Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
2a. City Year Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out C Y for City Year) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2a. City Year Meeting Table
Gage Park High School, City Year Mentoring Room - Backof the Yards, Chicago, IL (2012) This is a schematic design for a tutoring classroom on the South Side of Chicago, currently in the funding stages. This is an AND-OR designed project.
1. Custom Work Desk w/ Locker and/or Cabinet/shelving New Branding/identity Supergraphic for City Year Space City Year Supergraphic
1. Custom Work Desk w/ Locker and/or Cabinet/shelving
(Table Legs Spell out C Y for City Year) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2a. City Year Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out C Y for City Year) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2b. front most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out F m for Front Most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2b. front most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out F m for Front Most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2b. front most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out F m for Front Most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
3. Custom Leisure seating
2C. Center most Meeting Table
3. Custom Leisure seating
2C. Center most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell Out C m for center most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
(Table Legs Spell Out C m for center most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
The graphic is the initial focus of this interior and essentially expands into an architectural situation through its supergraphic quality, creating SUPERTHICK surfaces.
Perspetival Plan of Room w/ furniture in Individual Layout
Interior Perspective rendering of Proposed City Year Space (phase 1 & 3) Interior of City Year Room
2a. City Year Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out C Y for City Year) (mobile/easily repositioned)
2C. Center most Meeting Table
3. Custom Leisure seating
(Table Legs Spell Out C m for center most) (mobile/easily repositioned) 1. Custom Work Desk w/ Locker and/or Cabinet/shelving
2b. front most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out F m for Front Most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
By shifting focus on the interior from surface to volume, we brought this project back into the realm of architectural production. Boom!Teach! This classroom looks to cost effective ways of implementing color and form to create playful and multipurpose volumes.
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Perspective plan of city year room (phase 1 & 3) - Collective & rearrangeable meeting space
By implementing a cost-effective supergraphic to affect the overall interior easily, this teachers work room extends its graphic identity on surface into the furniture in volume. We attempt to create a superthick graphic volume in the room where the parts are not only cohesive and relative, but variant, mobile and exciting to use.
1. Custom Work Desk w/ Locker and/or Cabinet/shelving
Plan Perspective showing how the walls of the space change with introducion of paint (phase 1)
A teachers work room is sacred time where they don’t have to be around their students. Borderline sanctuary and place to let loose (so to speak), this project looks at ways to encourage change in teaching methods through a change in a teachers work environment.
C: 305-343-6285
Perspective plan of city year room (phase 1 & 3) - Room divided into 3 spaces: Left - leisure, center - seperated meeting tables, and Right - work tables
BOOM! Tutoring ROOM
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3. Custom Leisure seating
design process shaped by culture of City Year
Perspetival Plan of Supergraphic Layout
City
year
front
most
center
2C. Center most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell Out C m for center most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
most
2a. City Year Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out C Y for City Year) (mobile/easily repositioned)
1. Custom Work Desk w/ Locker and/or Cabinet/shelving Perspetival Plan of Room w/ furniture in Collective Layout Letter Formal Logic for Furniture Creation
2b. front most Meeting Table
(Table Legs Spell out F m for Front Most) (mobile/easily repositioned)
Interior rendering of Proposed City YearYear SpaceRoom (phase 1 & 3) Interior Perspective of City
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
How to let Prentice Grow...
Growing
Up
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1
2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647 I want to grow up!!
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
2
I want to feel young again!
Prentice
(up, down, around, inside, Chicago Prize 2012 Competition outside, near, far and Entry, Chicago, IL - 2012 in-between) 1. OLD DOG (Old Prentice) Prentice Womens Hospital serves 1. OLD (Olda Prentice) as anDOG origin point, figural language for new city making in Chicago. Prentice Womens Hospital serves as an This type of urban narrative allows originforpoint for the development highly figural buildings - soft, of a iconic, fun easy - tomaking act as anin Chicago. language for and new city agent in terms fo speed This urbanizing type of urban narrative allows for and shapes.
