v b u p
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r g i n a r c h i d e r g r a d u a r t f o l i o o f b
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t r
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a t e c e c t u r p o r t f o l i c e b e c k w i t
h e o h
C O N T E N T S URBAN ECOSYSTEM som residency project spring 2014 page 4-17
MEGABLOCK studio exercise spring 2014 page 18-19
THE VERTEBRAE dmco installation fall 2014 page 20-23
FRUIT STAND good fruit competition fall 2013 page 24-25
ROOM IN A GARDEN studio project fall 2012 page 26-29
DUCK CUBE naef toy competition spring 2012 page 30-31
SHELTER HOME shelter competition fall 2013 page 32-33
URBAN OBSERVATORY studio project spring 2013 page 34-47
APP VISITOR CENTER third year competition spring 2013 page 48-49
BRKLYN CENTER studio project fall 2013 page 50-57
STRUCTURE + TIME vsaia competition spring 2013 page 58-59
EXPLORATIONS a collection of discoveries page 60-61
DXA
DXA STUDIO internship summer 2014 page 62-75
SOM internship spring 2014 page 76-79
RÉSUMÉ summary of events 2007-2014 page 80-81
#
CONTACT bryce beckwith virginia tech page 82-83
SOM
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3
EDUCATION
URBAN ECOSYSTEM: INTERWOVEN CONNECTION residency project with som
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date context instructor partners sponsor
spring 2014, 4th year cermak axis, south side, chicago, illinois andrew balster kelsey dressing, adrienne milner, maru padilla, alec yuzhbabenko som, chicago studio
Previously the site of the Harold Icke social housing development, the site, located at McCormick Road and State Street, now holds six vacant sity blocks with a schools, positioned at the northwest corner. The "Icke homes" were a vast housing project, holding roughly 4,000 people of different races, occupations, and statuses. Within the housing units, various exceptionally strong communities developed, using unconventional spaces and individual units for gathering and providing services for one another. These communities were sorts of informal settlements among the architecture. The land is seeded, cultivating a forest of trees for the production of timber, injecting life into the local economy. The act of training those to tend to the forest and harvest the wood, educates the population. The building of the site, block by block, generates community within the process and sustains the newly generated community within the development. 4
SOCIAL
JOBS
HARVESTING
INDUSTRIAL
ECONOMIC
CONSTRUCTION
DENSIFICATION
CUSTOMIZATION
STATE ST.
ON SITE LUMBER ST.
CULTURAL
RESIDENTIAL
COMMUNITY
OPEN SPACES
FORESTRY PARKS GREEN HOUSES
COMMERCIAL
ECONOMIC
This diagram depicts the process of building from educating locals for construction, the coordination and construction of the forest and the development, the creation of living residents, the addition of economic and cultural amenities, and the building of community within the built environment.
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6
As the site is developed block by block, sequentially over time, the ecological forest is transformed into an urban forest by the cultivation of trees into cross-laminated timber for the construction of the architecture. The land that holds the forest becomes the land that holds the development, with the open spaces of the masterplan sustaining pockets of the original forest. The pockets of open space serve the community in providing programed and unprogrammed spaces of gathering. The wood structured community becomes a celebration of the community developed and reminiscent of the forest, housing a new urban ecosystem.
20 ft 7
a b
The craft of timber construction is intellectually socially, and economically critical to the community that occupies the structures. Just as a collection of trees creates a miniature ecosystem, the community that lives within is reminiscent of this ecosystem. The craft and the spatial capabilities of timber construction provides opportunity for the training and housing of workers. The cost of timber construction is economically realistic and suitable to all social classes. 8
A B
TYPICAL COLUMN 1
TYPICAL COLUMN 2
rigid insulation A concrete ring beam B c d
laminated timber column metal bracket concrete topping cross-laminated timber panel
a
b c d
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a b
10
A B
TYPICAL PARTITION 1
TYPICAL PARTITION 2
concrete to timber tie-rod A concrete power-actuated fastener B c d
gypsum board metal stud with insulation wood trim power-actuated fastener
a b c d
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a
b
c
12
A B c
EXTERIOR COLUMN DETAIL
TYPICAL EXTERIOR WALL
laminated timber column A metal pin bracket B gravel fill c
wood panel wood sheathing rigid insulation
a b c
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a b c d
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TYPICAL BALCONY DETAIL A B c d
wood decking metal grate drainage sublayer copper sheathing
TYPICAL PARAPET DETAIL A B c d e
wood handrail soil gravel fill rigid insulation weatherproofing
a
b c d e
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The residential building houses various sizes of residential units, all containing interior and exterior spaces. Exterior unit spaces provides opportunities for gardens, patios, events, etc. The range of strictly defined to the delineated exterior unit space provides a range of privacies throughout the building. The delineation of boundaries between community spaces and residential open spaces promotes a greater sense of ownership over the community.
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MEGABLOCK
studio analysis charrette ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date spring 2014, 4th year context cermak corridor; chicago, illinois instructor andrew balster recognition taller al cubo, digital web publication
The continuous recomposition of context via the preexisting logic of a Rubik’s cube explores latent opportunity by means of reorganizing sites along the Cermak corridor. 18
TH
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INK E TH
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THE VERTEBRAE
felt installation ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date fall 2014, 5th year context burchard hall, blacksburg, virginia initiators bryce beckwith + tyler lafontaine partners digital mentorship collaborative + parabox labs recognition studio collective publication
The Vertebrae functions as an intervention with felt, addressing the center circulation aisle of Burchard Hall and questioning it’s presence as a space for meeting and collaborating. By suspension of undulating ribs, the installation implies and projects spatial boundaries, and the reverberation and resonance of sound within different locations of Burchard Hall is decreased. The addition of a soft interior ceiling plane encourages conversation, a sense of privacy, and creates a home for the Design/Build collaboration table. By using grasshopper, the phenomena of catenary curves were easily simulated in order to manipulate the curves assuming gravity as a key component within the installation. In partnership with Zach Downey of Parabox Labs, this project was designed to instigate the use of parametric design tools; not necessarily for the process of form making, but for understanding the role of these tools as instigators of speed, efficiency, and accuracy in our methods of designing.
