Low Density HIGH G+3

G+1

MEDIUM

LOW G+2

Stationary

Pedestrian Movement VEHICULAR MOVEMENT

BUILDING AGES 5 - 10 Years 10 - 15 Years 15 - 20 Years <1k 1.8k-2k

1k-1.2k

1.6k-1.8k

1.2k-1.4k

20 - 25 Years 25 - 30 Years

1.4k-1.6k

Bikes

Cars

Buses

Pedestrians

Autos

SMELL INSTIGATORS

LAND USE Light Industry Office / Retail Residential

Commercial Public Spaces

Mixed-Use

Public Buildings Tourism / Utilities

Industrial

Residential

Bakery Chai

Flowers Eatery

NOISE INSTIGATORS

FIGURE GROUND Urban Density BUILT-UP

SEMIOPEN

OPEN

Bamboo Drain

Prasadam Ether

Paan Smoke

Petroleum Sweets


Redevelopment of the Musi Canal CONCEPT | Design Ideation

PROGRAM | Design Development

Current Scenario

Phase

Problems

User Groups

Solutions

Water Pollution

Residents

Lung Spaces

Analysis

Activities

Cycling Route Encroachment of Public Parks

Children Buffer Trench

People Conceptual Solution

Flee Market Lack of Public Spaces

Vendors Organic Farm

Redevelopment Proposal

Design Solution

Rise of unemployment

Displaced Citizens

Children’s Play-Ground

C

C’

SITE PLAN | Design Proposal

Annual Storm Mean High Water

Wetland Purification

Mean Low Water Fresh Water

Lung Spaces

Starting of Buffer Zone

SECTION C-C’ | Buffer Trench Proposal

North


Portfolio

[Above] Key Plan

[Top] Elevation differences utilised as street furniture for seating spaces [Middle] Sandpit playground connecting the two core spaces [Bottom] Vendors allocated adequate space to house their stalls

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Portfolio 20|21

HOSPICE DESIGN Hyderabad, India September 2017 - March 2017 Hospital Project | Semester 5 | Hospital Design

PROJECT | The Hospice must be transformed into a space that will provide the best possible conditions to promote quality of life, respect, and a dignified demise. The final structure must defy the traditional concept of an institution and reorganise its principles to cater to those in need of a home. CONCEPT | The pre-eminent ideology underlying this design is its emphasis on returning autonomy to its users. It keeps in mind their need for a space that acts as a sanctuary in their final stages, allowing them to live out their days with dignity, grace, and as much self-reliance as possible. The main character of Leo Tolstoy’s work, Ivan, from the Death of Ivan Ilyich, and his disarming diatribes were the inspiration for this design. DESCRIPTION | The complete circulation circuit has been designed as a continuous network of ramps that interconnect every space in the building for unassisted movement. The entire design is restricted to a single floor to rid the resident of the need for assistance in vertical translation. The entrance has been designed as a transitional zone that removes the visitor from the surrounding hospital environment. The bridged pathway is made of a hard, radiant oak that oversees a narrow stream of fresh flowing water and is offset by a row of small Gulmohars and birdhouses. Parallel to this is an open-air dining area that is visible through the gaps in the dense foliage. While walking onto the transitional bridge, the sound of feet tapping on wood, the changing colours of the Gulmohars, the chirping of the birds, and the faint rumbling of guinea pigs stimulate visual, auditory, and olfactory senses to provide a change of atmosphere and begin the therapeutic effect. The pathway leads to an informal reception and sitting area that doubles as a casual gathering space. Spacious wards with attached bathrooms have open floor plans that ease movement and communication. Adjustable partition walls allow for selected privacy, while large personalised windows placed parallel to each bedding arrangement allow for an unrestricted view of the outdoors. [Left] View of play area from check-up room in the doctor’s office

Views of the wards are spaces allotted for organic farming, supervised by the residents. They stimulate a feeling of growth and novelty. A play area for children that doubles as an energetic meeting space borders the pre-operative consultation rooms to ease the patient’s visits to their doctors.



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[Top] View of the common lung space provided for the residents [Middle] The entrance to the hospice via the transition bridge [Bottom] The recreational space within the medical centre.



Portfolio 24|25

ALAPPUZHA HOUSING UNIT Alappuzha, Kerala May 2016 - July 2016 Housing Project | Personal

