Austin Robert Madrigale
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PRINCETON
TEXA S A&M
bonkei chutes & ladders both& village k-12 golden corral enfilade ivy house superclips
a.r.k. exquisite corpse imperfect places
WORKS COMPENDIUM 2015 - 2021 1
Austin Robert Madrigale
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To the reader,
T
his catalog is an assemblage of conceptdriven design projects crafting the
body of my architectural explorations thus far. This particular volume of works archives projects from my four years of undergraduate experience at Texas A&M University and my first half of graduate experience at Princeton University. These projects are presented in descending order. Each
project
presenting
its
own
architectural discussion and each drawing having its own representational purpose in the composition of the whole. This collection follows
themes
of
processes,
graphical
experimentation, theoretical investications, physical fabrications, and quirky executions all working in tandem to answer questions of architecture of different programs and at varying scales. Through further pursuits in the field of architecture and design, my hopes are to continure adding to this assemblage, expanding upon themes already introduced and discovering more along the way. Thank you, Austin Robert Madrigale
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I PRINCE TON
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01 - bonkei 02 - chutes & ladders 03 - both& village 04 - k-12 05 - golden corral 06 - enfilade 07 - ivy house 08 - superclips
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01 BONKEI Eco-Cultural Park in Inujima, Japan M.ARCH FALL - 3RD YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): JESSE REISER OF RUR ARCHITECTURE DPC
This project seeks to create an ecocultural
as shelves for new sculptures and experiences
park that interacts with and highlights the
that pull visitors into the excavated histories.
excavated geographies of the island. Inujima,
These trails that traverse that landscape use
once home to a thriving quarrying and
the natural elements of the pits to create
copper refining industry, now has a declining
sensorial experiences for the viewer as scale,
population and a landscape scarred with the
light, texture, and atmosphere are highlighted
history of its industrial past. Most famous for
through the procession. In hopes of tapping
its granite mountains, the stone was excavated
into the geothermal energy in the site, an
to build castles in Japan as well as shrines
introduction of bathhouses will be placed
on the island, these quarrying sites are now
in the park providing new atmospheric
scattered across the island leaving pits now
conditions and layer of cultural experiences.
filled with water giving opportunity for new
A place of relaxation and a means of viewing
ecosystems of life and observation. Situated in
art similar to that of murals in traditional
the heart of the island, filling in the landscape
bath houses and placed opportunley to
between a network of abandoned quarry sites,
view the geographic landscape as art as well.
this park provides a cultural retreat allowing
This microcosmic park looks to create an all
visitors to immerse themselves in new and
encompassing journey of different ecosystems,
old histories of the island. A network of paths
histories, culture. A journey through a time
traverse the terraced geography, now serving
and atmosphere at the heart of inujima.
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02 CH U TES & L A DDERS Center for Ceramics in Long Island City, New York M.ARCH SPRING - 2ND YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): WONNE ICKX OF PRODUCTORA
So why chutes and ladders? When presented
and compositions as they respond to a grid
with the prompt of proximity for this studio
and the objects in proximity to them.
I was interested in the relationship between
I wanted to look for similar
objects that were similar in their typology
relationships of proximity around our site
but had the ability to take on different formal
in queens. This resulted in a finding of these
expressions based on different pressures. The
big box sheds that are scattered along the
simplest example I can think of is the “bar”
east river. I read this Costco as an example
or long extrusion of a sectional profile. This
of “two ladders slipping” past each other
led me to thinking about the game of Chutes and
looking to the city across the water. Moving
Ladders where a bar can take on a rigid form in
down the waterfront from Rikers Island in
the case of a ladder ,with a strong directionality
the north to Dumbo in the south, there were
or a more freeform sweep that responds to its
many different examples of these industrial
environment, a chute. The game of Chutes and
sheds pointing to the water. Some taking
Ladders shows these two objects in proximity
on different section profiles that affect their
to each other in how they begin to layer on
readings as either a cluster of singular sheds
top of each other or slip around, under or
or maybe one extrusion of a 3 pitched roof
past each other, responding to environmental
which I found to be helpful in moving forward
conditions, creating some unique interactions
with my own proposal for the ceramics center.