Plan with cable structure
Southeast elevation
20
16’
8 ft
Northeast elevation
’
21
The intervention receives it’s name, The Vertebrae, by the is visual similarities in elevation. As The Vertebrae spans the central circulation artery in the back half of Burchard Hall, it creates a spectacle that allures the attention of passerbyers. The dynamics of this constructed ceiling catalyzes change via a sense of privacy and spatial intentions. The circulation aisle now becomes a space of convening- hosting conversations, spectators, and productivity, while maintaining it’s primary function as a route through the building.
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FRUIT STAND
competition entry ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date context partner sponsor
fall 2013, 4th year chicago, illinois tyler lafontaine the good food project
A versatile fruit stand interacts with passerby-ers and attracts the attention of the viewer as an interactive, occupiable façade. It stands as a display of fruit and a vertical garden which allows for the color and arrangement of the fruit to be the instigator of attraction. The façade acts as merely an organic aggregational organization structure to display the goods being sold.
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Vertical garden concept diagram, flattened elevation and hole sequence, plan (unfolded).
8 ft 25
A ROOM IN A GARDEN
comprehensive studio project ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date context instructor
fall 2013, 3rd year brown’s farm; blacksburg, virginia patrick doan
The room, being the most basic of defined architectural spaces, resembles a tent, the most humble of shelters. It becomes a place of refuge and self contemplation for man. The garden, being a gathering of nature, is a servant to the room by creating a path for arrival and a sense of place for the room. As the garden is a servant space to the room, the room is a servant space to man. The choreography of light within the room points to the existence of something beyond one’s self. The structure of the room bends inward, sheltering and protecting man while the garden stands as a gate or a threshold to enter within the room. The room becomes not only the beginning of architecture, but an extension of self; a reflection of man.
3 ft 26
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15 ft
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DUCK CUBE
competition entry ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date spring 2012, 2rd year partner james wood sponsor naef, international swiss toy company recognition finalist, honorable mention
Three identical elements comprise this deceptively simple puzzle. These duck shaped pieces stack, interlock, and cantilever off each other to create nearly infinite compositions. Perception of the individual elements ceases to exist when the blocks come together, due to the construction of each element from two distinct pieces of solid walnut. 30
8 cm
31
TWO FAMILY SHELTER HOME
international competition entry ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date context sponsor
fall 2013, 4th year appalachia; southwest virginia shelter architecture magazine
Motion is the illustration of time’s pursuit. The architecture acts as a clock, orchestrating the occupants conscious awareness as well as delineation of the pace of time. The shelter stands as a two family temporary residence among a landscape that is a timekeeper, day by day, in the transition of seasons. The structural system of repetitive frames act as measurements of time as one shifts between rooms on a processional path through the spaces of the home. The material of the rooms conceal the frames, creating rooms of serenity, in contrast to the hallways which expose the frames, establishing an awareness of time by the movement through each frame.
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15 ft
master bedroom master bedroom master bath master bath guest bedroom guest bedroom
100 ft
water closet water closet
kitchen/ dining
kitchen/ dining Front elevation
Longitudinal section of one apartment NOITCES LANIDUTI33 GNOL
URBAN LAB + OBSERVATORY
comprehensive studio project ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date context instructor
spring 2013, 3rd year urban; cincinnati, ohio jim bassett
The perception of how one thinks about space, orientation, and movement is the basis for exploration in the formal, structural, and material qualities of the Urban Lab and Observatory. The building is comprised of multiple different program types, each program housed in separate “buildings” proportioned by program size, then stacked one upon the other.
Site model, diagram of different building orientations profiles, diagram of orientation.
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white box theatre galleries studios library + archive studios exhibition hall lobby + staging
How we order space on the scale of a city block often times is influenced by the development of particular parcels over the course of time. This typically results in the stacking of programs (buildings) horizontally. The reorientation of city blocks changes the perception of how one understands the relationships of building programs and the use of space that typically would be unoccupiable.
35
EXHIBITION Visual + Aural Galleries (400 nsf/ea.) 8,000 nsf Exhibition Hall 5,000 nsf White Box Theatre 3,000 nsf
ARCHIVES Library and Archives 800 nsf (attached reading room) 200 nsf Lobby + Staging 3,000 nsf
16,000 nsf
4,000 nsf
4,800 nsf 20,800 gsf
+gsf factor 25% 1,000 nsf subtotal 5,000 gsf
+gsf factor 30% subtotal 36
Building section showing the configuration of separate spatial conditions.
25 ft
RESEARCH + SHOP 10 Research Studios (600 nsf/ea.) 6,000 nsf 8 Working Studios (800nsf/ea.) 6,400 nsf Office + Support 2,000 nsf 14,400 nsf +gsf factor 35% subtotal
5,040 nsf 19,440 gsf
TOTAL 45,240 gsf Site floor area 26,000 gsf the main site retains 19,500 gsf 75% open space (to the sky) at grade floor/area ratio
1.74 far 37
38
Each programmed section has it’s own identity as its own building. Rather than a homogeneous building envelope that houses all programs, the difference in program is expressed by the volume of necessary square footage for each building.
