ELEMENTS OF HOUSING Radical Domesticities for 21st Century Urban Life Anthony Averbeck (Coordinator) Jaime Sanz Haro (Coordinator) Gonzalo Alonso Maria Gonzalez Aranguren Jorge Pizarro Montalvillo UVA SoA | ARCH 2020 | Spring 2019
CONTENTS 1
Note from the Chair
2 Abstract 3
Faculty Overview
7 Lectures 8 Calendar 12
Studio Assignments
14
Studio Overview
17
Pedagogic Objectives
18
Studio Process
20
Policy + Procedure
22
Case Studies
24
Exercise 1 - Draw Your Own Home
28
Exercise 2 - Case Study Analysis: Collective Housing Inventory
32
Exercise 3 - Typological Inventory of Domestic Units
36
Exercise 4 - Collective Housing Block in the City
40
Final Review
42 Visualization 44 Bibliography
N OT E F RO M T H E C H A I R The conceptualization and design of domestic space is an essential component of urban life. The gradual collection of dwellings in multiple forms of existence —from individual to collective and from provisional to permanent— makes up the basic building blocks of a city. The space of the dwelling, as a mediator between conditions of exterior and interior, between the public and private realm, is an essential component in the construction of urban life, and has been throughout its extended history a pivotal component of the modern American city. With projects that range from extreme vertical urban growth (the Ansonia in New York City) to others that endorse ideas of decentralization (Radburn, New Jersey), the design of housing and the diverse models of domestic life it engenders, have played a pivotal role in the physical and experiential identity of the post war metropolis, shaping many of the models of domesticity that are quotidian today. This studio brief asks of students to think about housing and its organization at multiple scales, and understand it as a primary organizational element that can help mediate between the public and private realms. The examination of canonical housing projects —through a careful reading of architectural drawings, primarily plans, sections, and elevations of the selected case studies— paired with an inquisitive attitude towards what should the future of housing entail for a small American city sets the stage for a challenging and productive design studio. The outcome of the studio will show the responsibility afforded to architecture in shaping the many notions of home. Felipe Correa Vincent and Eleanor Shea Professor Chair of the Department of Architecture
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ABSTRACT Elements of Housing is a foundation studio that introduces fundamental concepts, strategies, and disciplines associated with the design of domestic space, from the dwelling unit to the aggregation of domestic spaces into coherent urban blocks. Applied case studies, lectures, and workshops will build a foundation for a series of interrelated design exercises that construct hypotheses about new spatial, formal, and experiential typologies of domesticity that reshape and respond to changing conventions of life in the midsized city. Housing is one of the most representative elements of a city’s history and cultural evolution. The aggregation of dwellings in multiple forms of existence over time —from individual to collective and from provisional to permanent— makes up the basic elements of a city. The space of the dwelling, as a mediator between the exterior and interior, between the public and private domains, is an essential component in the construction of urban life.
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F A C U LT Y O V E R V I E W Anthony Averbeck (Coordinator) is a designer and academic who teaches design studio and visualization seminars in both the undergraduate and graduate programs at the University of Virginia, where he is Lecturer in Architecture. He is also co-founder of a design and research collaborative investigating the American Midwest at both the territorial and tactical scales. Anthony has practiced professionally in Minnesota, Virginia, and New York, in both traditional architectural practice, and in the design and fabrication of architectural elements and landscape furniture. He holds a Master of Architecture from the University of Virginia, where he received the Lori Ann Pristo Prize, and a Bachelor of Science in Architecture, with High Distinction from the University of Minnesota. His recent research has focused on territorial and tactical responses to human settlement in the rapidly-changing American Midwest.
Jaime Sanz Haro (Coordinator) focuses his professional activity as part of the team of JosĂŠ Manuel Sanz Arquitectos, based in Madrid where he has developed several projects, including his work focused in housing developments. His research interests focus on Postwar Domestic Spaces, and the role of the objects, furniture, appliances and new devices within the contemporary domestic space. He is Ph.D candidate with a dissertation entitled “Liquid Homes, processes of substitution on the domestic space for systems of objectsâ€?. His work has been laid out in different national and international exhibitions including the last Venezia Biennalle 2018, within the Spanish Pavillion. He has been menthor teacher in The Superior Technical School of Architecture of Madrid from 2014 to 2017, as well as guest lecturer in the INDA-Chulalongkorn University of Bangkok.
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Maria Gonzalez Aranguren is architect and urban planner who graduated in Master degree in The Technical University of Architecture of Madrid (NAAB Substantial Equivalency Accreditation), with Honorable Mention in 2014. She obtained ERASMUS Scholarship in TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITÄT BERLIN for one year and she studied an extra Master in Advanced Architectural Projects to complement her knowledge in Architectural Theory. She spent a year teaching at Technical University of Madrid as mentor professor to graduate students in their Master Thesis Projects. In January 2018, she joined the faculty at University of Virginia.During this time, she has combined teaching with professional practice in the renowned office A&G (Aranguren & Gallegos architects), where she began working in 2010 in national and international projects, including the ICA New Contemporary Art Museum in Miami, the “Oak House” or the new Housing Towers of Valdebebas. She has been very interested in the field of cooperation, traveling and studying possible solutions for cities in countries including India, Mexico, an Morocco.