highly figural buildings - soft, iconic, fun 2. INFLATE and easy - to act as an urbanizing agent in Allow Prentice’s iconic figural terms fo speed and shapes. column-less floor plan to reproduce itself across the street into a
30% larger floor plate. This acts 2. INFLATE as the maturing agent and is a Allowdirect Prentice’s figural columness responseiconic to Northwestern floor University’s plan to reproduce across the criticism itself of Old Prentice’s inability to sustain the street into a 30% larger floor plate. This 500,000 sq. ft. of new space they acts want. as the and is a direct By maturing inflating the agent current floor plan and of the building into response toshape Northwestern University’s a gigantic second mass across the criticism of Old Prentice’s inability to street, the first inklings of Prentice sustain 500,000 sq. cities ft. ofare new space as athe paradigm for figure they born. want. By inflating the current floor plan 3.and shape of the building into a INFANTALIZE gigantic second mass across From an inflated state, then Prenticethe street, can move into a smaller more the first inklings of Prenticeinfant as a paradigm version of the original Floor Plan, for figure cities are born. adjacent to the “Inflated” tower. “Infant” tower can be a completely different program for the hospital, INFANTALIZE such as administrative or hotel.
3. From an inflated state, then Prentice can move4. into a smaller more COPY-CAT (Prentice City) infant version of The “Prentice is to the the original FloorCity” Plan,complex adjacent completed by erecting an exact “Inflated” tower can be a copy oftower. the Old“Infant” Prentice Women’s Hospital different on Southwest corner of completely program for the the VA Lot. As a model for future hospital, such as administrative or hotel. figural city blocks, “Prentice City” is the first historic building to multiply
without kitsch reproduction 4. COPY-CAT (Prentice City)or abstract repetition. The “Prentice City” complex is completed by erecting an exact copy of the Old Prentic Women’s Hospital on Southwest corner of the VA Lot. As a model for future figural city blocks, “Prentice City” is the first historic building to multpiply without kitsch reproduction or abstract repetition.
4
I just want to be alive!!!
3
I want things to go back to the way they were!!
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
room for Debate Permanent Installation at the Miami Science Museum, Miami, FL 2009-present
This project from PIE Studio was a collaborative effort to reuse trash and materials in non-typical ways. It actively challenged green design standards and championed effect versus building system. This is a space to explore basic energy principles, renewable energy sources, new and emerging energy efficiency technologies, and how these can be brought together to advance sustainable design, without mitigating or dumbing down architectural form. If anything, this interior shows the projective possibility of recycling without looking either worn or green. This room is equipped with different digital interfaces, embedded into the surfaces and furniture, including Snibbe Interactive, Carbon Footprint Interactive table & Storytelling Kiosk.
Entrance showing laser cut and CNC Milled Cork + Gypsum board
Backlit, Laser cut and folded recycled Strathmore Panels
Interlocking Celing Plane made from recycled Soft Foam, CNC Milled
My role in this project was in the schematic design phase and reclaiming materials, later digitally representing them to create a realistic model from recyclables. ***PIE Studio Project - Team: Director: Bannavis Andrew Sribyatta with Adrian Von der Osten, Alejandro Stein, Allen Plasencia, Allan Cabral, Alvaro Velosa, Analise Calleiro, Damian Caballero, Daniel Alonzo, Eric Peterson, Ernest Abuin, Henrik Schoop, Gabriella Sanchez, Juan Damas, George Valdes, Jorge San Martin, Shigehiro Otsuki, Yemail Sanchez.***
Exploded Projection of Room for Debate surfaces
Snibbe Interactive Room showing relaimed wood, rolled up magazine wall and printer paper tube wall.
Reclaimed Magazines wrapped with zip ties to create partition wall
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Dam(n) Inevitable Nature Center, Hoover Dam, Arizona/nevada border, 2012 The Hoover Dam is located in a pivotal tug-of-war between nature and natural resource. Without it, Las Vegas and Los Angeles, or the lost-Las’s of post-modernity, would not exist. Water is the negotiated commodity and the Colorado River is the only loser. The reservoirs will inevitably silt up, if they don’t go dry earlier. Will the only thing for future alien archaeologists to examine be our silt-laden concrete arches? As a narrative, Damn Inevitable describes this future through a story about carving a hole through the Hoover Dam and allowing the Colorado River to flow freely once again. As architecture, this move is a détournement of the culturally accepted use of a dam, where its structure and iconicity is used against itself and inhabited. The nature center is the piece of active program embedded in this stultifying icon of the past.