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The problems introduced by trying
thus disrupting the programmatic expression
to apply my formal explorations with the
of the two and concealing itself within the
investigations of the shed typology around
repetition. The roof plan showcases the roof
the site at midterm were most attributed to
tear and clearly articulates the relationship
the direction of the grain of the project. This
between the chute and the ladder.
came with the implementation of a roof pitch
The proposal on the site is having a
that wants to work with the existing building
dialogue with the site bounds on the left, the
(horizontally) on the site but also one that
bridge on the right and the existing buildings
wants to extrude down our site towards the
across the east river on Roosevelt island.
water (vertically). tHis problem resolved
Looking almost as if it could plug into it and
itself in creating two different “ladders”. One
become an extension across the water. This
ladder defined by a private program with the
pier is introduced as an extension of the
same dimensions of the existing building on
queensboro park to the right of the bridge
the site that repeats itself all the way down to
connecting it to the proposal.
the waterfront set back. The second ladder, defined by a public program, looks at a singular pitch extrusion extending towards the water much like the examples presented earlier. This private bar takes on more of a domestic articulation with the repetition of the pitch roof. The long public shed then hinges and aligns itself to the bridge on its right. To mediate the grain of the roofs and bridge the gap between the two bars, the roof of the long shed tears off and slips itself into the other bar,
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03 B OTH& V IL L AGE Queer Quarters & Gender-Inclusive Housing for Princeton University M.ARCH FALL - 2ND YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): JING LIU & FLORIAN INDENBURG OF SO-IL
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n this studio we were prompted with the
According to the 2019 anonymous
question of how to double the occupancy
senior exit survey, 18-20% of Princeton
of Spelman Hall, the historic dorms built my
seniors identify as a member of the LGBTQ
I.M Pei on Princeton University's campus,
community with approximately 6% coming
and how can we achieve doubling through
into their sexuality during their time at
sustainable means.
Princeton. With a collective student body
This project believes that not all
population of 8305 students, according to
bodies fit the binary and neither should
2019-2020 enrollment statistics, roughly 935
student housing. It believes in creating a
undergraduates and 539 graduate students
healthy environment for any and all students
identify as a member of the community. The
to grow in their work as well as in themselves.
campus pride index, an organization that
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rates and ranks universities based on tolerance
around the world with notable examples
and resources for the LGBT community, has
like the Castro neighborhood in San
consistently ranked Princeton University in
Francisco, Capitol Hill in Seattle, Le Village
the top 5 for the past 5 consecutive years.
in Montreal, Montrose District in Houston,
Peer universities have affinity housing
and Hells Kitchen and Greenwich village in
programs already in place tailoring to creating
New York City. Though these neighborhoods
a community based on shared experiences of
have traditionally come to be formed through
race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, etc
ghettoization of marginalized groups to
with schools like Dartmouth, Cornell, and the
generally less affluent areas. They have since
University of Southern California, to name a
been reclaimed, embraced, and affirmed
few, already having in place affinity housing
as places of refuge where members of the
programs for LGBT students. It would not
LGBT community can come together and
be out of place for Princeton University
benefit from the concentration of safe,
to implement a program of similar nature
nondiscriminatory resources and services and
given the size of its queer population and the
this is exactly what Both& Village aims for for
resources it has.
the students of Princeton.
Queer villages or gayborhoods can be found in nearly every metropolitan area
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Spelman Hall Spelman Hall has always been a dorm of change, from its first occupation as an all women’s dorm in 1973 it has since evolved into one of the few designated gender inclusive housing options on campus for partnered undergraduate students
or
for transgender/gender nonconforming students to have a more conformtable option to live. Understanding the history of the dorms as a sort of building whose inhabitants change with the social climates of the times, I used this as a departure point for my proposal of doubling the occupancy of Spelman hall and establishing it as an LGBTQ affinity housing complex and a safe space for students of shared experiences to live learn and create an environment that is sustainable for occupants in terms of academic success, community engagement and tolerance, and students’ mental and physical health.
