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2015 AWARD RECIPIENTS 2012 AWARD RECIPIENTS
KEVIN KOLDEN VINEET BHOSLE ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY AIAS MEMBER AIAS MEMBER SAMUEL DANI HILL MARTIN
TALIESIN TALIESEN WEST AIAS MEMBER AIAS MEMBER
IAA
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WIN $400 CASH ENTER NOW
FOR MORE INFO VISIT: www.aia-arizona.org
AMANDA MARCELASCHWARZ GRACIA UNIVERSITY ARIZONA UNIVERSITY OFofARIZONA AIAS MEMBER AIAS MEMBER
And remember, all recent NAAB-accredited degree recipients automatically receive a FREE 18-month Associate Membership to the AIA after graduation!
Dominick Abbott PUBLIC
AREA (sf)
SUBTOTAL (sf)
1 1
2985 650
2985 650
CAFE COUNTER CAFE PREP STORAGE CAFE SEATING
1 1 1
120 250 500
120 250 500
GALLERY AUDITORIUM COMMUNITY MEETING ROOM
2 1 1 1
2000 4240 3900 3000
4000 4240 3900 3000
GUEST SERVICES/CHECK-OUT DESK LIBRARY REFERENCE DESK LIBRARY REFERENCE (CLOSED STACKS) LIBRARY REFERENCE (OPEN STACKS)
1 1 1 1
120 80 1000 630
120 80 1000 630
LIBRARY COLLECTIONS (ARCHITECTURE) LIBRARY COLLECTIONS (PHOTOGRAPHY) LIBRARY COLLECTIONS (FINE ARTS)
1 1 1
3490 3300 3710
3490 3300 3710
WORK ROOM (LARGE) WORM ROOM (MEDIUM)
1 2
345 240
7%
23% 18%
19,645
13,155
COLLABORATION
The Center for Information and Collaboration
OPEN STUDY STUDY CARRELS COMPUTER STATIONS
8 80 36
STUDY ROOM (LARGE) STUDY ROOM (SMALL)
1200 24 18
9600 1920 648
10 16
240 120
2400 1920
MULTIMEDIA LAB
1
1500
1500
CONFERENCE ROOM (LARGE) CONFERENCE ROOM (SMALL)
1 2
400 200
400 400
8
120
10 8 1 1 2
64 120 180 320 130
640 960 180 320 260
CIRCULATION SERVICES CIRCULATION SERVICES STORAGE
1 1
600 200
600 200
SERVERS IT
1 1
850 260
850 260
SHIPPING/RECEIVING
1
200
VISITING FACULTY OFFICE
960
ADMINISTRATION
19,748
Education University of Arizona B. Architecture 2011 - Present
STAFF WORK AREA (OPEN WORKSTATIONS) STAFF OFFICES (ENCLOSED) DIRECTOR’S OFFICE STAFF WORK ROOM BREAKOUT (INFORMAL MEETING)
19%
27%
6%
345 480
SERVICE | MECHANICAL L | CIRCULATION | STRUCTRURE
University of Arizona/ 2016
FUNCTION
INFORMATION
abbottd@email.arizona.edu 520.269.2905 38491914
QTY
LOBBY/RECEPTION AUDITORIUM LOBBY
200 4,470
CIRCULATION + STRUCTURE (13,777 sf) - PUBLIC STAIR - EXIT STAIRS - ELEVATORS|ELEVATOR ROOM - COLUMNS|ENVELOPES|PARTITIONS MECHANICAL + SERVICE (5,551 sf) -
GROUND MECHANICAL ROOM HVAC EQUIPMENT ROOM FIRE RISER ROOM MAIN ELECTRICAL ROOM ELECTRICAL DISTRIBUTION ROOMS MDF ROOM IDF ROOM PUBLIC RESTROOMS JANITOR CLOSET
STRUCTURAL FORM DIAGRAMMATIC A PROCESS 1.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Bottom mass rotates, establishing axis of entry into site from west and sout
Masses extrude into one another, integrating structural systems
Bottom mass is sliced in relation to visual and circulation axis
Upper mass extrudes north and south, cantelevering off of the bottom mass. Bottom mass extrudes structural core upwards to support cantlever
Upper mass tapers for the purpose of aesthetic and structural resolve
Experience SWAIM Associates: 2014-2015 / Summer Line and Space: 2016 - Present Involvement Habitat for Humanity: 2014 - Present AIAS: 2015 - Present Awards The Richard + Bauer Architecture Prize - Best Integrated Design - Best Interior Architecture Description Project Type: Educational Project Location: University of Arizona Through the utilization of natural lighting, green space, and passive cooling strategies, the CIC creates an environment which provides users with opportunities for academic exploration and interdisciplinary interaction. These nodes of collaborative opportunity are created and defined by programmatic voids which intersect adjacent program and pierce the building envelope, establishing visual connections between interior program and exterior public spaces. Voids adjust to the programmatic needs of each floor, producing terraced atriums throughout the CIC which provide natural lighting to the ground floor pavilion gardens, and create opportunities for exterior balconies and circulation on the upper floors. Exterior shading and crossventilation encourages users to occupy and circulate through these terraced balconies, facilitating multisensory interaction between CIC users occupying both planar and sectionally adjacent program.