Graph showing population rise in the Southwest United States versus available drinking water, projecting past our current history
Front Elevation of Nature Center
Cartoon Diagram of Major Changes to the Hoover Dam
Back Elevation of Nature Center
Autonomous Plan of main education and nature center floor
Maybe the reason there is a collective amnesia and our lack of history in this country is because of an inevitable restlessness to change, to amend. And then again maybe passive consumption is our form of entropy. Damn Inevitable is the architecture of active ownership and involvement of an I-have-noother-choice-but-to-be-informed future audience. Damn inevitable is an end to manifest destiny. ***INNATURE OpenGap Competition Entry for Nature Center in 2012. Work done with John Clark and Kevin Stewart***
Transverse Section through Nature Center and Underwater Silt Room
North Side/Back Side of New Hoover Dam with waterfall mouth
Axonometric of Nature Center (green), opening (yellow) and Silt Room (fuchsia)
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
Aerial View Nature Center Floating in mouth of new waterfall
Compound View of Interior looking South out at the new waterfall (both Wet (wild) and Dry (tame) months)
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
messy mies+ massive middle
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
View towards ‘Bark It’ Lounge and the Dinner Table
Audience looking at Barcelona Pavilion Model
Barcelona Pavilion without Flash Card
Barcelona Pavilion with Flash Card Frame
View outside the Cone of Silence (floating model inside, wrapped in mirrors)
View inside the Cone of Silence
Opening Night Seating at Dinner Table
Gallery Talk and Auditorium
Interactive Exhibition at Oakton Community Collge, Skokie, IL 2012 messy MIES + MASSIVE middle is an exhibition centering on Mies van der Rohe’s ambiguously built/ unbuilt architecture including a never-before-exhibited project. This exhibition presents three projects designed by Mies, starting with the Barcelona Pavilion (design/ built 1929, destroyed 1930, rebuilt 1986), Brussels Pavilion (designed/ unbuilt 1934, reappears publicly 1966) and the IIT Master Plan (partially built in the 1940s in its original design). Interestingly enough, all three projects do not exist in their original intention or even literal interpretation. The Barcelona Pavilion stood for a mere six months and was little noticed. Only later, decades after its demolition, did it emerge in the collective consciousness as a masterpiece of modern architecture, materializing in 1986 as a built copy by popular demand. The design for the Brussels Pavilion disappeared into the chaos of World War II only to make its way back into Mies’ hands in 1966. The IIT Campus Plan was only partially realized in its initial design, as it is missing several buildings in Mies’ master plan, and instead creates the pastiche urbanism we know today.
View from the Entrance of the exhibition
The exhibition provides two frames to engage with Mies’ models: the first is a series of designed enclosures/viewing platforms and the second is a series of interactive flash cards. The exhibition also intends to open up the conversation about the variant character versions of Mies that have evolved over time. ***Co-Curated with William Huchting, AIA***
View from the Rear of the exhibition
View
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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Liberty City After HOPE VI
2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Cultural/Public Centers
Current Vehicular Flow
Figure Ground (transparency vs. opaquness
Existing Use/Program/Amenities
Liberty City, Miami, FL - 2008-2009 The original master plan of the Scott-Carver Homes, in Liberty City, Miami, had little to no relationship with the various urban situations occurring within the city. The identification of various systems focused on movement, urban activity, and potential for economic growth led to an orientation of microcommunities, all of which adapted to their immediate contexts.