25 ft
39
level 0: lobby + staging How can the foundations of a building express a structural idea challenging the orientation of conventional norms? GRAVITY STRUCTURE ORIENTATION HONESTY
N
40
level 1: hall for exhibiting The reconciliation of art and science. VIEWPORT CREATIONISM EVOLUTION FREE PLAN
N
20 ft 41
level 2/3/5/6: studios for making Above is a typical floor plan of the co-op studios configurations. How does live-work environments establish a sense of balance and how can a place of productivity be a place of rest? LABYRINTH INTERACTION COLLABORATION BALANCE
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level 4: archive for learning What is the role of the archive and how does it become a catalyst for making? STACKING LAYERS ORIENTATION
20 ft 43
level 7/8: galleries for displaying The observation of art The art of observation REFLECTION REFRACTION TRANSPARENCY SERVED VS. SERVANT
N
44
level 9: theatre for performing What is the stage and what is the audience? The typical roles of audience and performance become challenged through means of architecture. MOVEMENT PROXIMITY PHYSICAL RELATIONS CINEMA
20 ft 45
2” porcelain perforated screen system 6” diameter steel tube column with welded steel column plate
2” concrete finishing slab wire mesh with ties @ 1.5’ 2” insulated concrete form concrete metal decking non-shrink grout l4x6 pour stop angle w22x18 structural floor beam vapor barrier + water proof flashing 2”rigid insulation 2”electrical conduit beam penetration w8x40 structural roof beam
3 ft 46
The structural system reinforces the architectural idea of each program having its own formal identity. The structure is expressed as buildings stacked one upon the other, both having their own roof structure and floor structural systems.
3 ft 47
ridge line
ashwood valley
APP COMMUNITY VISITOR CENTER
healing springs
competition entry
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date context partner sponsor
spring 2013, 3rd year warm spring mountain preserve; appalachia soo han virginia tech third year competition
Formally derived from three geographically iconic locations in the Appalachians, the sequence of spaces acts as a common place for the local and the visitor. It becomes a place of refuge from the outside and a space that people may inhabit as a destination to commune and visit with one another. It also serves the warm spring mountain reserve as an observatory for wildlife and a place of shelter from the harsh climatic conditions. Located strategically at the Ingall’s municipal airport and the trail head of a park preserve, the building services visitors to the park as well as the airport. 48
The structure is composed with units of reclaimed railroad ties from the nearby railroad system that creates a thick fortress-like barrier between the elements and the interior. The railroad-tie walls are wrapped by ribbons of corten steel that provides wind load and solar protection against the extreme in-climate weather conditions that are characteristic of the site.
living room + lounge
offices
cafe + display space
restrooms + mechanical + storage
30 ft 49
BKLYN TRAIN TERMINAL AND LIBRARY CENTER comprehensive studio project
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date context instructor
fall 2013, 4th year urban; future downtown brooklyn, new york margarita mcgrath
RO
OKLY N-Q UEE NS EXP RES SWA Y
With the plans for a new subway system servicing all of Brooklyn and revitalizing the downtown Brooklyn district, a train terminal and a central library converge to instigate a new epicenter in Brooklyn, a room for the city, and a place for interaction. The formal qualities of the building are an exploration of the idea of mass and void as excavation and displacement.
B
50
plaza archives/offices library library library lobby/lounge/cafe/ticketing train terminal train terminal
bed-stuy 51
60 ft 52
South building elevation placed in the context of a dense urban environment, site plan with the mapping of future train lines.
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54
Level -2
Level -1
Level 2
Level 3
Level 0
Level 1
20 ft
Level 4
Roof Level
55
Building section of glass curtain wall system, detail section of roof plaza balustrade.
copper film insulated glass units tension cable
continuous floor vent
3’ floor slab
double pane insulated glass units
15 ft
56
MYRTLE AVENUE MUNICIPAL BUILDING MYRTLE AVENUE / EMERSON PLACE
BRYCE BECKWITH 4TH YEAR / VIRGINIA TECH
window / balustrade clamp frame
welding plate for stair unit
concrete stair unit
permeable exterior cork tile mats
precast air plenum/hvac services
precast concrete floor slabs
cast-in-place column concrete ring beam- borders perimeter
3 ft
57
STRUCTURE AND TIME competition entry
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date context sponsor
spring 2013, 3rd year n/a virginia society aia
This weekend competition entry was an investigation of the conceptual idea of structure. The program is constantly evolving yet the structure stands as the constant. What if the structure adapted to the needs of society as it evolves? The childhood of the building could be characterized by the different needs of a community, and as the building ages, different spaces within the structure evolve and become reprogrammed in response to societal needs. As the building establishes an impression in the context in which it’s apart of, the relationships and experiences of each occupant that interacts with the building looks differently. Structure and the visual identity of the structural idea is possibly the only enduring architectural programme of the building’s multiple functions that it houses over the course of its life time. 58
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EXPLORATIONS
a continuous collection of discoveries ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The images presented are a collection of ideas, studies, and fragments of projects that display the means in which I explore. These objects are generators of how I think about architecture and representations of my interests through design.
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US
PE NS KI
CA TH
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ATTHEDRAL HELSINKI CA
KA ATAJANOKAN TERMINAALI VIKING LINE
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INA RM AL
TITIE ETE
TE PIA YM OL
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HELSINKI CATHEDRAL
WITH DXA STUDIO DXA INTERNSHIP RE guggenheim helsinki competition, private client projects S TA UR
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date context
RI ST
O may 2014 to august 2014 manhattan, new york city, new york
As an Intern Architectural Designer at DXA Studio, my roles included site surveying, LPC submittals, schematic design drawings, digital modeling, CD drawings, rendering, physical fabrication and demonstration, and physical massing and modeling. Projects include a yoga studio, multiple residential projects, a church, a jazz entertainment venue in Hawaii, an entertainment venue in New York, and the international Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition. Physical fabrication and demonstration experience includes installation and setup of lighting component demonstration with Matthew Schreiber, owner of Baltic Studios and long-time studio director for James Turrell. 62
During the tenure of the summer, primary responsibilities included focusing on the international Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition, working on pre-design to design development and representation, represented on spread.