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S p e l m a n H a l l , P r i n c e t o n Un i v e r s i t y A r c h i t e c t : I M Pe i , 1 9 7 3 Current occupancy: 206 students
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Spectrum of Interactions After speaking with the director of Princeton’s LGBT Resource Center, I mapped the programs of what he and the students would like to see in this hypothetical complex and organized them around the ideas of sustainability that I aimed to achieve through an affinity housing group, community engagement/tolerance, academic success, and positive health.
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HEALTH
GENDER INCLUSIVE LIVING
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
STI TESTING
ALLYSHIP
PUBLIC SAFETY
QUEER SPACE
MENTORSHIP PROGRAMS
COUNSELING SERVICES
SEX EDUCATION
GUEST SPEAKERS
PRINCETON LGBT RESOURCE CENTER
SPECTRUM OF INTERACTIONS
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ACADEMIC SUCCESS
BOTH& VILLAGE
Doubling through tangential packing Proposed occupancy: 445 students & public spaces
Spelman Double In order to double the amount of occupancy my intervention was found through the reading of Pei’s grid and introducing a new system of circles within the grid touching at the tangents of peis blocks to create a conversation of binaries. I wanted to start to develop a dialogue between the two systems, creating layering, bending, and wraps that will give the system a new reading but still maintains remnants of both. A both and condition.
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Both& The ground level is porous to allow for
in anonymity (especially younger college students)
interconnectivity to the rest of campus to promote
for that reason, each of the new blocks are organized
allyship and acceptance into the neighborhood.
around an interior program, giving inhabitants
The ground floor contains mostly public spaces
privacy from the rest of campus allowing them to
like common rooms, outdoor plazas, the newly
feel comfort within their own space.
expanded LGBT Resource Center and access to each block using the existing cores. Though there is a stigma that those of the LGBT community enjoy being, out, visible, and proud, most find comfort
Ground Level
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Up p e r L e v e l
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SECTION
1.1
L2
L1
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Village The section shows the different offering of “tribes within the village” as well as an underground tunnel system connecting the blocks and allowing students that find comfort in anonymity to pass between spaces without being seen replicating the bridges in the air below ground.
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Layered Richness striations on the exterior create an atmosphere that is inviting for the students living inside. The earth carved out for the tunnels will be repurposed for the earth walls and given a 15% lime coating to withstand erosion.
Influenced by the Chinese TuLou round villages as well as a spiral rammed earth wall done across from the site in the Forbes garden done by the Princeton form finding lab a few years back. The opportunity to create something beautifully graphic with the layering was also exciting. The more organic, colorful, and warm striations of the rammed earth on the interiors contrasting with the cold, sharp concrete
DETAIL 1.1
2
1. oak window, exterior untreated, interior oiled, double glazing 2. 180mm timber floor; leveling 25mm locally sourced loam board 3. 450mm rammed earth (10% lime-earth mixture outside coating); 2x 50mm reed-mat insulation; 30mm loam rendering with wall heating (roughcast loam plaster, finishing loam plaster with marble dust), iron oxide pigment for colored striations
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4. 27mm softwood lumber-core plywood (3-ply)
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5. 25mm reed mat insulation 6. 100mm rammed-earth floor, with vegetable-based hot wax, cork-trass-loam mixture as leveling 7. 280/120/30 mm mud brick as erosion protection, fired 8. 300/150 mm trass-lime ring anchor with reinforcement
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7 8
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RAMMED EARTH FABRICATION RAMMED EARTH FABRICATION & CONSTRUCTABILITY STUDY & CONSTRUCTABILITY STUDY DETAIL 1.1 DETAIL 1.1
1. oak window, exterior untreated, int 1. oak window, exterior untreated, in oiled, double glazing oiled, double glazing
2. 180mm timber floor; leveling 25mm 2. 180mm timber floor; leveling 25m locally sourced loam board locally sourced loam board