Jorge Pizarro Montalvillo is an architect and urban planner grad-uated at the Technical University of Madrid, Spain, where he completed hi Master’s degree in 2015 with honors. His Final Thesis Project worked around the topic of urban and social sustainability under the title “Ahmedabad: Urban Fabrics in Conflict”. In 2016 establishes Ensalada Works, his own architecture office where, among other colleagues, he tries to explore new architectural fields, with a special in-terest in new ways of approaching our environments and contexts, based on the interconnection of professionals and fields. He has also been involved in the creation of Fragments Of: an international network of architectural academic workshops held in cities that are interesting for their cultural, social and economic distance.
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Gonzalo Alonso is is an architect with an MArch from the School of Architecture of the University of Navarra. He set up Abalo Alonso Arquitectos, with Elizabeth Abalo, twenty years ago. Since then they have carried out some constructions and they have obtained several awards and distinctions; among them, in the last years, the first Prize in the BakĂş International Awards for the RomaĂąo Civic Centre, Azerbaijan 2017; the A Prize of the Triennale di Milano for the Monterroso Health Center, Milano 2015; the International Prize Ischia di Architettura 2014 for the Moure Hotel; the Riuso, Regenerazione Urbana Sostenibile prize, for the Ribadeo redevelopment, Bologna 2013; Highly Commended at AR Emerging Architecture, London 2013, for the Rubido Romero Foundation; the Spanish Aplus Award 2013 for the University Kinder Garden in Ourense and in 2011 for the Oleiros Health Center; and the Spanish National Heritage Cities Award for the San Clemente Square.
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Teaching Assistants
Sherry Ng MARCH ‘19 Coordinating TA
Colin Gilliland MARCH ‘19
Phillip Goodbread MARCH ‘19
Samantha Kokenge MARCH ‘19
Audrey Liu MARCH ‘20
Alek De Mott MARCH ‘20
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LECTURES Felipe Correa is the Vincent and Eleanor Shea Professor and Chair of Architecture at UVA School of Architecture. He is an internationally renowned architect and urbanist. Working at the confluence of architecture, urbanism, and infrastructure, he has, through his design practice Somatic Collaborative, developed design projects with the public and private sector in multiple cities and regions across the globe. Designing across multiple scales and varied contexts, Correa is known for using architectural commissions, design competitions, and diverse forms of applied research to facilitate design’s role as a critical mediator between society and space. Prior to joining UVA, he was an Associate Professor and Director of the Master of Architecture in Urban Design program at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. Maria Gonzalez Aranguren (see Faculty Overview) Jorge Pizarro Montalvillo (see Faculty Overview) Gonzalo Alonso (see Faculty Overview) Anthony Averbeck and Jaime Sanz (see Faculty Overview)
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CALENDAR
January
M 14 First day of class / Course Introduction / Introduce Ex. 1
CAM 158, 1:00-3:30p
W 16 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 01
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 18
Desk crits
M 21 MLK Holiday, No Class W 23 Ex. 1 Review / Visualization Workshop 02
Tech Bridge, 1:00-3:00p, CAM 158, 3:00-4:45p
F 25
Introduce Ex. 2 / Desk crits
CAM 158, 1:00-2:00p
M 28 Lecture by Felipe Correa / Desk crits
CAM 158, 1:00-2:00p
W 30 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 03
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
February
F 01
Desk crits
M 04 Ex. 2 Review
8
Tech Bridge, 1:00-4:45p
W 06 Introduce Ex. 3.1, 3.2 / Lecture by Maria Gonzalez / Visualization
Workshop 04
CAM 158, 1:00-4:45p
F 08
Desk crits
M 11 Film: Mon Oncle by Jacques Tati / Desk crits
CAM 158, 1:00-2:00p
W 13 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 05
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 15
Desk crits
M 18 Desk crits W 20 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 06
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 22
Ex. 3.1/3.2 Progress Pin-Up
Tech Bridge, 1:00-4:45p
M 25 Introduce Ex. 3.3 / Lecture by Anthony Averbeck and Jaime Sanz
CAM 158, 1:00-3:30p
W 27 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 07
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
March
F 01
Desk crits
9
M 04 Desk crits W 06 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 08
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 08
Ex. 3 Review
M 11 Spring Recess, No Class W 13 Spring Recess, No Class F 15
Spring Recess, No Class
M 18 Introduce Ex. 4 / Lecture by Jorge Piazarro / Desk crits
CAM 158, 1:00-3:00p
W 20 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 09
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 22
Desk crits
M 25 Lecture by Gonzolo Alonso / Desk crits
CAM 158, 1:00-2:00p
W 27 Desk crits / Visualization Workshop 10
CAM 158, 3:30-4:45p
F 29
Desk crits
April
M 01 Desk crits W 03 Desk crits
10
F 05 Desk crits M 08 Desk crits W 10 Desk crits F 12 Ex. 4 Progress Pin-Up
Tech Bridge, 1:00-4:45p
M 15 Desk crits W 17 Desk crits F 19 Penultimate Review
Tech Bridge, 1:00-4:45p
M 22 Desk crits W 24 Desk crits F 26 Desk crits
M 29 Desk crits
May
F 03
Final Review
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STUDIO SECTIONS Anthony Averbeck Samantha Kokenge TA Auer, Jessica Clark, William Davis, Mira Liberatore, Elizabeth Liechty, Stephen Lin, Xinyi Lowden, Connor
MacPherson, Ian Penny, Patrick Reid, Heather Travers, Eric Trepp, Devon Xia, Chenyang Zekany, Emily Colby Lapointe
Jaime Sanz Haro Phillip Goodbread TA Brown, Lauren Diaz, Angel Dong, Yudi Dougherty, Abigail Gianakopoulos, Marina Gorashi, Omer Hickman, Anna