Green Space
The housing blocks at Scott-Carver take cues from the climactically responsive buildings of old South Florida. Maximizing crossventilation, minimizing direct sun exposure, and re-emphasizing the front porch and its applicability to medium density structures. The blocks simultaneously engage issues of ecology and community. By increasing density within the housing sites, the residual open space takes on three distinct forms. By establishing a gradient between active and passive open space, the uniform housing structures become animated by the shifting ground conditions which surround them. The identity of each microcommunity can then become more apparent through different visual expressions, such as art or agriculture, in turn providing new images of a growing community, without jumping to conclusions as to how that would work.
View from the Platform Gardens into new Communities.
New Transportation Hub in Liberty City
The Competition Entry for USGBC Natural Talent Design Competition was one of four finalists, and was subsequently exhibited at the Miami Workers Center in Liberty City, Miami. ***This was a collaboration between myself and David de Cespedes, as a group called CASIS. It was a redevelopment of another work entitled, “Degentrification + Densification + Synthesis: �, a competition entry for the Future of Cities 2007.
Liberty City Urban Identity After Hope VI
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Blanket Pyramid Loop, Chicago, IL - 2011
Linear Urban Plan of Tigerman’s 1966 Instant City across the Eisenhower Expressway
Stanley Tigerman’s initial focus on Instant City was on historical models of building cities along infrastructure and the introduction of road or highway system as being the first time where infrastructure caused schisms in community. He locates this project ambiguously along the “highways of the future” as a way to continue and recapture the infrastructural community. The program is distributed, much like the USDA food pyramid : the base is comprised of public services and amenities, as well as commercial; then having the semi-private/public offices and administrative level; finally housing the inhabitants on the upper levels, with mechanical being tucked into the highest areas of the pyramid. Alternative Projection of Instant City into a pyramid blanketing downtown Chicago and housing Soldier Field in its peak. This merges Tigerman’s intention of using the Instant City Pyramid typology in Football City (1967) over Soldier Field. This version is blown up and brought above the city.
Andrew Santa Lucia
Program Distribution into the Pyramid - 1966
Transverse Urban Section of Tigerman’s 1966 Instant City
***Completed for University of Illinois at Chicago - School of Architecture: Graduate Urban Seminar taught by Dr. Alexander Eisenschmidt in Spring 2011.
Afterglow
Blanket Pyramid
Exploded Axonometric of Tigerman’s 1966 Instant City Site
Authenticity is still possible in architecture. In this case, it’s possible to reoriginate an old Pyramid, model. You can teach anBlanket old dog newChicago, tricks.IL - 2011 Blanket Pyramid uses Stanley Tigerman’s 1966 project, Instant City, and creates a new
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Mini-Modern Series
MEESE: A Kids Chair
Meese
UIC, Chicago, IL - 2012 Mini-Modern Series “Re-originating modernism through the reproduction and revisions of iconic pieces of furniture, allows children and teenagers alike to engage with the history of style. During a time when modernism and its attitudes are resurfacing, the Mini-Modern Series promises to bring style back in your life, regardless of your age or tax bracket.” MEESE “The canonical ‘Barcelona Chair’ from architect Mies van der Rohe employed his signature use of steel and luxurious materials such as leather to create a cantilevered chair in his Barcelona Pavilion. MEESE recreates, but more importantly repurposes his initial idea, through using aspects of the design, such as angles, curves and details. This laminated 1/8” & 1/4” corrugated cardboard chair is perfectly blown out of proportion, in the small way, to achieve an oddly familiar, yet a more functional version of Mies’ chair, for kids.”
Barcelona Chair - Mies van der Rohe
Pamphlet for Propsective Buyers
Prototype 1
1. Cushion Laminate 1 1. - (128) Cushion Laminate 1 - (128)
8 sections of 16 each 8 sections of 16 each
1
2. Button Laminate - (18) 2. Button Laminate - (18) 6 sections of 3 sequential 6 sections of 3 sequential laminates each laminates each
2
3
Available Color Options 4 5 6 7 8 9
3. Structure Laminate 13.- Structure (18) Laminate 1 - (18) 3 sections of 6 each
3 sections of 6 each
***Completed for University of Illinois at Chicago - School of Architecture: Graduate Technology Seminar taught by Michael Gelick in Spring 2012.