3. 450mm rammed earth (10% lime-e 3. 450mm rammed earth (10% limemixture outside coating); 2x 50mm mixture outside coating); 2x 50mm reed-mat insulation; 30mm loam ren reed-mat insulation; 30mm loam re ing with wall heating (roughcast loam ing with wall heating (roughcast loa plaster, finishing loam plaster with m plaster, finishing loam plaster with m dust), iron oxide pigment for colored dust), iron oxide pigment for colored striations striations
4. 27mm softwood lumber-core plyw 4. 27mm softwood lumber-core ply (3-ply) (3-ply) 5. 25mm reed mat insulation 5. 25mm reed mat insulation
6. 100mm rammed-earth floor, with 6. 100mm rammed-earth vegetable-based hot wax, floor, with vegetable-basedmixture hot wax, cork-trass-loam as leveling cork-trass-loam mixture as leveling
7. 280/120/30 mm mud brick as ero 7. 280/120/30 protection, firedmm mud brick as ero protection, fired
8. 300/150 mm trass-lime ring ancho mm trass-lime ring anch 8. 300/150 with reinforcement with reinforcement
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04 K-11 2 KK-12 School & Community Center in Trenton, New Jersey M.ARCH SPRING - YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): MONICA PONCE DE LEON & CAMERON WU
T
here were two preliminary exercises
exterior massing and urbanism as seen from
of
required
the city, while simultaneously choreographing
the orginization of matter and space in
the interior programs and sequence for
paradigmatically different ways. The first
public and private users. Converse to the
encouraged the production of unconventional
first exercise, it sought to produce unity and
relationship between repetitive elements as a
sameness from difference.
the
semester
that
means to explore part-to-whole composition
The program of the K-12 school
and type. In doing so, the destabilized section
situated in a post-industrial American suburb
may have suggested (new) social implications
demands that we consider the integration
between user groups (of different ages) in
of these two ways of architectural thinking.
addition to more general notions of the
Its program is large - manifesting both
collective and the individual. In short, it
heterogenous variation and homogenous
sought to produce difference from identicality.
repetition - such that the methods used to
The second exercise inverted these tendences,
produce its architecture might be applicable/
requiring strategies to architecturally unify
interchangeable with strategies for larger
larger program elements which were singular
urban morphologies. Thus, the themese
and idiosyncratic in nature. Circulation was
engaged in the beginning of the semester will
undoubtedly the main protagonist of the
now culminate in a final exercise to design
latter study, organizing the
the building and grounds for a K-12 public
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Working now with the programs of both
However on the side fo the pentagonal site,
exercises combined (and then some), you
theres a row of commercial and residential
will quickly learn that the site, though large,
buildings that must be kept.
will require intelligent and strategic planning
Careful
consideration
must
be
to accomodate all the program, especially
paid to how the project is accessed by the
with the addition of exterior athletic fields.
different user groups: a) students; b) parents;
You must therefore strike a balance between
c) teachers; d) staff; e) general public. You
internally-motivated
and
should study this for both indoor and outdoor
typological) constraints which dictate that
spaces. The program must be able to operate
the site be occupied in highly deterministic
at various times of day and serve various local
ways, and the extrinsic urban factors that
community groups simultaneously. To that
suggest the overall massing and site be shaped
end, the building must have separate systems
and subdivided in certain ways. Consider the
of entry and circulation. One (or more)
figure/ground of the project as a coherent
should serve the leasable gathering spaces/
architectural syntax that can permute on the
auditoria, while other entry routes should
site while also being contextually responsive at
provide access to the gymnasium, library,
its edges.
and cafeteria, and other spaces of the school
(programmatic
The site for the school is located on
at large. It is probable that lobbies or other
a predominantly disused industrial block in
common spaces might enable the building to
southwest Trenton. It is bounded by South
function as one.
Clinton Ave, Hudson Street, and Mott Street. There are large industrial buildings on the site which are in various states of viability or dilapidation. Some of these existing buildings may be kept rehabilitated and used for part of the school - or they may be razed completely.