Koury, Kyle Norton, Nicholas Ruff, Jack Saunders, Evelyn Sharpe, Jayden Shuff-Heck, Lucia Thompson, Taylor
Maria Gonzalez Aranguren Audrey Liu TA Bowles, Reagan Harding, Summer Hicks, Zoe Hu, Bihong Huntsinger, Kenton Master, Alexander Morinigo-Spalding, Esteban
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Padilla, Isabella Ragano, Gabriella Riley, Ellie Schiavone, Luciano Sparks, Madison Suid, Yahya Wright, Alexander
Jorge Pizarro Montalvillo Alek De Mott TA Andrade, Gabriel Gibbs, Dylan Hendi, Matias Hunger, Julia Kilgore, Katherine Legare, Daniel Magenheimer, Jolie
Maguire, Samuel Proano, Maria-Emilia Rhodes, Trenton Rodas, Ana Rodgers, Genesis Tao, ChenCheng Yamada, Cheyenne
Gonzalo Alonso Colin Gilliland TA Cheetham, Lauren Di Napoli-Castaneda, Alejandro Duncan, Hayden Fay, James Hurst, Christopher Key, Mary Kirssin, Leah
Knights, Lindsay Miller, Elizabeth Milone, William Shen, Chenan Thornberry, Bridget Wang, Nancy Zavala, Fernando
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STUDIO OVERVIEW Elements of Housing | Radical Domesticities for 21st Century Urban Life ARCH 2020 Foundation Studio III Spring 2019 Monday, Wednesday, Friday 13:00 – 17:45 Introduction Elements of Housing is the third foundation studio in the undergraduate program in architecture. The studio introduces fundamental concepts, strategies, and disciplines associated with the design of domestic space, from the dwelling unit to the aggregation of domestic spaces into coherent urban blocks. The studio speculates on the designer’s role in analyzing and shaping the future city and how we will inhabit it. Applied case studies, lectures, readings and workshops will build a foundation for a series of interrelated design exercises that construct hypotheses about new spatial, formal, and experiential typologies of domesticity that reshape and respond to changing conventions of urban life. Housing is one of the most representative elements of a city’s history and cultural evolution. The aggregation of dwellings in multiple forms of existence over time —from individual to collective and from provisional to permanent— makes up the basic building blocks of a city. As American models of urban development continue to depart from the traditional and time-honored model of the compact city, the studio acknowledges the agency of designers to operate in novel capacities. The design of domestic space begins with the recognition that homes have grown in scale recent decades in The United States, which is sustaining a greater standard area per occupant than in the past, and larger than other developed countries. As such, projects will
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be sited in the downtown core of Charlottesville, Virginia, USA, experimenting with new typologies in collective housing that respond to the place and reshape conventions of life in the midsized city. Contemporary ways of living, including our evolving relationship with technology, and new conceptions of home as ephemeral place to reside within a nomadic society, will be engaged as design drivers. Speculations will operate within such research themes as density, dispersion, multifunctionality, and vertical suburbia, as explored through comparative case studies. The studio methodology progresses from cell to city, approaching housing first with investigations at the human scale and the individual dwelling unit, and then broadening the exploration to strategies for aggregation at the scale of the urban block. Logistically, the studio is organized into three parts. The first component is comprised of two exercises in case study analysis and drawing, the second the development of a typological inventory of domestic units, and the final a collective housing project that will synthesize the content of the studio. Three primary components establish a foundation for speculation: the first being a competency in visualization and representation, the second being a foundational understanding of the principles of architecture (space, form, program, scale, architectural language), and the third being the capacity to research, interrogate, and explore through the design process.
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Image Credits: Anthony Averbeck and Maria Gonzalez Aranguren, ARCH 2020, Spring 2018, University of Virginia, SoA
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PEDAGOGIC OBJECTIVES The succesful completion of this core studio will demand the students skillfully demonstrate knowledge of engament with the following primary pedagogic emphases of the course: 1. To establish an understanding of the discipline of architecture, its rules and logic, through specific foundational methodologies in drawing and analysis. 2. To rethink the role of housing at three scales: the dwelling unit, the collective aggregation, and the urban block, in the creation of new systems and the reconfiguration of existing systems. 3. To develop an understanding of fundamental components informing the design of domestic space, including programming the house (interior and exterior spaces),considering relationships between each part and the whole. 4. To consider the various factors informing the design of collective housing in the city; including socio-cultural factors, principles of construction and tectonics, and urban and environmental systems. 5. To foster a dialogue between design motivations and actions, and how they might be tested and explored through specific design projections. 6. To explore the range of scenarios at play informing how we dwell collectively in the contemporary world, and the diverse design procedures that can inform their transformation. 7. Development of team work capacities, active participation in discussion, and the ability to productively work both individually and in collaboration with others.
