Portfolio 2016

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Andrei Olteanu

Portfolio 1


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Andrei Olteanu date of birth june 12ᵗʰ 1990 nationality Romanian home address Mihai Bravu 96, Ploiești phone +40 726 77 11 42 e-mail andrei.olte@yahoo.ro

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Work background 2015-present architect, designer 2014

intern architect

Trend Furniture (Bucharest, Romania) Ensamble Studio (Madrid, Spain)

Educational background 2013-2014

École Nationale Superieure d’Architecture (Versailles, France) Erasmus programme

2009-2015

„Ion Mincu” University of Architecture and Urban Planning (Bucharest, Romania) bachelor + masters degree

2005-2009

„Ion Luca Caragiale” National College (Ploiești, Romania)

Workshops and other activities 2014

developped the entry pavilions at the 2014 Solar Decathlon (Versailles, France)

2013

Dynamic Fields, international workshop (Bucharest, Romania)

2013

exhibited at the Annual Architecture Convention (Bucharest, Romania)

2013

Parametric design and digital fabrication, course, UAUIM (Bucharest, Romania)

2013

Introduction to complex systems, course, Santa Fe Institute (online)

2013

Integrated planning and design for urban peripheries in Europe, ERASMUS International Workshop (Bucharest, Romania)

2013

speaker on Augmented Reality in Medicine II, National Students’ Congress (Bucharest, Romania)

2012

volunteer at Romanian Congress of Architecture and Design (Bucharest, Romania)

2012

speaker on Short History of Architecture from the Beginning to Tomorrow (Ploiești, Romania)

2012

speaker on Augmented Reality in Medicine, National Students’ Congress (Constanța, Romania)

2011

Introduction to Parametric Design and Digital Fabrication, workshop (Bucharest, Romania)

2010

speaker on Ploiești of the Future, Students’ Congress (Ploiești, Romania) 6


Skills BIM

Autodesk Revit

CAD

AutoCAD

3D modelling parametric

rendering environmental

image editing vector graphics

Rhinoceros 3D

3D engine

Grasshopper, Kangaroo, Galapagos vRay

practical

augmented reality

Ecotect

Languages romanian english french

native speaker proficient (A degree, University of Cambridge CAE) intermediate

portuguese

beginner

spanish

beginner

russian

beginner

Interests 爱

â

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Adobe Photoshop Corel Draw, Adobe Illustrator Unity 3D model making, construction site abilities ARToolkit


Block Apartments Bucharest, Romania school project, UAUIM tutors: Ioan Lucăcel, Radu Negoiță team: Bogdan Tomuleț, Cătălin Mihai, Andrei Olteanu

Camelot Research Centre South Cadbury, England competition team: Eliza Tomescu, Răzvan-Ioan Molie, Andrei Olteanu

Tourbillon Bucharest, Romania international workshop tutors: Patrik Schumacher, Hooman Talebi team: Orsolya Günthner, Eliza Culea, Sarah Safaoui, Irina Ilie, Andrei Olteanu

pl

Ploiești Hub Ploiești, Romania diploma project tutors: Ionuț Anton, Augustin Ioan

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Blooming Gate Versailles, France constructed project project managers: Klaas de Rycke, Wendy Geeraert team: Ernest Bordoy, Neyda Moko Steadler, Laura Guimarães, Javier Montero

Suprablock

SB

Boston, USA proposal project managers: Anton Garcia Abril, Debora Mesa Molina team: Andrei Olteanu, Federica Zunino, Simone Cavallo, Massimo Loia

Teleferic Grand Hotel Poiana Brașov, Romania interior design in collaboration with TRENDfurniture, Eugen Buta team: Adrian Stan, Anda Dănilă, Mihai Ștefan, Andrei Olteanu

Ana Pan & Ana Baking Co. Bucharest, Romania interior design in collaboration with TRENDfurniture, Corvin Cristian Studio team: Adrian Stan, Andrei Olteanu

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Block Apartments Bucharest, Romania school project, UAUIM tutors: Ioan Lucăcel, Radu Negoiță team: Bogdan Tomuleț, Cătălin Mihai, Andrei Olteanu

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physical model This project is one of the most comprehensive tasks in UAUIM’s curriculum, as it encompasses all types of approach: the urban integration, architectural design and also the detailing part. The solution here is three dierent volumes that resonate with the heterogenous surroundings, opting for a playful geometry and combining personal space with the latest energy eicient technologies. All this is put together in such a way that it maximizes dwelling confort: semiprivate yard, a facade system that maximizes interior space, access to the roofs and so on.

northern facade

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Yona Friedman Mobile structures

cells + structure

all dierent

easy to optimize space

no two identical spaces

One of the primary concerns was how to integrate such an ensemble into this really diverse area. The major boulevard, the former industrial area and the old, low-rise urban fabric.

?