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SITE
FIE L D P L A C E M E N T
U R B A N C O N N E C T IO N
N EST R O O F PL AN
T HICKEN
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THI cut 0’
53
20’
K-12
S E C TIO N A 0’
20’
40’
60’
80’
SECTIO N B 0’
20’
40’
60’
SEC T IO N C
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80’
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K-12
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05 GOL DEN CORRA L Artist’s Residence in Marfa, Texas M.ARCH FALL - 1ST YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): ERIN BESLER & MICHAEL MEREDITH
W
ith this project I was interested in
Windows looking into walls. Courtyards with
using the circle as a discrete module
no entry. These effects of the system's nature
that could be aggregated at points of tangency.
function locally, when a wall begins to split
By creating a system of relational tangencies
from another, but also the form of the with a
figural objects begin to be released from the
unifying unrolled conic roof.
field. Moments of intersection in this system
This system also tackles ideas of
begin to be capitalized on architecturally,
proportion referencing the golden ration
however the system responds to its own
spiral and deploying it in a west Texas as a
ontology. Columns are placed on module
small home for artist's it takes on the aesthetics
centers dictacting the structure in plan of the
of its vernacular.
object. Module tangent lines begin to create apertures and openings though not all usable.
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GOLDEN CORRAL
a g g re g a ti o n o f d i s c re te m o d u l e s
c enter- t a n g e n t re l a ti o n s h i p o f a d j a c e n t m o d u l e s
tangent- ta n g e n t re l a ti o n s h i p o f a d j a c e n t m o d u l e s
fi g u ra l r e l e a s e i n s y s te m g ri d
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GOLDEN CORRAL
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front elevation 0
2.5
5
15
0
2.5
5
15
back elevation
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06 ENFIL A DE Threshold Expansion Fabrication for the Princeton SOA M.ARCH FALL - 1ST YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): ERIN BESLER & MICHAEL MEREDITH TEAM: JONATHAN HANNA & IAN TING
T
his project brief asked us to build a
The idea was to place it in a review space
one to one prototype model of a door
to allow passage through while someone is
or window. Our group chose to tackle the
presenting without acting as a distraction to
concept of an expanding threshold. A portal
the presenter. The sloped top gives it an idea
that can be flattened into a door or expanded
of sideality and the painted "socks" on that
into a hallway of portals, an enfilade. It is
bottom ground it and camouflage the black
constructed of CNC milled oriented strand
casters.
board, repeated and hinged together in a sort of accordion style and then placed on rolling casters allowing it to be deployed anywhere.
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07 IVY HOUS E Green House Laboratory and Research Center for Princeton University M.ARCH FALL - 1ST YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): ERIN BESLER & MICHAEL MEREDITH
I
vy House looks at volumetric compositions
form interior walls and spaces, the floor plates
of quasi-autonomous objects that are
between the two buildings delaminate to a
wrapped in a delaminated facade envelope.
circulatory ramp connecting the two within the
Three separate programs, the Research
conservatory. Ground begins to delaminate as
Center, Conservatory, and Greenhouse,
well to create green walls and roof to provide a
are organized on the site in accordance
living quality to the structure.
with the limitations set by the existing trees.
This Center reads as a living wall.
The conservatory at the center provides a
The architecture becomes a billboard of
formal torque to the connected buildings,
sorts, advertising seasonal changes through
diagrammatically resembling a belt pulley,
the display of plant life cycles on its exterior
delaminating the surfaces of the facades, floor
creating a dynamic facade condition. The
plates, and ground. Facades peel and tear to
facade delaminates revealing interior during
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PRINCETON
facade delaminates revealing interior during
the two. The Research Center holds the
the winter months to take in more sunlight
library, classrooms, labs, and offices. The
vs. summer months when they begin to close
Greenhouse is divided into two floors and
up with plants creating fuzzy poche. The 3
holds plants that will then be cultivated and/
are unified by a ribbon strip that ties a thread
or placed in the conservatory for public view
through the Center and ends with a peel of the
and study. The Conservatory pulls in aspects
site ground.
of both the Research Center and Greenhouse
The three objects, different in
and provides a means of vertical circulation
programs but read similarly in material
between the two. It is a public showcase of the
characteristics and tectonics. The panelled
work being done in the two buildings as well
west facade is stone cladded with breaks to
as a place to hold vegetation during the winter
provide shelving for vegetation to grow during
months.