Prototype 1
4. Section Base 1 - (12)4. Section Base 1 - (12) 2 sections of 6 each
2 sections of 6 each
5. Structure Base 2 - (6) 5. Structure Base 2 - (6) 2 sections of 3 each
2 sections of 3 each
Carboard Laminate Fabrication Details
Exploded Assembly Diagram Exploded Assembly Diagram
Exploded Fabrication Axonometric
Prototype 1
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
Patio Villa Redux
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com South Elevation facing Street (renovation) Fig. 62 Elevation 1/16”=1’ (This elevation shows the materiality of the facade and the introduction of the glass loggia/widow’s walk element, superimposed on top of the actual facade. The users would need to go outside of their home to move through it, adding to the paradox of going on out and in at the same time.
Original Patio in the center of the house flanked by glass walls.(1988)
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 2010
This thesis project explored the effects of gender and sexuality on the interior. Formally, the operations of this investigation occur on the interior and focus on the transgression of boundaries, both literally and phenomenally. The building being renovated is Rem Koolhaas/OMA’s early project titled ‘Patio Villa’ in 1988. It was designed for a prominent gay couple in the Netherlands. They continue to live here until today and were interviewed during this process. Throughout a year of research, writing and design, this final iteration is based upon a series of moments/operations working within the accepted cultural norms of surface, boundary and threshold, as well as instigates provocative reuse of spaces, based on sexuality, gender and history of both. Initially meant to be a triplex, then becoming a duplex, the villas were divided for 1. a gay couple and 2. a widow. Using this chance detail, I constructed narratives of interaction between the couple/ widow based on their adjacency and enabled through architectural manipulation. From conceptual understandings of reorganizing space and history/ theory of gender identity + sexuality, this thesis did not intend to answer any general questions, instead attempted to activate generalities of lifestyles and engender a new misreading/misshaping of the contemporary dutch house.
Patio Villa Duplex Site Photograph Satellite Photograph of Site in The Netherlands This thesis project examines boundaries in architecture, and how they are transgressed. This is done through closely analyzing an existing building, through a lens of gender and sexuality, and proposing a renovation. As post-modern gender theory transgresses the boundary and confine of structured opposition in sexuality, architecture also transgresses the boundaries created by walls and division, through opening, through permeation. This condition is a threshold. The threshold accepts the boundary, because without it there is nothing to transgress. Due to that acceptance, there is an architectural paradox in creating boundaries to transgress them. This thesis project embraces paradox and examines new ways to design and transgress boundaries that question normative notions of gender and sexuality. The site is the Patio Villa in Rotterdam, The Netherlands by Rem Koolhaas.
Ground and Second Floor Plans Plans Ground Floor + Second Floor (1988) Fig. 18 Satellite Image of Patio Villa Onderlangs 46, 3062 Rotterdam, The Netherlands OMA (1988)
Exploded Axonometric of Patio Villa (1988)
Study Model (Circuit)
Study Model (Circuit)
Plan (Circuit) TheDiagram villa has been the venue to test ideas regarding publicity and privacy, linguistic development of architectural form, politics, and much more. The compact and directed scope of the villa lends itself to commenting and questioning on much broader topics. Completed in 1988, the patio villa by Rem Koolhass/OMA, is one of the offices first major projects. This marks a turning point for Koolhaas in that it is is one of his first built works, marking his transition from a theorist to a practitioner.