Mass anchored on existing site. Ground floor becomes dedicated to public space
Mass is divided into two structural systems: Upper mass = Truss Lower mass = Concrete Core
STRUCTURE
Anchored to an auditorium and concrete service core, a tapered truss system encompasses the upper floors and spans to the north, creating shaded exterior pavilion space on the ground floor. Voids are introduced into the structure, further lightening the dead load while providing the pavilion space with natural lighting, enabling opportunities for greenspace to occupy the ground floor.
STEEL TRUSS
Encompasses the second - fourth floors and tapers to the north
CONCRETE CORE
Comprised of ground floor auditorium, underground parking and service core
FACADE ASSEMBLY
Provides strategic interior/extrerior shading while reducing solar gain
Relatively modest floor to floor heights facilitate stronger visual connections between sectionally adjacent programs, enhancing the experiential quality of the atrium spaces. These atriums also act as an effective counterbalance to the ceiling plane, embellishing interior spaces with an increased sense of openness and verticality.
patrick ceguera patrickceguera@email.arizona.edu 925.550.3741 38121863
COURTYARD / DONUT TYPOLOGY
SIMPLIFICATION OF TYPOLOGY
ELEVATE TO CREATE PUBLIC SPACE
PROGRAM REDISTRIBUTION
Gensler Los Angeles, Summer ‘15 BWS Architects, Sep ‘14-May ‘15 AIAS Marketing Chair, ‘14-present Tau Sigma Delta Honors Society AIA SA Design Excellence Nominee - Spring ‘14, Fall ‘14, Sping ‘15 ABA Portfolio Competition, ‘15, ‘16 Archon Prize Finalist, Spring ‘14 Project Location: Prague 7, CZ Project Type: Hotel & Transit Hub Course: Design Studio 6- urban form The revitalization of the Bubny site creates a node of activity within Prague that will attract people, both tourists and locals. The northern waterfront in particular will see increase in activity due to the implementation of shopping, entertainment, and a revitalized pedestrian friendly waterfront. To provide for this increase in traffic and capitalize on the economy of tourism, a waterfront hotel is implemented on the site, and was my focus area for 3 weeks of this project. The mixed use hotel provides a connection back to the existing transit hub via a bridge with retail and cafes that leads you inside the hotel. Formally, the building plays on the common courtyard typology, creating a dynamic public space on the ground floor that frames the sky from below.
levels 2 & 3
ROOMS level 4
TRAIN
SERVICE
S ROOM TRAIN level 5
ROOMS level 6
RESTAURANT VIEW
WAIT
ROOMS
ROOMS
REC
ROOMS ROOMS
level 1
LOBBY
ROOMS ROOMS ROOMS
BAR & RESTAURANT
University of Arizona 2011-2016 Bachelor of Architecture
ROOMS
BALLROOM
RETAIL VIEW RETAIL
A Temporary Stay : Prague 7 Waterfront Hotel & Transit Hub
POOL
University of Arizona / 2016
BALLROOM
level 7
TRANSIT HUB
rammed earth :: regional technology using earth from the site
Caitlin Kessler
minimal impact :: building touches two points and bridges above
program diagram :: intimate spaces below + social spaces above
cjk2012@email.arizona.edu 480.313.1530 AIAS Membership Number :: 38268774
SANCTUARY
University of Arizona :: Class of 2017
LEARNING CENTER
SOCIAL HALL INFO
Anchoring + Extending :: Mountain Vista Unitarian Universalist Campus entrance to campus
site p plan la an
EDUCATION University of Arizona 2012-2017 B. Arch :: Honors College LEADERSHIP AIAS Vice-President Fundraising Director 2nd Yr Representative 1st Yr Representative
2015 2014-2015 2013-2014 2012-2013
Tau Sigma Delta
2014 -
258 2 2580 580 80
gallery space
sanctuary
natturre ch chapell
2590 90
EXPERIENCE 25 2590
Arch History + Theory Teaching Assistant
2015 -
Drachman Institute Student Researcher
Summer 15
GLHN Architects + Engineers Intern
Summer 14 longitudinal section
PROJECT CONCEPT Located in Northwest Tucson, the Mountain Vista Unitarian Universalist Campus has a unique relationship with the site, anchoring into the desert soil and extending toward the sky. Rammed earth guides you as you enter the campus, reaching from the earth, layer by layer, supporting the light structure composed of glass and steel. There is a balance between the natural and the man-made. As you
see the rammed earth rising up from you stand on. You are connected to the desert. The campus highlights this connection between people and landscape.