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STUDIO PROCESS Studio Methodology The work of the studio will be framed by a rigorous and iterative process of analysis, drawing, and modeling to synthesize information regarding site, program, and other parameters to generate multiscalar design strategies, hypotheses, and ideas. The work will be directed toward developing an architecture that engages the program of housing within the specific physical and social context of the site, including its geography, urban fabric, and infrastructure. Visual documentation and analysis, including drawings, diagrams, and models will be critical tools for testing and communicating ideas clearly. The studio emphasizes the iterative design process, deploying both physical model making, sketching, and 3D software tools effectively to do so. This intensive design process will require full and active participation by all members of the studio. Assignments will be conducted both individually and as teamwork. Delivery of Content The exercises and studio content will be in introduced through lectures, discussions, and workshops to communicate critical content. Lectures will cover content from methods of case study analysis, design processes, the lineage of domesticity, collective housing strategies, and visual representation. During the semester, we will organize a series of round table discussions to support the application of lectures and readings to studio projects. Additionally, a series of weekly visualization workshops will facilitate an understanding of critical representational methods. Studio Field Trip to Site The studio will take a field trip to the site in downtown Charlottesville in early March to explore, document, and analyze the site preconditions. This will take place during studio time, and will require students to arrange transportation to and from. More information to come. UVACollab and Classes Folder The studio will use UVACollab for the sharing and dissemination of critical information and resources, and for the submission of digital work. Moreover, students will be expected to use and maintain a personal folder on Classes using the provided structure. An explanation will be given at the studio intro.
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Studio Exercises The studio will be divided into four phases, and each phase is accompanied by an exercise, consisting of drawing and analysis at the beginning of the term (exercises 1/2), followed by the design of domestic units based on specific parameters (exercise 3), and concluding with an exercise in aggregation to develop a resolved collective housing strategy at the scale of the urban block. Ex. 1 - Draw Your Own Home Jan 14 - 23 will establish foundational skills with a focus on accurately observing, recording, and drawing one’s own domestic space(s), introducing fundamentals of measurement, precision drafting, and working between analog and digital tools for architectural representation. Ex. 2 - Case Study: Collective Housing Inventory Jan 23 - Feb 1 will focus on reading, re-drawing and comparing case studies in collective housing through hand-drawn diagrams and digital drawings. The resultant will be a catalog of precedents to be shared and exhibited across the studio. Ex. 3 - Typological Inventory of Units Feb 6 - Mar 8 will focus on developing an inventory of domestic units based on a series of parameters and constraints. The first exercise is the development of a horizontal home, the second a sectional home, and the final a home based on a common research theme. Ex. 3.1 Horizontal Home Ex. 3.2 Sectional Home Ex. 3.3 A Home for Someone Ex. 4 - Collective Housing Block in the City Mar 8 - May 3 This final component synthesizes the ideas, concepts, and techniques from the first three exercises into the development of coherent collective housing blocks for the assigned site. Emphasis is placed on developing strategies with clear strategies for aggregation of domestic units.
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POLICY + PROCEDURE Participation The studio meets every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 1:00pm to 4:45pm. Attendance is mandatory. You are expected to participate in all pin ups and reviews, and during desk-crits you are expected to be working at your individual workstations. Participation at visualization workshops is also mandatory. In addition to completing assignments on time, you are expected to engage in discussions and dialogue in class. Lecture Series The SARC lecture series is an invaluable learning experience, and your participation in studio extends to attending lectures by the Department of Architecture. We will structure Monday and Friday sessions to end before the beginning of school lectures. Reviews Reviews are not evaluations, but rather an opportunity for open dialogue about your work. Evaluation will be conducted in confidential sessions by the studio faculty, in which all critical aspects of a project will be considered. It is important and expected that each student not only present their work in reviews, but also attend the presentation of fellow students. Participation in class reviews and seminars is absolutely mandatory. UVA Honor Code This architectural studio is built on a foundation of analysis, transformation, and reuse of precedents and is, therefore, intended to be an open community of shared research, process, and ideas. However, the University of Virginia Honor Code applies with respect to the building and preservation of a community of trust across the University and prohibits lying, cheating, or stealing. You may find more information at http:// www.virginia.edu/honor/, and if you have questions about special cases in the context of the School of Architecture’s curriculum, please contact the School of Architecture’s elected representatives.