How can these pressures be applied to the project?

reconcile fabrics three types of urban fabric

aerial view 13


The structure-cell idea enabled the appartments to bear a free approach in terms of space. Thus, even if there are some ďŹ xed points like the vertical circulations or the piping system, the spaces are composed in a free manner, as if their addition were natural.

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oor plan 3 bedroom apartment scale 1:50


The public space in front of the buildings, towards the boulevard is a take on the former market that used to be on the site. It is thought as a directional public space that reminds of the corridors in the old market, as well as sugesting a break in the velocity of the busy Grivița boulevard. This also constitutes an open junction. This junction brings together the private block buildings with their heavy presence and the ever-busy street, with high velocities and a changing dynamic, so this acts more like a filter. A filter between day-to-day private space and day-to-day outside world.

further info:

typical floor plan uauim.ro/galerie/ proiecte/956 15


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Camelot Research Centre South Cadbury, England competition team: Eliza Tomescu, Răzvan-Ioan Molie, Andrei Olteanu

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Tales always come from the dimness of another time and place that somehow still feel present. That’s why the edge between story and reality is full of fringes and gradients, but the distance inbetween is always worth a journey. The Camelot Research and Visitors Center has to respond to its demands by suggesting a journey between light and darkness, between reality and tale, but in the same time creating a feasible collaboration between the public and the researchers, while preserving their ows and necessary spaces.

square plan centrality minimum extent

light route le : exhibition right: admin

enclosure exhibition encircling walls

unity rooms related to each other

towers grouping the functions

light luminous route separating spaces

axial orientation volumes towards the monument

rest waiting areas between spaces

up the museum extends vertically

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the elevators

the light

vertical circulation for every the spaces, from exhibitions to restaurants a luminous line is the conducting element, that lead the flows throughout the buildings

the castle

the volumes are placed in such a way that it resembles a medieval typology

the tower

the vertical axis is the gradient between the two worlds

the unity

the volumes ar all oriented towards the same central point, a preexisting King Arthur’s fountain

the route

on the le , public areas; on the right, administration areas; inbetween, rest areas.

first floor plan

ground floor plan

cross section Legend Tower 19


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Tourbillon Bucharest, Romania international workshop, 2013 tutors: Patrik Schumacher, Hooman Talebi team: Orsolya GĂźnthner, Eliza Culea, Sarah Safaoui, Irina Ilie, Andrei Olteanu

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The Dynamic Fields – Responsive Architecture Workshop, which took place in Bucharest, July 16-29, resulted in five innovative prototypes. The workshop’s purpose was the understanding of how the advancement of digital technology is helping architects respond to the complexity of the environment surrounding them. The five prototypes (Turbillon, Interactive Field, Dynamic Muqarnas, Project 86 and Wind Mapper) are to be exposed in the near future at different fairs or events. Materials, technique and geometry were the research fields and Rhinoceros, Grasshopper şi Arduino were the digital tools. The workshop participants came from different educational experiences and cultural backgrounds: students or graduates, architects, interior, product and urban designers, and engineers. geometries exposed to dynamic fields

final project 22


We were given the task of designing a surface that performs in a field of constant flow – in our case air. The challenge was finding a simple and effective operation that would alter static behaviors into performant ones. The base material with which we have started and finished our study is paper. Using the childhood experience in the art of Kirigami, we have discovered how cuts and folds can modify the behavior of a paper sheet from a simple plane into a responsive three dimensional surface. During the course of our research, the "fold and cut system" was replaced by digital design and automated manufacturing, leaving us with the single and effective action of cutting. Through repetitive and alternative cuts applied on different geometries we have modeled multiple performance results and chose for our final presentation those shapes that offer two specific qualities – vertical performance combined with control. The gradual testing of the various shapes started with squares and went as far as interconnected spirals and each step has allowed us to fully comprehend the implications that the nature of the cut-line has on the final result. Our project has therefore crystallized under the form of a large scale responsive surface to air flow that fully exhibits the potential and synergy between a simple action – cutting, a single material – paper, and digital technologies.

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The final project is a long table, 380 x 80 cm, with various cuts, controlled in Grasshopper, that play with the wind flow in order to achieve different geometries. This table has a set of fans underneath, that are positioned in such a way that they make sure the air flow is uniform. With the help of Arduino, the fans can dose their power and the new ’topography’ can be modified in order to better study the effects of the dynamic field.

just

cut

and

blow air

cut

cut

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developed with:

Rhinoceros 3D

Grasshopper

Arduino

further info:

archdaily.com/ 421143

parametrica.ro/ projects 25


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Ploiești Hub Ploiești, Romania diploma project tutors: Ionuț Anton, Augustin Ioan

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street level panorama

Ploiești is the ninth biggest city in Romania and it is going through a period of great economic success. It is one of the best performing cities in terms of startups and freelancing, and it relies on one of the most important universities in the country. The infrastructure of the city is also one of the most dynamic in the country. The heavily industrialised profile that marked the past of the city needs to evolve, and the long-term strategy focuses on the change to a more sustainable future.