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International Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition board submission: board 1
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66
International Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition board submission: board 2
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International Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition board submission: board 3
69
INTERIOR LIGHTING FIXTURES: Gallery focal lighting will be high efficiency LED fixtures throughout. In administration spaces and other back-of-house areas, occupancy sensors and individual controls will be used to minimize energy use.
The site presents a fundamental challenge in that the majority of visitors will approach the site from the city center to the North, while the best access to sunlight is to the south.
INTERIOR LIGHTING FIXTURES: Gallery focal lighting will be high efficiency LED fixtures throughout. In administration spaces and other back-of-house areas, occupancy sensors and individual controls will be used to minimize energy use.
DAYLIGHT: Daylighting by north-facing sawteeth will be maximized in the galleries to reduce the demand of artificial lighting and to minimize direct radiation.
GLAZING: Triple glazing will be used throughout to maximize the energy performance of the glass systems and to provide thermal comfort. Double wall glass skin systems were explored but were ruled out due to compromised visibility through the systems.
Basic mass
ENERGY SAVINGS
HARBOR WATER HEAT EXCHANGE: Water source heat pumps utilize harbor as a heat source and heat sink.
Mass shifted East-West to allow light to water Maximize open spaces on south terrace of building: public and museum installation spaces. Alternative entry is provided from the 2nd floor terrace.
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
BASELINE
5000 mWh
10%
4500 mWh
15%
4200 mWh
25%
3800 mWh
30%
3500 mWh
40%
3000 mWh
100%
POTENTIAL NET-ZERO WITH ON-SITE BIOFUEL + PVS
PHOTOVOLTAIC PANELS: 650 kW rooftop PV array on South generates 500 mWh and offsets 15% of project energy.
40% Lights, Equipment, A/V + Digital Displays Mass shifted Northwest to form daylit outdoor terraces
13% Pumps + Fans
25% Space Heating
SOLAR HOT WATER COLLECTORS: Solar hot water collecting piping integrated into the facade cladding on the building’s west face offset half our project’s domestic hot water demand.
Massing organized to increase light at harbor quayside March 21, 12:00 PM
International Guggenheim Helsinki Design Competition board submission: board 4
LIGHT + MASSING
70
View of Southern Terrace
10% Space Cooling
12% Domestic Hot Wate
ENTRY COURT: The museum entry, located to address the city center, is generally in shadow, but illuminated paving and a reflecting pool create a vibrant space that welcomes visitors.
ENERGY
WOOD CHIP BIO-FUEL: Used to offset city tri-generagion district heating and cooling, and shift entire source of energy to renewable biofuel.
BASELINE DESIGN WITH 5000 MWh at 385 kWh/m2/yr
CITY TRI-GENERATION DISTRICT HEATING AND COOLING: Helsinki provides district heating and cooling which is up to 90 efficient. The bulk of the energy for the museum will come from this energy source.
However, the museum design accommodates alternative energ strategies to offset reliance on foreign procured natural gas an coal burning both of which are presently used to fuel the majority of the district systems.
e d
er
0% m
gy nd
GH-5437109047 Vegetated swales
FRESH AIR ACCESS: Fresh air intake will be located at the North-West service core at roof level in order to avoid polluted air from the ferry terminal and the ferry terminal’s access road.
MECHANICAL ROOM DISTRIBUTION: Mechanical spaces are evenly distributed along the West facade on multiple floors in order to provide direct, adjacent access to all the served spaces and to leave the North, East and South areas of the building open for public spaces.
GREEN ROOFS: Green roof systems are used to slow rain water in order to avoid run-off. FERRY EXHAUST: Landscape buffers are provided to mitigate the air quality issues.
Pervious paving used as much as possible to reduce run-off.
CONDITIONING ZONING: In order to reduce energy demand, Gallery and Art Storage spaces will have distinct mechanical system zoning due to strict art space environmental requirements. All other spaces will be conditioned to meet local building codes for typical public buildings.
AIR QUALITY + STORM WATER
MECHANICAL ZONING AND DISTRIBUTION CANTILEVERED HARBOR GALLERY: The Harbor Gallery will be cantilevered over the public entry with a dramatic system. A truss system integrated in the saw-tooth of the roof provides clear spans, and provides capacity to suspend the Multi-Function space from above, while simultaneously allowing for a column-free lobby at grade.
DEFLECTION DIAGRAM:
RECYCLING: The building will utilize waste separation that will include the following separation of materials: - Paper - Cardboard - Glass - Metals - Plastics - Bio-degradable materials for composting
STRESS DIAGRAM:
STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION: The structural grid for the building is laid-out on a 10M x 10M grid, a spacing that works for the ideal subdivision of the galleries. The bulk of the building is a simple, cost-effective post and beam system steel frame. Wood structure was explored but ultimately not selected due to its inefficiency with providing the desired spans and durability.
WATER: Gray water will be collected and stored for re-use in the following areas: - Irrigation for plantings on-site, after passing through a filtration system - Toilet flushing Water conserving fixtures including waterless urinals will be used
RECYCLING + WATER
NORDIC ROYAL: Nordic Royal is a regionally sourced copper, aluminum and zinc alloy that has a golden finish that does not weather or patina over time with exposure to the atmosphere. It is appropriate for quaysides and will give the museum a jewel-like quality on the harbor front.
STRUCTURAL TARRED WOOD: Taking advantage of the sustainably managed resources of wood in Finland, the base of the building is clad in black tarred wood. The material is appropriate for exterior use in this environment and provides a rough, dark foil to the shimmering Nordic Royal metal work above the building’s plinth.