warmer months. A wooden “green screen” is applied to the east facade to filter morning light. The greenhouse and conservatory are built in traditional means of glass and steel for proper plant growth. The Research Center and Greenhouse are autonomous programmatically using the Conservatory as a transitional space between
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N
sc a l e: 1 / 8 ”
G r o u n d LLe v ele 0v1e- stlu d y- S t u d y cut +5’
c u t +5 ’
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L e vn el Level O cut +
nl 0e2 - -t eachTe a c h +20’
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N
N
sc al e: 1 / 8 ”
sc a l e: 1 / 8 ”
L e vel o 0 3 - w-o r kWo r k L e v e l Tw cut +40’
c u t +2 0 ’
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c u t +4 0 ’
IVY HOUSE
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IVY HOUSE
30’
15’
Wo r m ’s Eye S ect i o n
sc a le: 3 /1 6 ”
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40’
30’
20’
10’
20’
30’
40’
10’
Wo r m ’s E y e S e c t i o n
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West Elevation
S um m er
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08 S UPERCL IPS Barber Shop and Apartment on Main Street, USA M.ARCH FALL - 1ST YEAR STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): ERIN BESLER & MICHAEL MEREDITH
A
little off the top please. Superclips,
circulation. The facade screen receives a
Main Street addition, uses operations
literal clip to provide clear clips into the
of clips, clipping, and clip-ons to create
interior of the project from the street. The
construct a main street addition, barber
facade also acts as a clip on unit, speculating
shop and residential unit. Clipping operates
on an idea where main street facades can
at multiple scales across the project. Clips
be interchangeably replaced depending on
as a means of subdivision of the 30x30
program, use, or aesthetic. Clipping as both
block to activate interior spaces and provide
an additive and subtractive operation.
a geometrical system of organization and
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section perspective scale: 1/2” = 1’
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II TE XA S A&M
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09 - a.r.k. 10 - exquisite corpse 11- imperfect places
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09 A .R.K. Archive for the Post-Anthropocene UG4 SPRING - VERTICAL STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): JORIS PUTTENEERS & GABRIEL ESQUIVEL TEAM: ESTEBAN ARMENTA, KAREN CARDENAS, & MICHAEL MARROQUIN
A
RK is a sanctuary of objects speculating
the system. Programmatically, objects are
on a new ecosystem of accessing,
displayed in a gallery and garden, processed
displaying, processing, and preserving in
within an archival chamber, and finally laid to
a post-singular context in an endeavor to
rest within the catacombs for deep storage and
ensure that digital information of continuing
preservation. This process of preservation is
value remains accessible and usable. This
cyclical, allowing for a reduction of time to
archive addresses algorithmic operations
exist in an object’s quote unquote lifespan.
sectionally, in three levels: the architectural
The objects are not only preserved but are
system as a whole, the curatorial process,
repurposed to be able to produce new objects,
and the object as a tool in how it relates to
through data collection and sequencing.
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This system utilizes algorithmic processes working at
This project sorts in two categories. A machine’s data processing output and a
three scales:
human subject’s understanding of this output. 1) The first level is the ecosystem as a whole.
While both are independent of each other,
The cylical nature of garden, collection,
both can be used as a resource for each other
extraction, and preservation.
in this ecology. The system learns from human data while the human may also learn from the
2) The next level of algorithmic processing is
data outputs of the system, creating a symbiotic
curation. There is a step by step process in the
relationship between both system and human
object’s journey from arrival to storage that
without any interdependence. This archive
takes place within the archival chamber.
produces interpretations of architecture and human and machine interaction through
3) At the smallest scale, the algorithm
new means of object collection and data
functions as a tool. A collection of objects
processing.
repurposed as a difficult whole.
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A.R.K.
Ecosystem The gardens above ground, landmarked by follies outputted by the machine, determined ideals of a picturesque, rejecting Kantian perspectives of the beautiful and sublime, in order to inject its own aesthetic. A gallery where an object’s “hardware” is displayed and accessed by a subject curated entirely up to the machine’s discretion. Below the gardens, the liminal space of the archival chambers where an objects data is collected and processed in its transition to becoming digitally preserved, and finally to storage within the catacombs where the object’s remains are stored in the “folders” within the poche. Due to the cyclical nature of this ecosystem, if objects are considered significant due to machine discretion, the object data will be outputted and sent to the gardens to be displayed or if deemed insignificant (for example: object duplicates) are then sent to the incinerator to be deleted.