community

logistics

HUB technologic field

business environment academic field

The industry is changing everywhere, shi ing the focus from industrialism. The fabrication methods are evolving and creation processes become more and more democratised. Freelancers and startups can’t find their place in office buildings that seem to have remained accessible only to big corporations. The need for more flexible offices determined the creation of coworking spaces, suitable for a more dynamic use. However, there is no coworking space in the entire Ploiești metropolitan area, which is estimated at around 350 000 inhabitants.

building must host different types of users the building shoud feature informal areas as well as office spaces

In its strive to find a new identity, the city must keep up with the new typologies that make the shi from the industrialism.

the building is to be connected to the most important resource: community

the building must be like a hub it should facilitate interchanges it should absorb and act as an attractor

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underground plan

ground oor plan 29 facade detail


street view The building features a gradient that aims to help its users: each level is designed for different types of business, from freelancing to teams of ten members. A specific type of segregation has been implemented in the building: noise oriented placement. There are quiet rooms for spontaneous meetings, regular office cubicles, silent office areas and also informal spaces for meetings. Serendipity can happen anywhere. It can happen while waiting in front of the elevator door or while boiling water for a cup of tea. Formal and informal areas in the building are interwoven but protected from one another. All these zones are placed around two vertical nodes, that are linked with a central circular corridor. Then, the informal zones cut through the office space to become more ubiquitous.

second floor plan

vertical nodes 30

informal areas

work space


As the facade can become more open or more ermetic, so does it’s permisiveness towards direct insolation. Although usable space has a rather regular shape, (a prism), it still is subject to different values of the insolation. Moreover, the openings in the second skin could act as a wind gauge in different types of weather. The performance of the second skin can leave efficiency as the sole criterion for the layers underneath. aerial view

facade panels before genetic optimisation

aerial view

concept stages

Ecotect insulation analysis 31


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Blooming Gate Versailles, France finished project, 2014 project managers: Klaas de Rycke, Wendy Geeraert team: Ernest Bordoy, Neyda Moko Steadler, Laura Guimarães, Javier Montero

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The project is meant as an access gate to the Solar Decathlon international competition which was held in 2014 in Versailles. Wooden butteries act as bricks in this multiple arch structure and are locked together mechanically. Every single buttery is dierent and is actually a pair of two triangular wooden panels that are cut by a CNC machine and then are articulated together using metal pieces.

axonometric view

module A33

construction process 34


interlocking

interlocking detail

construction phase 2 joints view 35


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Suprablock Boston, Massachussetts proposal project managers: Anton Garcia Abril, Debora Mesa Molina team: Andrei Olteanu, Federica Zunino, Simone Cavallo, Massimo Loia

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Suprablock is thought as a multiperformative system that develops the urban grid in the three dimensions, detaching from the tyranny of the car. Optimizing the use of the air, the system defines aerial streets and public spaces, communicated by means of shared vertical cores. The spaces in between infrastructural lines become the empty “volumetric plots” to be filled over time and according to needs. The open system designed can be developed in many ways and incorporate manifold agents in the process, using urban planning strategies.

concept

In this prototype that can grow with the same freedom and logic in the horizontal and vertical dimensions, the concept of the “building” completely dilutes, creating a hybrid where architecture and infrastructure find a new balance, where isolated buildings are transformed into a hyper-connected network. The construction logic of this system follows that of the prefabrication and li ing operations required for its construction, so that an on-site factory can efficiently fabricate and position the material saving transportation and manipulation costs.

site plan

cross section

As a case study, Suprablock Boston, inserts itself over the easternmost segment of Massachusetts Turnpike (Interstate 90), connecting the neighborhoods divided by the highway, resolving a physical and acoustical barrier and feeding the city with new open spaces, facilities and programs. The functionality of the highway remains intact but the space it occupy is bridged and recovered for the city.

cross section

(text courtesy of Ensamble Studio)

model 40


further info:

ensamble.info 41


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Teleferic Grand Hotel Poiana Brașov, Romania interior design. finished, 2016 in collaboration with: TRENDfurniture, Eugen Buta team: Adrian Stan, Mihai Ștefan, Anda Dănilă, Eugen Buta, Andrei Olteanu

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further info:

telefericgrandhotel.ro

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Ana Pan & Ana Baking Co. Bucharest, Romania interior design. ďŹ nished, 2015-2016 in collaboration with: TRENDfurniture, Corvin Cristian Studio, Inegal Design team: Adrian Stan, Andrei Olteanu

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Ana Pan Pompeiu Bucharest, Romania in collaboration with: Corvin Cristian Studio team: Adrian Stan, Andrei Olteanu

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Ana Baking Co. Vitan Bucharest, Romania in collaboration with: Inegal Design team: Adrian Stan, Andrei Olteanu

further info:

anapan.ro 49


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Andrei Olteanu 2016

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