INTERIOR MATERIALS: Interior materials that maximize the use of post-consumer and pre-consumer recycled content, that come from rapidly renewable sources and that are low-emitting will be selected. Finished wood from certified, managed regional forests will be used for a variety of purposes such as the gallery ceiling suspension system, and wood paneling in public spaces. Concrete floors have been shown throughout for durability and aesthetics, however finished wood floors may be selected as an alternative.
MATERIALS Entry Plaza Truck By-Pass
Public Bicycle Parking Located Below Ramp
VIP Drop-Off Area Terminal + Museum Services Access Road
Widened Sidewalk and Bicycle Lane
Loading Dock Access
Bicycle and Pedestrian Ramp to Water Front Museum Staff Parking Elevator from Laivasillankatu to Bridge
SITE CONNECTIONS
Tähtitorninvuori Park Bridge to Park
71
Private residence existing site surveying notes
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73
Schematic design plan of yoga studio as an adaptive reuse project. Existing plan drawing of an entertainment venue in Hawaii.
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CSI BID DIVISIONS
STERN PROJECTS
RADIUS CONSTRUCTION
ELJIN CONSTRUCTION
Project & Site Management $468,760.00
Project Management & Supervision Estimating
$106,160.00 $2,700.00
Temporary Utilities
$8,100.00
Temporary Sanitary Facilities Pre-Construction Services $30,000.00
$2,700.00 $36,540.00
$20,000.00
Submittals, Samples, O&M, & Close Out Manuals
Submittals & Shop Drawings
$9,000.00
Permits, TR1’s, Testing, & Special Inspections
$11,000.00
Project Administration Reimbursables $34,000.00 Site Safety & Protection $290,288.00
$65,000.00
$14,000.00 $54,000.00
$100,000.00
$12,000.00 $17,000.00
Sanitary Sewerage: Site Sanitary Sewage Lines
Site Grounding
$1,500.00
Construction Fence & Barrier Hoisting
Scaffolding & Sidewalk Bridge $55,000.00 Scaffolding
Carting, Debris & Site Removals $26,950.00
$3,500.00 $8,500.00 $45,360.00 $32,450.00
$28,000.00
Carting Of Excess Dirt Rubbish Removal Shoring & Underpinning $75,000.00
$14,950.00 $17,500.00
NOT INCLUDED
Shoring Excavation & Fill $115,000.00
$5,000.00
$22,000.00
Site Preparation, Subsurface Investigations, Excavation Support, & Protection Excavation Excavate For New Footings & Foundation Walls Per Structural Backfill And Compact At Footings & Foundation Walls
$43,275.00
$8,000.00
$14,000.00
Green Wall Components $85,000.00
ADD’L INFO REQ’D
GSky Versa Wall
Plywood Sheeting on Vertical Garden Wall Concrete (Slabs & Formwork) $120,000.00
Cast-In-Place Concrete Foundation, Slab, & Reinforcing Rebar For Concrete
$40,350.00
$92,000.00
$4,620.00 $9,350.00 $9,600.00
Rock And Vapor Barrier Under New S.O.G.
$7,280.00
Pour Foundation Walls Concrete Formwork For Foundation Walls Form And Pour Elevator Pit
$27,950.00 $16,140.00 $2,550.00
Pour New Structural Footings Masonry- East, West, North, & South Façades $325,000.00
$41,050.00
Structural & Façade
Front Limestone Façade $110,000.00 Metals $150,000.00
Structural Metal Framing, Metal Joists, & Stair Stringers Cold-Formed Metal Framing
Architectural Metals Copper Cladding On Bulkhead
Light Gauge Metal Framing For Ceilings & Soffits
Light Gauge Metal Framing On New Walls Black Metal Stair At 1st Floor Rear Metal Railing At 1st Floor Entry Stair
707 Washington Street New York, NY 10014 T 917 261 6566 www.dxastudio.com
$1,800,000.00 $116,000.00 $80,000.00 $20,000.00
$326,094.00
$14,625.00 $9,200.00 $24,220.00
SCALE: $7,940.00 AS NOTED $4,200.00 CLIENT: HARRISON RESIDENCES LLC $26,224.00 PROJECT NUMBER: 11.15 $5,625.00 DATE: JUNE 6, 2014 $222,000.00
$325,000.00
Miscellaneous Backing Architectural Millwork $425,000.00
$202,000.00
Cabinetry & Millwork Finish Carpentry Architectural Woodwork Cabinet Hardware
$230,000.00
$16,000.00
7 HARRISON STREET · EXISTING ELEVATIONS
Metal Joists Planter Boxes at 1st Through 4th Floors Structural Steel (W Beams, Connections, Moment Welds, etc.), Steel Staircase From Cellar To Roof (Stringers, Rail, Etc.), Glass & Wood Treads, Landings & Rails Under Woods, Plastics, And Composites AB’s, Embeds, Bearing Plates, Hangers, Etc. Rough Carpentry $525,000.00 Plywood Sheeting on Floors & Roof
$7,800.00
$225,050.00 $184,000.00
SOUTHConcrete ELEVATION 1/8”= 1’-0” Masonry Unit :$154,000.00
DXA Studio
$2,925.00 $79,616.00 $77,600.00 $2,016.00 $85,290.00
$32,500.00
Form And Pour Stairs, Areaway, Planter Pits Pour New S.O.G. In Cellar
NORTH ELEVATION : 1/8”= 1’-0”
$26,540.00 $10,000.00 $35,390.00 $12,000.00
$107,000.00
Protection & Cleaning General Requirements (Temporary Fire Protection, Heating, Cooling, Ventilating, Utilities, Sanitary Facilities; Sidewalk Bridging, Scaffolding, Platforms, Security Measures, Barricades, Dust Barriers, Fences, Water And Snow Control, Environmental Controls, Construction Signage) Water Distribution: Water Supply
Masonry: CMU Walls, Brick Veneer, Mortaring: Materials & Installation Masonry-Supported Stone Cladding
EXCEL BUILDERS & RENOVATORS $234,530.00 $113,100.00 $1,770.00
Insurance On Site Data & Phone
$120,000.00 $10,000.00 $4,000.00 $8,000.00
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$12,060.00 $32,200.00
$650,000.00 $60,000.00
$28,700.00 $3,500.00 $306,055.00
Sample plate from an LPC set of residential project developed for submittal. Standing & Running Trim Wood Frames
Bathroom Millwork: Vanities Kitchen Millwork
Bid comparisons developed for contractor selection.
