SD State DoARCH Portfolio

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3508 S Bahnson Ave Sioux Falls, SD 57103 (605)376-8622 ajkrug@jacks.sdstate.edu

ALEX

JOSEPH

KRUG Education

Fall10-Spring14 Fall08-Spring10

Awards

Fall11

Spring12 Spring13

Organizations

Work Experience

Summer11

Winter11-Summer12

Fall09-Present

Winter10-Summer13

Skills

South Dakota State University BS Arch South Dakota State University 2 years of Civil Engineering Barnstorming Charrette Honorable Mention Independent Insurance Scholarship First Place Sandbox Design Charrette Published Drawing Oakwood Literary Magazine American Insitute of Architecture Students Student Advisory Board Chairmember SD State World Affairs and Language Club KSDJ Radio DJ Intermeral Swimming Camelot Intermediate School Tutor SDOT Bridge Crew - Sioux Falls, SD Repaired and maintained interstate and highway bridges. Brownstone Restaurant - Brookings, SD Cooked and prepped specialty dishes along with perpairing daily meals. KSDJ Radio Music Director/ Station Manager - Brookings, SD Updated music selections, kept track of technical equipment, formed a yearly budget, and managed staff and student DJs. DoARCH Student Worker - Brookings, SD Fabricated and restored needed furniture, assembled and disassembled work spaces, surveyed and formed site models for the department, supervised students in the wood shop and assisted with incoming student tours. Proficient in Adobe Illustrator, Indesign, Photoshop and Audition, AutoCAD, FormZ, and Rhinoceros. Knowledgeable with Revit, Grasshopper, Vray, and RhinoVault. Studied four years of German language studies. Novice craftsman and metal worker. Efficient with welding tools, passing the standard skill proficiency test. Skilled with hand drafting and modeling.


ARCH-452 | JESSSICA GARICA-FRITZ | SPRING14

GENERATION: I

GENERATION: II

GENERATION: III

GENERATION: IV

GENERATION: V

GENERATION: VI

GENERATION: VII

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO

This quick yet in-depth project of how a existing historic structure and used as a multi program structure in downtown Aberdeen, South Dakota focused on many different iterations of ideas. The idea of how an addition that could be a palimpsest, mediation, composition or complement to the downtown area was used to drive some aspect of each model in each generation. Some models focused on one of these parameters, others became a hybrid of two or more of these factors. The ideas of how a building could be vertically opposite to the rest of downtown Aberdeen and how a program could be organized off of an axis that was horizontal to Main Street while both maintained the consistency of the existing building faces were what formed my last for generations of models.


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ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


TENSILE STRUCTURES The goal of the tensile workshop was to experiment with the many different techniques that can make a lightweight yet incredibly strong

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


DIGITAL NOTATION The first process to this compilation of digital drawings was to photograph physical space so that the image became an abstraction of the quality of real space, much like an architectural drawing. Next a collage of the images was created using digital software to evoke movement and movement in time. A 2D drawing was then made to interpret underlying forces, geometers and structures. Lastly, a 3D model was created in Rhino by extruding and further interpreting the spaces and shapes that were made.

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Seeing Space

Collage Space

Analytical Diagram Drawing

Composite Drawing

Topographic Construction

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


The Mississippi Research Library was geared heavily toward using the circulation of a given precedent of an existing library along with building out of a stackable unit that is standard throughout the building. The precedent that I studied for this project was that of the Minneapolis Central Library. Before I took a visit to the building I played around with several different ideas of what circulated through the building. The diagram posted at the bottom right corner showed the circulation of water throughout the Minneapolis Central Library. I later changed the circulation pattern to something more of a push and pull approach. The patron to the research library would travel in and out throughout carried over to the patterning of the bricks. The more drastic the circulation change the greater the brick pattern would push and pull.