WELCOME unitarian universalist congregation of northwest tucson
Amanda Schwarz & Ryan Baxter
WEAVING THE NARRATIVE Stories are as much a part of the land as the people who dwell on it. The Navajo tradition of weaving anddostorytelling is from a lens to relate to this landscape. How you tell one story the many? How do you tell one story from the many? Arranged in long curves, the buildings follow the topography, flowing along the surface of the earth.
anschwarz@email.arizona.edu / rybaxter@email.arizona.edu 520.870.3236 / 520.310.0135 38118961 / 38408780
Box demonstrates Average lifespan
Box demonstrates Average lifespan
University of Arizona / 2016
Timeline
NARRATIVE LANDSCAPE : The Navajo Code Talkers Museum and Veterans’ Center
Box and Whisker Plot
Timeline
Box and Whisker Plot PEARL HARBOR PEARL HARBOR FAMILY EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION DEVELOPING THE CODE CODE IN COMBAT COMING HOME
NAVAJO HISTORY
TIMELINE NAVAJO HISTORY
“Preserve and pass on the legacy and language of the Navajo Code Talkers while educating the Public and Providing a place of refuge, renewal and healing for all veterans, military personnel and their families.” - Navajo Code Talkers Association Mission Statement
The Lives of the Code Talkers The Lives of the Code Talkers
LEGACY LEGACY
Tau Sigma Delta
2013 - Present
Ministry of Design
2015 / Summer
NAVAJO HISTORY NAVAJO HISTORY
MUSEUM LOOP ON HILLTOP
Navajo History
University of Arizona 2011 - 2016 B. Arch. / Honors College / GPA: 3.9 2011 - Present 2015 - 2016 2014 - 2015
LEGACY
Timeline
AMANDA SCHWARZ
AIAS Past President President
LEGACY
FAMILY EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION DEVELOPING THE CODE CODE IN COMBAT COMING HOME
Timeline
Early Childhood PEARL HARBOR
FAMILY
Education
enlistment
Early PEARL HARBOR FAMILYHistory EARLY CHILDHOOD THE CODE CODE IN COMBAT COMING HOME Navajo FAMILYEDUCATION DEVELOPING Education enlistment Childhood NAVAJO HISTORY FAMILY EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION The DEVELOPING THE CODE CODE IN COMBAT COMING HOME Code Developing The Legacy COMING HOME training Hall of Remembrance Hall ofnames IN Combat the Code
NAVAJO HISTORY
Hall of Remembrance
The Legacy
COMING HOME
The Code IN Combat
Developing the Code
training
Navajo History
FAMILY
Early Childhood
Education
enlistment
The Legacy
COMING HOME
The Code IN Combat
Developing the Code
training
LEGACY LEGACY
Hall ofnames
LONG-TERM CARE VETERANS’ CLINIC
Hall of Remembrance
Hall ofnames
Rick Joy Architects 2014 / Summer RYAN BAXTER University of Arizona 2011 - 2016 B. Arch. / Honors College / GPA: 3.7 AIAS
2014 - Present
Tau Sigma Delta President
2013 - Present 2014 - 2016
[TRANS-] journal Senior Editor
2013 - Present 2014 - 2015
Teaching Assistant
2014 - Present
VETERANS’ LODGE MUSEUM LOOP
The Code IN Combat The Code IN Combat
Developing the Code training Developing the Code training
FAMILY The Legacy
Location : Window Rock, Navajo Nation Type : Museum & Veterans’ Campus Location Climate : Semiarid Squarefootage : 85,000 sq ft This project synthesizes personal conversations with Navajo Code Talkers Association, research on their stories, Navajo culture, and site conditions. All work is being used for their fundraising campaign.
The Legacy
LANDSCAPE FLOWS ACROSS MUSEUM ROOF, LEADING TO IWO JIMA REMEMBRANCE MONUMENT
SITE PLAN OF MUSEUM AND VETERANS’ CAMPUS
FAMILY Navajo History Navajo History COMING HOME
HALL of Rememberance
COMING HOME
HALL of NAMES
Early Childhood
HALL of NAMES
Early Education Childhood Education
enlistment
The Code IN Combat enlistment Developing the Code
HALL of Rememberance
training FAMILY The Legacy Navajo History
HALL of NAMES
Early Childhood Education enlistment
COMING HOME
CODE IN OTHER CONFLICTS EXHIBIT
CODE IN OTHER CONFLICTS EXHIBIT
LEGACY EXHIBIT
LEGACY EXHIBIT
HALL of Rememberance
NAVAJO HISTORY + CULTURE EXHIBIT
NAVAJO HISTORY + CULTURE EXHIBIT
DEVELOPING THE CODE E
DEVELOPING THE CODE EXHIBIT
Embracing the importance of storytelling as it relates to the earth, this scheme flows along landscape. The Navajo tradition of weaving became a lens to relate to the site, and tell the story through the architecture.