Study Model (Intersection)
Study Model (Intersection)
Study Model (Division)
Study Model (Division)
Diagram Plan (Intersection)
***Thesis Project completed for Florida International University - School of Architecture: thesis critics: John A. Stuart, Fall 2009-Spring 2010. (Miami, FL)
Exploded Axonometric of both Widow’s villa and Dick/Joops Patio Villa (renovation) Diagram Plan (division wall)
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
View in interior garden adjacent to Sauna
View in Sauna adjacent to interior garden Steel Beam
Ground Floor Plan (renovation) Ground Floor Plan - Patio Villa Redux
Ground Floor Plan (renovation)
Steel C Channel Column
Wooden Weephole Wall - allows sauna steam to collect and roll off into cistern
Hydration System Connected to Greywater Colection from Sauna Steam Runoff
Logitudinal Section (renovation)
Logitudinal Section (renovation) Longitudinal Section - Patio Villa Redux
CMU - various sizes Poured in Place Concrete Flooring Poured in place Conrete Footing
Second Floor Plan (renovation)
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
Cross Section o
Second Floor Plan (renovation) Couples VIlla Loggia (sectional Sequence 1)- Patio Villa Redux
Cross Section of Dick/Joop Patio Villa Exterior/interior wall shows three different sectional conditions within the same wall
View from Loggia walkway with alternating wall
Second Floor Plan (renovation) Second Floor Plan (renovation) Second Floor Plan - Patio Villa Redux
Couples VIlla Loggia (sectional Sequence 2)- Patio Villa Redux
Couples Loggia w/ Reading Bench + Refrigerator - Patio Villa Redux
View from Loggia walkway with a
Cross Section of Dick/Joop Patio Villa Exterior/interior wall shows three different sectional conditions within the same wall
Cross Section of Dick/Joop Patio Villa
Cross Section of Widow’s Villa
Cross Section of Dick/Joop Patio Villa Exterior/interior wall shows three different sectional conditions within the same wall
Couples VIlla Loggia (sectional Sequence 3)- Patio Villa Redux
Couples Breakfast Nook - Patio Villa Redux View from Living Room with Alternatig wall
Street Elevation (South) - Patio Villa Redux
Cross Section of Dick/Joop Patio Villa Exterior/interior wall shows three different sectional conditions within the same wall
View from Living Room with Widow’s VIlla Loggia (sectional Sequence 1)- Patio Villa Redux South Elevation facing Street (renovation) Fig. 62 Elevation 1/16”=1’ (This elevation shows the materiality of the facade and the introduc-
Widow’s Walk - Patio Villa Redux View from inside Widow’s Villa looking out
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
BOUNCE: Miami Womens Center Formal Analysis on Arthropod: Used as Generator
Miami, FL - 2009 Using a digitally driven design method to create a soft-physical type, this bounce house looks to erode a glass-ceiling imposed on women in contemporary society, by establishing a malleable systems of shapes that flow in and out of each other for leisure activities to take place right on Biscayne Bay. Through careful formal analysis and generative processes, a proposal for a structural member that could perform and change under three different scalar moves, a model was created and edited to create a fully self-sustaining and referential shape for the bounce house. This allowed for the softness of the pneumatic sections to function seamlessly with the more rigid mechanical ones, in turn creating sculptural structure and functional shapes.
Structural Combnations Generated from Analysis Renderings of Pool + Bounce House in action
original celloriginal cell developingdeveloping cell cell
evolved cell evolved cell
Model of Structural Memebers
Section through Bounce House v.2.0
Section
Model - v.1.0
Andrew Santa Lucia
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Architectural Designer / Critic
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2740 W. Logan Blvd, #8 Chicago, IL 60647
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C: 305-343-6285
E: andrew_santa_lucia@me.com
S.O.F.I. Kiosk South Beach, Miami,Miami, FL USA -FL, 20062006 South Beach,
South Beach’s S.O.F.I. (South of Fifth Street) district is a collection of historic exchanges between art, culture, architecture and technology that calls for a urban public gathering space that questions the boundaries between inside and outside; digital and analog; as well as real and virtual, through fragmented kiosks that push the enigmatic imagery associated with its character. The S.O.F.I. Kiosk perpetuates the visual character of Art Deco without kitch reproduction, instead focusing on breaks in the urban fabric, as well as fragmented urban views afforded through the facade narrative. Employing simple shapes as fenesrtation and coupling them with more complex volumetric arrangements, yields a new typology for urban collective form.
S.O.F.I. Kiosk South Beach, Miami, FL Urban Plan 1”= 80’
S.O.F.I. Kiosk Plan
N
1’
3’
6’
N
S.O.F.I. Kiosk
Construction Section 1
1’
3’
6’