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


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The idea behind the Dairy Milking Center was first design a stacking unit then design a building with a set program out of said stacking unit. For the stacking units, I began to experiment with way in which I could make the block porous. The reasoning behind this initial idea was to allow rain water to run down and into the brick so that the rain run off could be directed and captured instead of pooling around the building and flowing into the cow barn. I first used paper in hopes that once the module would dry I could soak the block in water and have the paper dissolve. I later found that using a fast drying material and mixing it with ice cubes would work in making the block porous. The building was then designed in a way that all the service space would be in the center and the public and cows would share the outer ring of the building

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


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ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


SANDBOX

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


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Having the chance to work for the South Dakota State Department of Architecture has been a blessing for being able to hone in on my fabrication skills. Because of this opportunity I have been able to narrow my interests in architecture to more of the design build practice. Having the facilities and employer that allowed me to experiment and physically model as well as digitally model has smart and simple design possible. The three summers that I worked for DoARCH, I have been able to weld, craft objects with both wood and metal, survey and model potential building sites, and assist with the overall creation of the department.

many different Summer workers.

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


One of many square tube table frames that were used for student desks. Quick mockups for both structure and design were assembled until the table was lightweight and sturdy.

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The department had acquired many different pieces of furniture what were very bulky. Since DoARCH was still new and trying to find its niche on campus, the idea of putting all the furniture on casters was implemented in my work so that everything was easy to move.

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


These processes both show a time-lapse of some of the projects I worked on. The photos above and below show cubicles made from hollow core and refurbished for future use.

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


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TRAVEL CHICAGO | LONDON BERLIN PRAGUE | SAVANNAH and student worker. Being able to travel opens the mind to new ideas and possibilities while also strengthening the connection of what is taught in the classroom. The sites, and surroundings that are witnessed outside of your comfort zone begin to shape you not only as a designer but also as a citizen in this globalized world. CHICAGO12

Chicago was a great place to see how the modern skyscraper has shaped the American city and the high contrast to the wide-open plains of South Dakota. This experience reiterated how urban design affects its surrounding neighbors. SAVANNAH14 In Savannah, I studied how the simple yet complex design of the Oglethorpe Plan broke the city up into different wards and influenced the activities that began to inhabit Savannah. This unique grid system has made Savannah a prime example of the efficiency that comes with a well designed city.

ALEX J. KRUG | UNDERGRADUATE PORTFOLIO


LONDON BERLIN PRAGUE13 Although I only spent two weeks in three very different countries, I feel like I have taken away enough knowledge for rich history, iconic buildings and their structural makeup, has influenced me as a design student by showing me that an open mind and conciseness to your surroundings are very important.

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Dear DoARCH, When I was very young I never really gave a career much thought except for being a train conductor. But like my interests at that age, it quickly changed. The sporadic mind of my childhood was guided by my constant need to learn as much as I could while still being active. This concept, to me is learning by doing. It was something that my father placed in my mind and it seemed to have made sense even at an early age so it stuck. Since he was very active in woodworking and construction, I picked up building as an interest and would love to make little cities and buildings out of rocks, sticks, and whatever else was readily available. When not building outdoors, I would sit and watch my older brother play Sim City. With the passion for building and planning I soon decided I wanted to be an architect. I found myself drawing up floor plans and sections of huge buildings, ships and five-leveled airplanes. Then one day the dream of being an architect came crashing down. I had read in a Junior Achievement class that architects were beginning to be replaced by design catalogs. All a client would need to do would be to pick out a pre-designed floor plane and let the architect give him or her an estimate of what the project would cost. I carried on into middle school with the desire to build but in a different sense. I would build with melodies and lyrics along with my newly acquired musical talent. I put all my thoughts of what I wanted to grow up to be into what I wanted to be in that moment; a student of the idea but having better than average skills in mathematics and physics, the career seemed promising. I found myself here at South Dakota State enrolled in the civil engineering department, but was not enjoying myself. I told myself I that my original dream career fell into my lap. I had heard that an architecture program was starting up here at State so I went to see my engineering any longer, so I parted with the program. It was that summer before the first architecture classes started that I knew architecture was truly for me. I had gotten ahold of Brian Rex, the new department head, and ask to meet up with him to get a quick run down of what would be in store for me. A Flurry of ideas, projects, and precedence filled my brain and has carried me to where I am today. I have found my niche in architecture and have been program and department rise from the ground. I have been blessed that I have gotten to be so deeply involved in the building of DoARCH and I would be honored if I could continue my schooling here and help my fellow underclassmen to grow. As a graduate student I would enjoy sharing what I have learned and gained with other architecture students and continue to design and experiment with building techniques and ideas both new and old. Sincerely Yours, Alex J Krug


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