PROJECT | The Alappuzha House was designed as an academic project for a client who’s personality was derived from a random algorithm. The final brief required the design of a small house along a waterfront in Kerala, South India that could be used for stargazing and intellectual gatherings. The primary goal of this project was to develop a more keen understanding of client requirements and be able to convert them into a design. Additionally, this project was imperative in understanding how spaces are related and how connectivity can be established between them. CONCEPT | The underlying design idea was to create an open, functional, and versatile living and gathering space. This sense of openness was achieved by incorporating open floor plans to allow users to reorganise their living spaces frequently. The essential functions of the home such as cooking, resting, storage and hygiene are placed inside these stackable, pre-fabricated boxes, which help define the spatial hierarchy within the house. DESCRIPTION | The lightweight structure can be assembled by a crew of two to four people. In Alappuzha, Kerala, the waterfront is a common ground for all the locals; hence all the houses are closer together. For this context, the ideal design solution would be a lightweight, assembly-friendly system that adjusts well with the contours, rejecting multi-storey buildings, and suggesting a system in which homes are positioned near to one another, featuring useful high-ceilinged spaces which greet the surrounding view and guard the structures against cold winds by other means than those previously assumed. The construction of each house can be handled by crews of two to four people, which allows work on steep sites and a high degree of independence as is a tradition in the north. ROOF STRUCTURE | The external skin climate screen is mounted in long narrow polycarbonate sheets of varying translucency with continuous skylight in clear glass above. Prefabricated container boxes extrude through the facades as points of entry, sheds, balconies and bay windows framing views.

[Left] Perspective Render of the Alappuzha House


FLOOR PLAN | GROUND FLOOR

FLOOR PLAN | FIRST FLOOR 1. Bedroom 2. Closet 3. Bathroom 4. Stairway 5. Stargazing Deck 6. Kitchen 7. Living Room 8. Gallery

SITE PLAN | LOCATION

SITE AREA:

800 m2

PERIMETER:

North

MATRIX | SPATIAL ARRANGEMENT

PROGRAM | FORM DEVELOPMENT

ADJACENT NOT ADJACENT NOT RELATED

SECTION A-A’ | EASTERN PERSPECTIVE SECTION

360 m


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[Top] View of Alappuzha’s backwaters from the ground floor gallery [Middle] Stargazing on the deck space on level one [Bottom] The combined kitchen and living space with a view of the backwaters.



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WILDERNESS PAVILION KENYA Kajiado County, Kenya September 2018 - October 2018 Competition Project | Semester 9 Project Partner: Kushal Durai Rajan

PROJECT | The project aims to create a free-standing temporary pavilion in the heart of Amboseli National park that would allow visitors new ways to view and experience the wilderness and be close to nature. The proposal strives to be a poetic response for a pavilion structure in a very sensitive environment that would become the ‘eyes and ears’ for visitors who want to connect with the natural ecosystem and reflect on nature in its true spirit. The site for the intervention is located on the observation hill in Amboseli National Park, Kenya. This coneshaped hill is situated in the Western portion of the park and is the only high point of the Amboseli National Park, and it is also the only place where you can get out of your vehicle and take a walk. CONCEPT | The underlying ideology behind the design was to create a perfect ‘built’ narrative in the relatively ‘unbuilt’ context. It was thought that the final space designed should not end in specific limits but merge with the surrounding greenery expanding the visual boundaries and transforming into a large three-dimensional canvas. The pavilion aims to become a ‘window’ for man to experience the natural vistas as a new viewpoint of reference. The pavilion acts as a ‘zone of contemplation’ for the visitors that would transcend their olfactory, tactile and visual experiences. The pavilion space creates an immersive architectural quality that will allow people to reflect on the tangible and intangible components of a natural habitat. The participants are free to designate any function (or not) to their pavilion that would fit in their narrative. The space is a small retreat, an observation deck, a photographer’s pit, a meditation centre, and even a functionless vestibule depending upon its impact on a visitor’s mind.

[Left] Render of the view as seen from the Kenyan Pavilion

DESCRIPTION | The observation deck at Amboseli National Park is an important landmark, and the pavilion must function as an architectural icon that attracts more and more people towards natural ecosystems. The pavilion is a stable reference point that will generate awareness towards the preservation of nature and adopt a cohesive relationship with the various elements of nature. It strives to promote communal harmony and enrich the lives of all kinds of organisms around it. The design respects the context, and the pavilion causes minimal disturbance to the site. The volumetric and material composition is modular and permeable that adds vitality and a sense of identity to the space. The pavilion is a zero energy structure designed on the ideas of durability and sustainability.


CONCEPT | DESIGN ASPECTS

FLOOR PLAN | ARRANGEMENT OF VIEWS

Native Design Methods

Reclaimable by Wildlife

ELEPHANTS MATING PLACE

Organic Materials

LAKE

Tourist Destination

Temporary Structure

SWAMP

Bird Sanctuary

SECTION | RELATIVE HEIGHT REFERENCE CHART

SITE PLAN | LOCATION DETAILS SITE AREA:

SECTION A-A’ | SECTIONAL ANALYSIS

38000 m2

PERIMETER:

700 m

Lake

North

BULLS


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[Top] The roof structure of the Pavilion designed to double as a tree top for birds [Middle] Front view of the Pavilion on the hilltop [Bottom] The Pavilion as a reclaimable space for the wild


CONTACT ME Aasiya Maaviah | B.Arch - Sri Venkateshwara College of Architecture Email: aasiyamaaviah@gmail.com, aasiyamaaviah1186@gmail.com Mobile: +91 8688098077 Website: www.behance.net/aasiyam,


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