Wood Top Railing On Steel Rail Cellar Through 5th Floor New Base Moldings New Door Casings New Window Casings Crown Molding Millwork In Cellar
$7,000.00 $9,600.00 $44,000.00
$3,200.00
$11,970.00 $12,350.00 $9,350.00
$5,185.00 $38,000.00 $106,000.00
Millwork On 1st Floor Millwork On 2nd Floor
$6,000.00
Millwork On 3rd Floor Millwork On 4th Floor
CSI BID DIVISIONS
STERN PROJECTS
RADIUS CONSTRUCTION
ELJIN CONSTRUCTION
Project & Site Management $468,760.00 Project Management & Supervision Estimating Insurance
On Site Data & Phone Temporary Utilities Temporary Sanitary Facilities Pre-Construction Services $30,000.00 Submittals, Samples, O&M, & Close Out Manuals Submittals & Shop Drawings Permits, TR1’s, Testing, & Special Inspections Project Administration Reimbursables $34,000.00
Site Safety & Protection $290,288.00
Protection & Cleaning General Requirements (Temporary Fire Protection, Heating, Cooling, Ventilating, Utilities, Sanitary Facilities; Sidewalk Bridging, Scaffolding, Platforms, Security Measures, Barricades, Dust Barriers, Fences, Water And Snow Control, Environmental Controls, Construction Signage) Water Distribution: Water Supply Sanitary Sewerage: Site Sanitary Sewage Lines
Site Grounding Construction Fence & Barrier
$113,100.00 $1,770.00 $106,160.00 $2,700.00 $8,100.00 $20,000.00 $9,000.00 $11,000.00 $107,000.00 $14,000.00 $54,000.00
$65,000.00
Carting Of Excess Dirt Rubbish Removal Shoring & Underpinning $75,000.00
Shoring Excavation & Fill $115,000.00 Site Preparation, Subsurface Investigations, Excavation Support, & Protection Excavation Excavate For New Footings & Foundation Walls Per Structural Backfill And Compact At Footings & Foundation Walls Green Wall Components $85,000.00 GSky Versa Wall Plywood Sheeting on Vertical Garden Wall
Concrete (Slabs & Formwork) $120,000.00 Cast-In-Place Concrete Foundation, Slab, & Reinforcing Rebar For Concrete Form And Pour Stairs, Areaway, Planter Pits Pour New S.O.G. In Cellar Rock And Vapor Barrier Under New S.O.G. Pour Foundation Walls Concrete Formwork For Foundation Walls Form And Pour Elevator Pit Pour New Structural Footings Masonry- East, West, North, & South Façades $325,000.00 Masonry: CMU Walls, Brick Veneer, Mortaring: Materials & Installation Masonry-Supported Stone Cladding Concrete Masonry Unit $154,000.00 Structural & Façade Front Limestone Façade $110,000.00 Metals $150,000.00 Structural Metal Framing, Metal Joists, & Stair Stringers Cold-Formed Metal Framing Architectural Metals Copper Cladding On Bulkhead Light Gauge Metal Framing For Ceilings & Soffits
$35,390.00 $12,000.00
$12,000.00 $17,000.00 $1,500.00
$3,500.00 $8,500.00 $45,360.00
$28,000.00
$32,450.00 $14,950.00 $17,500.00
NOT INCLUDED
$5,000.00 $43,275.00
$22,000.00 $8,000.00
$14,000.00
ADD’L INFO REQ’D
$40,350.00
$92,000.00
$4,620.00 $9,350.00 $9,600.00 $7,280.00 $27,950.00 $16,140.00 $2,550.00 $7,800.00
$225,050.00 $184,000.00
Cabinetry & Millwork Finish Carpentry Architectural Woodwork Cabinet Hardware Standing & Running Trim Wood Frames Bathroom Millwork: Vanities Kitchen Millwork Wood Top Railing On Steel Rail Cellar Through 5th Floor New Base Moldings New Door Casings New Window Casings Crown Molding Millwork In Cellar
$1,800,000.00 $230,000.00
Millwork On 1st Floor Millwork On 2nd Floor Millwork On 3rd Floor Millwork On 4th Floor Millwork On 5th Floor Millwork Installation Exterior Stairs, Railings, & Screens $45,000.00 Metal Fabrication: Railings Interior Stairs & Railings $525,000.00 Interior Stairs & Handrails Stair Wood Tread Finish (42 Treads + 3 Landings) Glass Treads And Landings 3rd Through 5th Floors Wood Treads And Landings Cellar Through 3rd Floors Flashing & Waterproofing $50,000.00 Thermal & Moisture Protection
Flashing & Sheet Metal Building Sealants Membrane Roofing, Scuppers & Gutters $85,000.00 Roofing: Kemper Wood Doors & Jambs $65,000.00
Doors & Frames SCW Interior Doors Steel Windows, Doors & Skylight $275,000.00 Steel Windows & Steel Doors Skylights: Metal Framed Weatherstripping & Seals Door Hardware $50,000.00 Mirrors, Glass & Glazing $30,000.00 Glazing & Mirror: Interior Interior Wall Assemblies Gypsum Board On New Partitions & Furred Walls Gypsum Board On New Ceilings & Soffits Gypsum Board Assemblies & Shaft Wall Assemblies Rough Framing, Drywall, & Carpentry Stone, Marble & Tile $150,000.00 Tile Installation Interior Stone Installation
$120,000.00 $10,000.00 $4,000.00 $8,000.00 $7,000.00 $9,600.00 $44,000.00
$34,000.00 $20,500.00 $16,000.00 $4,500.00
$12,060.00 $32,200.00 $28,700.00 $3,500.00 $650,000.00 $60,000.00