SECTION THROUGH MUSEUM LOOP [SHOWING BRIDGE GALLERY]
Jaime Inostroza jinostroza@taliesin.edu 602 575 7214 38552441 Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture Taliesin Extension Patagonia, Chile.
Education: Taliesin Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture (M.Arch 2014-Present) -Vice President AIAS University Of Valparaiso -Bachelor Architecture Degree year 2010. -High distintion Final degree Project. -First place generation 2010 Work Experience: -(2011-2014) Government of Chile. -Position:Principal of Recovering Historical Houses of Valparaíso
View towards entrance
View towards Rosa Mosqueta Garden
Site Plan Taliesin Patogonia
Description: The studio´s focus was to create a campus extension for Taliesin, The Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. Taliesin West is an eccentric place on the fringe of urban Phoenix, that embraces the Sonoran Desert as a garden. Similarly, Taliesin Patagonia embraces the legacy of the frontier by siting a new campus in the pampas, the
A
A´
N
View towards access Ramp
3d Model Project
Southern tip Chile. The idea was to shape a vigilant border of light by creating a furrow in the site that marks the entrance of the school. Beyond the entrance is found two wings that both open up to and hold close a garden courtyard offering views of the vast pampas.
Section A - A´
Corridor
Bedroom
Rosa Mosqueta terrace Garden
River
C a r l
T o m s e n
K o h u t
ckohut@taliesin.edu 6 0 3 | 9 8 6 | 8 3 5 1 Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture | 2016
I C A R U S S H E L T E R Not to Scale
E D U C AT I O N SCAD
B.F.A Architecture | 2013 Savannah, GA
FLLWSA
Masters of Architecture | 2016 Scottsdale, AZ & Spring Green, WI
EXTENDED LANDSCAPE
EQUIPPED ARMATURE
EPHEMERAL OCTOHEDRAN
CORE GEOMETRY
EXPLORED GEOMTERY
BROKEN GEOMETRY
ARROYO VIEW
DECREASED MASS
SEPARATED QUOIN
EXPERIENCE LACOSTE VERNISSAGE Curated Exhibition | 2012 Lacoste, France
BEACON BUILDERS
Lead Draftsmen | 2013 Savannah, GA
QUINN BUILDERS Journeyman | 2013 Wolfeboro, NH
TIANHUA A.D.C.L
Architectural Intern | 2014 Shanghai, China
XCOOP
Resident Workshop | 2014 Port-au-Prince, Haiti
HOGBACK PUMP STATION
Architecture Consultant | 2014 Shiprock, NM
BOURIL DESIGN STUDIO Architectural Intern | 2015 Madison, Wisconsin
PROJECT DESCRIPTION An off-grid shelter at the base of the McDowell Mountains. Two components - one of longevity and the other of ephemerality - provide both a shelter for the present and armature for the future. The core geometry, an octahedron, continues the evolution of plutonic solids seen in neighboring shelters. Built by the son of a craftsmen, the wooden louvres and structure will melt in the desert sun and reveal an armature for future students to build upon.
OPENING IN THE MORNING
DAY NINE
NIGHT ILLUMINATION
DAY TEN
DAY FOURTEEN
DAY FIFTEEN
DAY SIXTEEN
DAY EIGHTEEN
Samuel Martin smartin@taliesin.edu 1 (206) 419 - 5367 38346281 Taliesin, The Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture - 2016 Taliesin Rail - Nomadic Campus for FLLWSA
Master of Architecture Taliesin - FLLWSA 2016 B.S. Industrial Design W. Washington University, 2013 Architect-in-Training Blank Studio, March 2015 - Current Accolades 2016 1st Place - Facade Charette, Taliesin 2015 1st Place - AIA Phoenix Metro 2015 1st Place - AIA Arizona Student 2015 The School Scholarship, Taliesin Leadership Joylist Coordinator, 2016 Vice Pres. Taliesin AIAS, 2014-15 Taliesin Rail Several studios after ‘Threshold,’ students were invited to reexamine what a third Taliesin campus could be. This nomadic solution is designed to bring ten students & three faculty to different urban centers as leaders in new urban practices. Blending traditional Taliesin communal spaces (like the Blue Loggia room), T.Rail also employs a facade of weathering steel, telegraphing to the non-nomadic Taliesin students the time that has passed between departure + return. A mobile facility equipped with the tools, technology and transit needed by contemporary students of Architecture- while embracing our storied traditions & lifestyle.
Final Deliverable 2’ x 9’ continuos scroll, developed as best means of presenting a linear architecture.