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SoA Rules, Regulations, Guidelines Undergraduate students of the School of Architecture can review the Academic Rules, Regulations, and Information provided at the following link for specifics on Incomplete Grades and Ownership of Work, among other issues relevant to studio. http://records.ureg.virginia.edu/content. php?catoid=33&navoid=1275. All students with special needs requiring accommodations should present the appropriate paperwork from the Student Disability Access Center. It is the student’s responsibility to present this paperwork in a timely fashion and follow up with the instructor about the accommodations being offered. Students are urged to fulfill this responsibility within the first two weeks of the class. The SDAC is located in the Department of Student Health at Elson Student Health Center and can be contacted at 243-5180 or http://www.virginia.edu/studenthealth/sdac.html. Grading The studio adheres to the School of Architecture’s guidelines for evaluating student work. A summary of this criteria can be found below. A+ | A- Extraordinary Work. Addressing and expanding upon the issues presented in the assignments and discovering/ proposing issues which are reciprocal and similar to the specific assignment. Demonstrating the ability to achieve and excel independently in the development of class work. B+ | B Notable Work. Addressing and expanding upon the issues presented in the assignments, and demonstrating understanding and achievement in directing the investigations and development in class work. B- Competent Work. Addressing all of the issues presented in the assignments and demonstrating an understanding of them. C | D | F Marginal Work. Exhibiting difficulty in demonstrating an understanding of the issues and concepts presented in the assignments. Assignments not completed. Distribution: Ex. 1 - 5%, Ex. 2 - 5%, Ex. 3 - 30%, Ex. 4 - 60%
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CASE STUDIES 1. Lake Shore Drive Mies Van der Rohe, Chicago, Illinois, USA (1951) 2. UnitÊ d’habitation Le Corbusier, Marseille, France (1952) 3. Complejo Residencial San Felipe Enrique Ciriani, Lima, Peru (1966) 4. Nakagin Capsules Kurokawa, Tokyo, Japan (1970) 5. Bouca Housing Alvaro Siza, Porto, Portugal (1978) 6. Kanchanjunga Charles Correa, Bombay, India (1983) 7. Edificio Residencial Jaragua Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Sao Paolo, Brazil (1984) 8. Kitagata Housing Complex SANAA, Gifu, Japan (1994-2000) 9. Rue des Suisses Herzog & deMeuron, Paris, France (2000) 10. Housing in Maia Eduardo Souto de Moura, Maia, Portugal (2001)
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11. Housing in Carabanchel Aranguren & Gallegos, Madrid, Spain (2003) 12. Elemental Alejandro Aravena, Constitucion, Chile (2004) 13. The Mountain Bjarke Ingels Group, Copenhagen, Denmark (2008) 14. Alcรกcer do Sal Residences Aires Mateus, Alcรกcer do Sal, Portugal (2010) 15. One Santa Fe Michael Maltzan, Los Angeles, California, USA (2015)
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E 1 . D R AW YO U R O W N H O M E An Exercise in Observing, Recording, and Drawing Domestic Space Assigned: Jan 14 Review: Jan 23 Reference: Atelier Bow Wow, Graphic Anatomy 2 As an introductory exercise, you are tasked with analyzing and drawing familiar spaces of inhabitation. To begin, you will observe and measure your own domestic space (apartment, house, or dormitory.) Then, you will construct precise measured drawings using AutoCAD/Rhino in plan, section, and axonometric projection. Finally, you will draw yourself as a participatory scale figure. This will form a collective catalog across the studio that can be inserted into drawings to give a sense of the human scale. The project will be evaluated on accuracy and precision, legibility and clarity of the drawings, and your success in capturing a sense of scale and spatial quality. Process 1. Record the Space Using your sketchbook, a measuring tape, and camera, begin by recording information needed to construct the drawings. Construct freehand sketches with dimensions of walls, doors, windows, furniture. Record both vertical and horizontal dimensions. Photograph the space thoroughly for reference in constructing the drawings offsite in studio. 2. Draw the Space From your recordings, use AutoCAD/Rhino to construct three line drawings of your living space, in plan, section, and axonometric projection. Scale all drawings to 1/4” = 1’-0”. Draw walls with appropriate thickness, apertures, static and kinetic furniture. Use appropriate line weights to denote hierarchy. Use hatching to convey materiality, change in ground condition, etc. 3. Draw Yourself: A Catalog of Scale Figures In Rhino, accurately draw yourself in plan and elevation to be inserted into
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your space to scale. Begin by sketching and recording measurements, and then translate into the digital. Edit the drawing to to show important characteristics and features of your figure. Consider composing yourself performing an activity so that you can occupy the space in interesting ways (cooking at countertop height, sitting, lying down, etc.) Deliverables 1. One 30� x 30� poster for each student featuring a curation of process sketches and photographs, along with the three final orthographic drawings at the specified scale. Students must use the template provided in the CLASSES folder. 2. One collective poster by the studio featuring the catalog of scale figures for propagation throughout the semester. Students will format, export, and save the drawings to the CLASSES folder as instructed. Teaching Assistants will assemble and plot the collective poster based on the template provided.
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Individual Board Plan, Section, Axonometric Drawings (see InDesign template on Classes)
Collective Board Scale Figures (see InDesign template on Classes)
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Review Format This exercise will be reviewed in gallery format, with students, instructors, and teaching assistants viewing and discussing the collective work. This will be followed by a general discussion on drawing technique and representational effectiveness.
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E 2 . C A S E S T U D Y A N A LY S I S An Inventory of Collective Housing Precedents Assigned: Jan. 25 Review: Feb. 4 As a second warm up exercise before we begin the semester’s design component, you will be asked as a class to construct a catalog of collective housing stratagies. Working in teams of two, each pair will be assigned a discrete project, and will be asked to both analyze/diagram the conceptual frameworks and logic of the two projects, and produce measured drawings. Deliverables First, each team will research and attempt to addresses through a 300 word write-up and diagrams, the following questions regarding the project: - What is the primary design intent/strategy for the projects? - Is there a common thread between the two of them? - At what scales are the projects operating? - How many typologies of domestic units does the project contain? - How do the individual domestic units function? - How does the domstic unit interface with the public domain? - What is the circulation strategy for each project? Next, each team will construct a 30” x 30” boards with both plan and two sections of each case study at a scale appropriate to the project, in consultation with the instructor. Drawings are to be B/W. Finally, the team will construct a 30” x 30” boards with a bird’s eye axonometric drawing of the project in its context, showing how the project integrates with the urban fabric, infrastructure, flows, etc. It might be exploded to reveal components and systems. * These boards will be reviewed on February 4 and then catalogued as a PDF on UVaCollab. This document will serve as a reference for all students.