$32,000.00
$142,000.00 $126,000.00 $16,000.00 $5,000.00 $18,400.00 $13,000.00 $13,000.00
$40,000.00 $144,378.00 $51,250.00 $6,100.00
$306,055.00
$3,200.00 $11,970.00 $12,350.00 $9,350.00 $5,185.00 $38,000.00 $106,000.00 $6,000.00 $33,000.00 $24,000.00 $12,000.00 $45,800.00
$425,000.00
$25,795.00
$16,295.00 $9,500.00 $143,587.00 $135,631.00 $7,956.00
$37,000.00 $18,000.00 $11,000.00 $8,000.00 $35,000.00
$326,094.00
$14,625.00 $9,200.00 $24,220.00 $7,940.00 $4,200.00 $26,224.00 $5,625.00 $222,000.00
$325,000.00
$202,000.00
$33,000.00 $24,000.00 $12,000.00 $45,800.00 $34,000.00 $20,500.00 $16,000.00 $4,500.00
Flashing & Waterproofing $50,000.00 Thermal & Moisture Protection Flashing & Sheet Metal
$37,000.00 $18,000.00 $11,000.00 $8,000.00 $35,000.00
Wood Doors & Jambs $65,000.00 Doors & Frames SCW Interior Doors Steel Windows, Doors & Skylight $275,000.00 Steel Windows & Steel Doors Skylights: Metal Framed
$32,000.00
Building Sealants Membrane Roofing, Scuppers & Gutters $85,000.00 Roofing: Kemper
Glazing & Mirror: Interior Interior Wall Assemblies Gypsum Board On New Partitions & Furred Walls
Gypsum Board On New Ceilings & Soffits Gypsum Board Assemblies & Shaft Wall Assemblies Rough Framing, Drywall, & Carpentry
Stone, Marble & Tile $150,000.00 Tile Installation Interior Stone Installation
Tile, Interior Stone Materials, Freight, Stone Templating, Fabrication, Delivery, & Setting Materials Cut Natural Stone Materials: Exterior Indiana Buff Limestone Floor Tile Wall Tile Marble Flooring Stone Countertops Exterior Pavers $25,000.00 Exterior Pavers Exterior Paver Installation Wood Flooring $85,000.00 Wood Floor Finish Wood Flooring: Material + Installation: 5” Quarter Sawn, Random Length, Select Oak Acoustical Sealant: Underlayment Below Wood Flooring Rubber Flooring Fluid Applied Flooring: Underlayment For Rubber Flooring Rubber Flooring
Painting, Coating & Finishing $150,000.00 Prime Paint
$142,000.00 $126,000.00 $16,000.00 $5,000.00 $18,400.00 $13,000.00 $13,000.00
$40,000.00 $144,378.00 $51,250.00
Painting Plaster, Tape, & Skim Paint: Interior & Exterior: Venetian Plaster Fireplaces $25,000.00 Bath Accessories $20,000.00 Bath Accessories Shower Doors New Shower & Tub Enclosures Appliances $45,000.00 Kitchen Appliances Laundry Appliances Window Shades $25,000.00 Motorized Single Shades Mechanical Screen Wall On Roof Elevator $65,000.00 Plumbing $275,000.00 Plumbing & Sprinkler Plumbing Supply Fire Suppression: Wet-Pipe Fire Suppression Sprinkler Domestic Water Piping (Green Wall Water Delivery Not Included) Sanitary Waste & Vent Piping Storm Drainage Piping AC Condensate Drain Piping Fuel Piping Plumbing Fixtures $65,000.00 HVAC $180,000.00 Ventilation & AC Equipment Air Distribution: Ventilation & AC Heating Equipment Electrical $150,000.00 Midland Lighting Installation Midland Power Installation Midland Service Work Midland Mechanical Work Light Fixtures $50,000.00
Midland Lighting Package Exterior Landscaping Planters On Terraces General Liability & Workers Compensation Insurance $179,534.00 SUB-TOTALS $5,603,532.00 Overhead 7% $392,247.00
Fee 5% $299,789.00 Contractor’s Contingency Profit & Overhead Insurances: General Liability, Workers’ Compensation, & Disability General Conditions 10% OH&P 12% Insurance 4% Of Sub-Total CONSTRUCTION TOTAL $6,295,569.00
$425,000.00
$25,795.00
$16,295.00 $9,500.00 $143,587.00 $135,631.00 $7,956.00
$80,000.00 $90,000.00 $381,495.00
$24,360.00 $392,720.00
$65,000.00
$13,650.00
$55,000.00
$133,320.00 $100,520.00 $32,800.00 $585,000.00 $200,000.00
$73,220.00
$6,100.00 $60,000.00 $27,028.00
$19,176.00 $5,440.00 $13,736.00 $75,000.00 $18,000.00 $46,500.00
$9,300.00 $27,180.00 $14,080.00 $22,660.00
$150,000.00
$10,500.00 $10,400.00 $2,400.00 $8,000.00 $220,500.00
Stain Level 5 Skim Coating Throughout
$41,050.00
Metal Railing At 1st Floor Entry Stair Metal Joists Planter Boxes at 1st Through 4th Floors
Plywood Sheeting on Floors & Roof Miscellaneous Backing Architectural Millwork $425,000.00
$2,925.00 $79,616.00 $77,600.00 $2,016.00 $85,290.00
$32,500.00
$116,000.00 $80,000.00 $16,000.00 $20,000.00
Stair Wood Tread Finish (42 Treads + 3 Landings) Glass Treads And Landings 3rd Through 5th Floors Wood Treads And Landings Cellar Through 3rd Floors
Weatherstripping & Seals Door Hardware $50,000.00 Mirrors, Glass & Glazing $30,000.00
Light Gauge Metal Framing On New Walls Black Metal Stair At 1st Floor Rear
Structural Steel (W Beams, Connections, Moment Welds, etc.), Steel Staircase From Cellar To Roof (Stringers, Rail, Etc.), Glass & Wood Treads, Landings & Rails Under Woods, Plastics, And Composites AB’s, Embeds, Bearing Plates, Hangers, Etc. Rough Carpentry $525,000.00