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//ossuary
//garden + processing
//folly01 //folly03
//folly02
//folly04
//divot
//stalactites
//catacomb chunk
//object cycle
//system leak //object processing _object status: arrived _SCNNR activated _CTLGR: warming up _XTRCTR: sleeping _NBLMR: sleeping //object classification: folly, +send to garden
ARK
//curating_cycle:
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T h e p ro c e s s o f c u ra ti o n t h ro u g h th e A R K i s c y c l i c a l . T h e o b j e c t e n te rs th r o u g h th e o s s u a ry , i s t a g g e d , s o rte d a n d p ro c e s s e d to b e s e n t to th e c a ta c o m b s fo r d a ta c o l l e c ti o n . P o s t c o l l e c ti o n , t h e o b j e c t i s e i th e r s e n t to b e p r e s e rv e d o r d e s tro y e d d e p e n d i n g o n th e m a c h i n e s v i e w o f o b j e c t w o rth . Ob j e c ts d e e m e d wo r th y o f p re s e rv a ti o n
A.R.K.
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Curation In the Second Digital Turn, Mario Carpo
but only based on the frequency of scale,
describes the new technological advancements
following an order that would be meaningless
in classification and sorting that have allowed
to humankind. This model of machine
data to be collected. Technology giants such as
classification is seen within the chambers of
Google and Amazon have allowed people to
our architecture. The Curators define their
correctly sort information or files in a specific
own system of classification unbeknownst
order, but machines are able to do the job at
to human understanding. This leads to a
a more efficient rate. From today’s big data
developed library of both meta and material
perspective, it is easy to see that classifications
data in order to create an accurate rendering of
also function by structuring and formalizing
authenticated content over time.
a random stock of information, providing speedier access to all data in an inventory by way of indexing. In Amazon Warehouses, objects are not sorted by subject or category,
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Meet the Curators
There is a step by step process in the object’s j within the archival chamber. This process is
The Curators. The Curators are charged wit
and interpreting object data through photogr
cataloguing for digital and physical preservation
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journey from arrival to storage that takes place aided by artificially intelligent tools dubbed
th classifying, appraising, sorting, collecting,
rammetric scanning, material extraction, and
n.
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A.R.K.
Contact & Excavation
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To o l Each “tool” is made from the
delamination, bashing, growth,
“hardware” of other typologies.
and decontextualization allowing
After a certain critical mass
for transtemporality of objects.
is outputted, when the tool
The pieces are not fused or
has enough information to be
merged,
of use, it begins to aid in the
objectual qualities. The object
curatorial process of the system.
uses collected data to render new
The result of this parts to whole
outcomes such as objects, spaces,
is a completely new typology,
and tools. The tools are no longer
the tool becomes a plane of
parts of the system but they are the
objects
system now.
through
aggregation,
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retaining
its
own
10 EXQUIS ITE CORPS E Meta-Mausoleum for the Data Departed UG4 SPRING - VERTICAL STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): JORIS PUTTENEERS & GABRIEL ESQUIVEL TEAM: ESTEBAN ARMENTA, KAREN CARDENAS, & MICHAEL MARROQUIN
O
ur project speculates on a speculative
spiritual space, and data center. Like that
fiction in which a Mausoleum becomes
of canonical catacombs, human remains
an archive for preserving artifacts in a post
and objects meant to enter the afterlife with
singularity era. The Mausoleum serves as a
the human, are stored within the poche
monument implanted in preexisting contexts
of the network of underground passages,
featuring an information garden and archival
establishing no hierarchy between human and
data catacombs below. These catacombs serve
non human objects after the expired lifespan.
as burial grounds for objects both physically
The poche becomes a plane of objects in
and digitally as well as a space of display and
itself rejecting classical labeling paradigms
historical preservation. The extraction of
through
both human and nonhuman metadata is
bashing, algorithmic manipulation, and
performed in the below and the essence at the
superimposition allowing for trans temporality
point of departure from physical existence
of objects, placing centuries of context in
is backed up to the cloud while the hardware
on observation of thickness and space. The
is preserved within the physical architecture
archival poche becomes an exquisite corpse
of the crypt. A tomb as a museum, library,
of collected objects perversing the duality of
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aggregation,
delamination,
TEXAS A&M
figure ground by layering the catalogued data
where objects rest in a state of existence. Our
through thickness and space. Poche in flux.