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Board 1 Plan, Sections, Diagrams (see InDesign template on Collab)
Board 2 Urban Axonometric, Urban Diagrams (see InDesign template on Collab)
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Review Format On February 4, we will review the boards on the Tech Bridge in the format of team presentations and feedback/discussion. Groups will pinup and present next to other groups analyzing the same case study, beginning with a short presentation of each group’s analysis, followed by a discussion between students and instructors.
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Image Credit: Margarita Jover, ARCH 2020, Spring 2018, University of Virginia, SoA
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E3. INVENTORY OF UNITS A Typological Inventory of Domestic Units Assigned: Feb. 4 Interim Pinup: Feb. 22 Review: Mar. 8 This third exercise is dedicated to the design of domestic units with a series of spatial and formal constraints. Students will work individually to develop three domestic units: the horizontal home, the sectional home, and a home for someone considering the adaptation of the domestic unit to issues affecting contemporary urban life. Collective housing has historically comprised the largest total built surface area in the city. External conditions that determine the construction of housing, and its cultural and technical configurations, is increasingly defined by outmoded cultural clichĂŠs and economic drivers. Too often, the design of domestic space responds uncritically to established norms in construction techniques, financial motivations, durability, speed of construction, social status, square footage, etc. Despite this, in the relatively short time from the pre-industrial age to today, many aspects of urban life have undergone rapid change and diversification. As a result, architecture should respond by innovating in the design of new dwellings and the transformation of existing ones. The broad pedagogical objective of this series of projects is to train in capacities to draw and think spatially about domestic space. More specifically, the architectural objective is to explore the plasticity of domestic spaces through the careful attention to given constraints. Economic considerations and legal restrictions are the traditional constraints for the design of collective housing. In order to facilitate innovation, this project also offers a series of spatial and formal constraints for the design of spaces of inhabitation.
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3.1 Horizontal Home This is an exploration of horizontality and the relation with domestic exterior spaces. How hyper private and hyper public can coexist in the same level? Thin and thick walls that are opaque or with degrees of trans-parency, movable filters, spatial sequences, special furniture, etc. will be unfolded on the design of this horizontal habitat. Rooms without a roof that are central or on the perimeter will be important features to organize inhabitation. Design Guidelines: 1. Design a habitat of 1200 S.F. on one floor. 2. Provide 25% of this given area as an exterior space. 3. The minimum diameter to be inscribed in a courtyard is 9 ft. 4. The maximum free height inside is 12 ft, the minimum 8 ft. 5. Ceilings and floors can incorporate texture, slopes, and small changes in heights. The operative floor thickness is 18”
3.2 Sectional Home This is a spatial exploration of sectional relationships in compact domestic spaces. Think formally, spatially, and logistically as you configure your spaces. The objective is to recreate an atmosphere. Design Guidelines: 1. Design a habitat of 1200 S.F. with only a 20% of the total surface touching the ‘ground’. This is 240 SF of footprint, and the rest is aerial. 2. The height of spaces can be designed between the minimum legal of 8 ft and a maximum of 12 ft. 3. The operative floor thickness is 18”
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3.3 A Minimal Home for Someone This final typology asks students to conceive of a minimal home of no more than 2500 cu. ft. for particular occupant(s), considering how the minimal domestic unit can adapt to the needs of contemporary urban life. Students are asked to design for a specific user; a mobility impaired person, a blind person, an acrobat, or a maker/salesperson who works from home. Deliverables For each of the three schemes, students will develop the following representations, presented on 30” x 30” boards in accordance with the template files available on the Classes folder. 1. Ground Floor Plan at 1/4”= 1’-0” scale 2. Typical Upper Floor Plan (if applicable) at 1/4”= 1’-0” scale 3. Section or Section Perspective at 1/4”= 1’-0” scale 4. Model of a scheme of student’s choice at 1/16” = 1-0” scale Review Format An interim pinup will take place on February 22 to review progress on Ex. 3.1 and 3.2 at the Tech Bridge. A final review of all three components will take place on March 8 in CAM 205/405.
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(1) planar model
(3) 30” x 30” boards
Board 1 (Ex. 3.1) Horizontal Home Plans + Section (see InDesign template on Classes)
Board 2 (Ex. 3.2) Sectional Home Plans + Section (see InDesign template on Classes)
Board 3 (Ex. 3.3) Students select either template
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E4. COLLECTIVE HOUSING BLOCK An Aggregation of Domestic Units on the Urban Block Assigned: Mar. 18 Penultimate Review: Apr. 19 Final Review: May 2 For this final exercise, students are asked to design an aggregation of housing units, and their public and collective spaces, as a cohesive urban block. Students will work individually to test and iterate strategies, working toward a resolved and coherent scheme to present at the final review. The Site The site is located in the downtown core of Charlottesville, VA, USA. It is presently surface parking, and the site of the weekly Charlottesville City Market, a farmer’s market that takes place each Saturday morning. The site is approximately 240’ x 460’ and includes a 20’ wide street (1st Street S.) that bisects it in the N/S orientation. The site is bounded by Water Street to the north, South Street to the south, 2nd St. NW to the west, and 2nd St. NE to the east. Designing an Urban Block The pedagogical goal of this project is to apply the lessons of the case study analysis, lectures, and readings to design solutions that address the essentials of collective housing. The project focuses on the following fundamental aspects of collective housing: typology of aggregation, morphology, programmatic hybridity, densification of existing conditions, sequencing of public, collective, and private spaces, scale, materiality and spatiality linked to project’s strategy and urban integration.
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Site in Charlottesville, VA, USA
Site Downtown Mall
20’
8’
210’
35’
street
8’
sidewalk
240’
block
8’
20’
8’
210’
8’
36’
block
8’ 20’
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Process 1. Students will begin the process by exploring through diagrams and models, formal methods for aggregating the units they have designed: horizontal home, sectional home, home for someone. In the process, they will test multiple possibilities through iteration, developing a catalog of axonometric drawings. 2. Next, students will depart from the previously designed units, instead rigorously applying case study research and knowledge from both lectures and readings to develop a strategic catalog of clear and deliberate strategies for aggregation on the site. Strategies can be formal (morphological), related to atmosphere (forest, active node, island of silence, etc.), or related to spatial conditions (enclosed, opened, etc). 3. Finally, with a catalog of both exploratory and strategic aggregation typologies, students will select a scheme to develop a coherent urban housing block with minimal programmatic hybridity and a clear integration of public space: Considerations Typologies of Aggregation Students will gain an understanding of the role of access and circulation to arrive to the domestic unit. Corridors, stairs and elevators are the essential elements of dwellings. These elements define basic typologies of aggregation, and by extension, ways of living. We can design housing aggregated with a single loaded corridor, or a vertical core with two dwellings per floor, 5 dwellings per floor, etc. A thorough understanding of typologies for aggregation is the first important part to learn in order to be able to start designing collective housing.
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Urban Morphologies In addition to typology of aggregation, collective housing can also be defined by its morphology, such as towers, linear bars, courtyards, closed blocks, mat-buildings, terraced buildings, etc. The form and scale of a group of collective housing, as well as its repetition, defines the urban context. Similar morphologies can have different modes of aggregation. Programmatic Hybridity Students should seek to increase the programmatic hybridity of the existing urban fabric. Although the main component of this project is housing, students will explore the incorporation of offices, shops, markets, parking below grade, sport courts, etc. Rather than designing this program, students will configure it spatially in relation to the domestic program, projecting possible scenarios for activating the public realm. Spatial Sequencing: Public, Collective, Private Transcending the classical public/private dichotomy, and the spatial distribution of enclosed versus open, the challenge is to consider the relationships between realms and achieve a more dynamic spectrum; degrees of collective space between public and private and degrees of openness in the sequence. The collection of buildings forming the urban block will look for the sequence of collective spaces linked to the circulation infrastructure of lobbies, corridors, stairs and elevators (collective=open to the residents only), and public spaces (open to the city at large). Urban Integration In addition to the project’s internal strategy, the collective housing block shouldt respond to fundamental site-specific systems, such as topography, solar orientation, views, and environmental and cultural preconditions.
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FINAL REVIEW Exercise 4. Collective Housing in the City Synthesizing the content of the semester, students will present the results of Exercise 4 at the final review as a comprehensive design project for the urban block in Charlottesville. Under the direction of your instructor, each project should address many of the questions that have been raised throughout the preliminary exercises and issues introduced during the previous semester’s study of urban architecture. Submission Requirements The final collective urban aggregation, along with the material from all preliminary exercises will be the basis for the final review gallery. Each student will have a space allotted for large format boards for the final exercise, and equal space for the display of previous exercises. While the drawings presented in the final review will be open and developed based on the requirements of each project, there are a few comparative deliverables each student must comply with. These are: 1. Site Plan at 1/32” = 1’-0” scale showing the project within the context of the site (extents provided) 2. Aerial Axonometric using the view angle and context provided 3. Urban Section at 1/32” = 1’-0” scale showing the project within the context of the site (extents provided) 4. Sectional Perspective at 1/16” = 1’-0” scale 5. Ground Floor Plan at 1/16” = 1’-0” scale 6. Typical Upper Floor Plan at 1/16” = 1’-0” scale 7. Catalog of Unit Plans at 1/4” = 1’-0” scale using provided grid template 8. 3D printed model of aggregation (files due April 19) * These are required drawings, not the minimum. Additional instructions will be provided by your instructor as the review approaches.