project instead produces new possibilities
Spaces in becoming. Newly added objects can
and potentials, where every object’s data is
be easily seen and understood by their sensual
part of a collective that is in the process of
qualities while objects of longer storage begin
becoming. The catacombs, where the objects
to be modified through data extraction and
are stored, become a “proto” for something that
hardware embalming through amalgamation
is beyond our present knowledge. Reflecting
into existing poche.
the canonical catacombs that were a proto of
The growth is omnidirectional,
the architecture that was to come, our project
without hierarchical structure, because it
explores the possible precedents for a post
transcends cartesian limits. The information
anthropocene architecture.
that is not expressed in the physical growth
The mausoleum questions object
occupies no spatial dimensions. The object
life and afterlife. As an object’s physical life
also has no set time. This is where the
ends, how can its essence be manifested
algorithm plays a vital role in communicating
digitally?
Data
these ideas. The gradient between smooth
Disposal.
Metadata
and striated denies any registration of
itself in its phenomenological state then
construction or deterioration. It is a setting
eventually abstractly materializes into a
where space and time are transcended
tangible architecture archived within the data
(pushed past their limits), and the state is
catacombs of the mausoleum.
purely the existence of data physical and metaphysical(or what is not seen with the eye). However our project defies a fixed state of this collected data, rather than a museum
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Upload
and
Hardware
extraction
identifies
EXQUISITE CORPSE
[SITE PLAN]
Garden of Algorithmic Delights Introduction of the algorithm allows
this data garden as an expression of
for multiple attributes of data or
or an attribute of the substance or
substance to be synthesized and
our archive of information. What is
expressed. Thereby implementing
expressed is physically seen but is not
the notion of the becoming and
the entirety of the substance, which is
growth, as is evident within the
the intangible data or information.
garden. The information growth or “garden” is the tangible growth of the information, a data leak of what has been archived. Our project treats
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Cadaver An archive of the dead. The mausoleum exists as a reduction of time to past, present, and future by understanding the poche as an archive. The mausoleum distorts that notion. There is no archive and yet there is only archive, in that the composition of the built work contains objects ranging from significant to banal, tangible and intangible, old and new, and temporal and eternal.
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Plan of Data Catacombs cut -45’
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EXQUISITE CORPSE
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Extraction Kierkegaard argues the idea of extraction and begins to question the afterlife by focusing on the moment when the subject transcends to the “after”. the post-physical identity, Corpus Hominis to Spiritus Immortalis. Known as “the moment”. The instance where subject connects and enters a transcendental state of the eternal, or where an object connects to upload its metadata through a trascendental vessel known as the Machine Aided Metadata Extraction
Device
(pictured
left).This
procession backs up the metadata to the eternal storage capacity of the “after”, from temporal to eternal.
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Autopsy logitudinal section
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11 IMP E RFECT PL ACES Sacred Space for Virtual Reality UG3 FALL STUDIO INSTRUCTOR(S): VAHID VAHDAT
T
his project focuses on the importance
allow for a shift in space thus activating more
of the architectural section in the
inhabitable areas throughout.
animation, articulation, and activation of
This was also an investigation in the
a space. What began as an aggregation of
occupancy of a space through virtual reality.
primitives in elevation, an animation of space
The spaces throughout called to question the
was achieved through booleans of “objects’
idea of the human as an irritant, an agent
taken from the initial massing. These objects
of disturbance in a space, manifested both
start to articulate the space by creating a
physically and virtually.
unique surface logic to the interior. The interior begins to imitate similar logics found in Piranesi’s Carceri drawings through the flattening of layered spaces blurred together by a manipulation of perspective. Through a diagrammatic analysis of the section of the object, cuts made along regulating lines can
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Austin Robert Madrigale Vol. 06 Produced in May 2021 WORKS COMPENDIUM 2015-2021 For further information contact at austinmadrigale@gmail.com
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