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Review Format April 15 (Penultimate Review) May 3 (Final Review)
36”
36”
72”
other student work
18”
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V I S U A L I Z AT I O N C O N T E N T The visualization component of the studio aims to build on the skills introduced in ARCH 2010, working toward a greater proficiency through a series of workshops on the fundamentals of making and representing using both digital and analog tools. The lessons will be closely linked to the development of studio exercises. Core lessons will be taught by the Coordinating TA, with assistance from the section TAs, consistently on Wednesday afternoons from 3:30-4:45 in CAM 153, with two exceptions for hands-on workshops. Instructors will augment these lessons with thematic lectures that relate technical skills to broader concepts. Schedule 1/16 Scale, Observation, Recording, Measurement 1/23 Setting up a Drawing: 2D to 3D Workflow 1/30 Fundamentals of Plan and Section 2/6 Diagramming 2/13 Dynamic Drawings: Sectional Perspective and Axonometric 2/20 Drawing Building Systems: Grids, Structural Systems, Blocks 2/27 Workshop: Physical Modelling 3/6 Workshop: Collage 3/20 Layout, Publication, Presentation 3/27 Q&A Format The majority of visualization sessions will be lecture format in CAM 158, with students encouraged to bring laptop computers to follow along with the lessons. Two workshops are themed around advanced techniques in physical modelling and digital collage. These will be interactive, where students will be divided into small groups for hands-on exploration of technique. More details on these workshops will be provided later in the semester.
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Required Supplies All students should have a personal computer that meets the following specifications, as required by the School of Architecture, for use during Visualization workshops and working at the studio desk. http://www.arch.virginia.edu/ IT_Resources/Computer_Requirements The below software should be installed on each personal computer: Rhinoceros, AutoCAD, Adobe CC (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign) Students should also consistently have the below supplies on hand in studio, at a minimum. Specific tools beyond this are up to you - bring what you need to draw and model effectively in studio: white trace paper, dedicated sketchbook, drawing utensils, cutting tools
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BIBLIOGRAPHY On Housing Ábalos, Iñaki. The Good Life: A Guided Visit to the Houses of Modernity. (Park Books, 2000). Alday, Iñaki. Aprendiendo de todas sus casas. Textos i Documents d Arquitectura. (Escola Tècnica Superior d ‘Arquitectura del Vallés, 1996). Aravena, Alejandro. Elemental: Incremental Housing and Participatory Design Manual. (Hatje Cantz. 2016.) Byrson, Bill. At Home: A Short Story of Private Life. Transworld Publishers, 2010). Ebner, Peter. Typology + Innovative Residential Architecture. (Basel: Birkhauser, 2009). French, Hillary. Key Urban Housing of the Twentieth Century. (W.W. Norton & Company, 2008). Leupen, Bernard with Harald Mooij. Housing Design: A Manual. (NAi 010 Publishers. 2012). Levitt, David. The Housing Design Handbook: A Guide to Good Practice. (New York: Routledge, 2009). McAlester, Virginia. A Field Guide to American Houses: The Definitive Guide to Identifying and Understanding America’s Domestic Architecture. (New York: Knopf, 2013). Mozas, Javier with Fernandez Per, Densidad: nueva vivienda colectiva/ Density: New Collective Housing. (Alava: a+t Architecture Publishers, 2007).
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Oliver, Paul. Dwellings: The House Across the World. (Austin: University of Texas Press. 1987). Per, Fernandez. Ten Stories of Collective Housing: Graphical Analysis of Inspiring Masterpieces. (Alava: a+t Architecture Publishers, 2013). Per, Fernandez. Density projects: 36 nuevos conceptos de vivienda colectiva / 36 New Concepts on Collective Housing. (a+t architecture Publishers, 2007). Schneider, Friederike with Oliver Heckmann. Floor Plan Manual Housing. (Birkhauser, 2011.) Schoenauer, Norbert. 6,000 Years of Housing. (W. W. Norton & Company. 2003). Rapoport, Amos. House, Form, and Culture. (Pearson, 1969.) Rowe, Peter. Modernity and Housing. (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995). Rybczynski, Witold. Home: A Short History of an Idea. (Penguin Books, 1987). On the Poetics of Architecture Zumthor, Peter. Atmospheres. Birkhäuser, 2006 On Architecture, Urbanism, and Culture Allen, Stan. Points and Lines: Diagrams and Projects for the City (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1999).
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Chermayeff, Serge; Alexander, Christopher. Community and Privacy: Toward a New Architecture of Humanism. (New York: Anchor Books, 1965). Correa, Felipe. Sao Paolo: A Graphic Biography, (University of Texas Press, 2018). Gandelsonas, Mario. X-Urbanism: Architecture and the American City. (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1999). Rapoport, Amos. Human Aspects of Urban Form: Towards a Man-Environment Approach to Urban Form and Design. (Franklin Book Co, 1977). On Architectural Visualization Atelier Bow Wow, Graphic Anatomy 2 (Tokyo: Toto, 2014). Ching, Francis. Architectural Graphics. (Wiley, 2015). Lewis, Paul with Marc Tsurumaki and David J. Lewis, Manual of Section, (Princeton Architectural Press, 2016). Tufte, Edward. Envisioning Information, (Cheshire: Graphics Press, 1990). Uddin, Saleh. Hybrid Drawing: Techniques by Contemporary Architects and Designers (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1999).
On Fundamentals of Building Construction Allen, Edward with Joseph Iano, The Architect’s Studio Companion: Rules of Thumb for Preliminary Design. (Wiley, 2017).
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American Institute of Architects, Architectural Graphic Standards 12th Ed. (Wiley, 2016). Ching, Francis. Building Construction Illustrated, 5th Ed. (Wiley, 2014). Cover Image “Habitat and the City�: Competition Entry by W. Neutelings, A. Wall, X. De Geyter and F. Roodbeen (1990)
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