$2,700.00 $36,540.00 $26,540.00 $10,000.00
$100,000.00
Hoisting
Scaffolding & Sidewalk Bridge $55,000.00 Scaffolding Carting, Debris & Site Removals $26,950.00
EXCEL BUILDERS & RENOVATORS $234,530.00
Millwork On 5th Floor Millwork Installation Exterior Stairs, Railings, & Screens $45,000.00 Metal Fabrication: Railings Interior Stairs & Railings $525,000.00 Interior Stairs & Handrails
$106,500.00 $114,000.00 $38,000.00 $16,000.00 $3,000.00
$5,980.00
$300,000.00
$139,912.00
$125,000.00
$56,118.00 $17,790.00 $41,020.00
$175,000.00
$45,000.00
$13,000.00 $42,608.00 $38,600.00 $4,008.00 $8,000.00
$44,000.00
$46,900.00 $261,000.00
$70,000.00 $425,000.00 $325,000.00 $100,000.00
$85,000.00 $132,000.00 $18,000.00 $15,000.00 $5,000.00 $6,000.00 $68,150.00
$180,000.00 $80,000.00 $100,000.00
ADD’L INFO REQ’D $123,030.00
$40,000.00
$2,739,692.22
$75,608.00
$24,984.00
$22,300.00 $4,000.00 $18,300.00 $50,411.00
$50,000.00 $4,935.00 $113,750.00 $153,865.00
$81,145.00
$300,000.00
$225,000.00
$132,150.00
$115,150.00
$49,080.00 $32,300.00 $26,420.00 $24,350.00
$75,000.00 $95,000.00 $250,000 (Not Included In Totals) $5,750.00 $6,489,645.00
$136,984.60 $465,747.64 $95,889.22 $648,964.50 $856,633.14 $3,438,313.46
$319,809.71 $8,315,052.35
$3,544,719.00
$80,000.00 $90,000.00 $381,495.00
$65,000.00 $55,000.00
$24,360.00
$392,720.00
$13,650.00
$133,320.00 $100,520.00 $32,800.00 $585,000.00 $200,000.00
$73,220.00
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WITH SOM SOM INTERNSHIP chinatown branch library, mid-rise tower, competition ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
date context
january 2014 to may 2014 chicago, illinois
As an Intern Architectural Designer at Skidmore Owings & Merrill, I participated in applied research and collaboration on projects through partnership between Virginia Tech and SOM. Projects worked on includes the current Chinatown Branch Library project in Chicago, an urban design and architecture competition in Shenzen, China, as well as a mid-rise tower project in the Philippines. 76
Model for a Mid-rise, multi programmatic tower development in the Philippines.
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Working along side, Brian Lee, design partner at SOM Chicago, involvement with the Chinatown Branch Library in Chicago included development and modification to the facade.
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architecture + design student RE RÉSUMÉ ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
EDUCATION
VIRGINIA TECH | Blacksburg, VA Bachelor of Architecture, 5 Year Program | To Be Conferred: Spring 2015 CHICAGO STUDIO | Chicago, IL Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill Office Residency + Internship | Spring 2014 SCOTTSDALE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY | Phoenix, AZ Private Preparatory High School | Conferred: Spring 2010 RIO SALADO COLLEGE | Tempe, AZ College English Studies | Fall 2009 to Spring 2010 ASU SUMMER DESIGN WORKSHOP | Downtown Phoenix Campus, AZ Summer 2007
WORK
DXA STUDIO | New York, NY | Intern Architectural Designer | May 2014 to August 2014 SOM | Chicago, IL | Intern Architectural Designer | January 2014 to May 2014 NOROOF ARCHITECTS | New York, NY | Intern Architectural Designer | September 2014 to Present COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM | New York, NY Teaching Assistant and Program Assistant | June 2013 to August 2013 TEAMBONDING INC. | Blacksburg, VA Independent Program Assistant | November 2013 VIRGINIA TECH MEDICAL SCHOOL GRAPHIC DESIGN | VCOM, VA Freelance Work | Fall 2011 MISH MISH, ART AND ARCHITECTURE STORE | Blacksburg, VA Sales Associate, Cashier | August 2011 to July 2014 BANANA REPUBLIC, GAP INC. | Scottsdale, AZ Store Associate | November 2009 to January 2013 ANCALA COUNTRY CLUB | Scottsdale, Arizona Summer Staff, Children’s Counselor | April 2009 to August 2009
PUBLICATIONS
STUDIO COLLECTIVE | Virginia Tech Architectural Academic Publication 2nd Edition | Featured Work: The Vertebrae | Fall 2014 TALLER AL CUBO | International Architectural Academic Publication Digital Web Publication | Featured Work: Megablock exercise | Summer 2014
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EVOLO 06 | Architecture Publication Forthcoming Print Publication | Transcription | Spring 2012 EVOLO 05: ARCHI73C7UR3 X3NOCUL7UR3 | Publication Edition: 2012-2013 | Print Publication | Transcription | Spring 2012
HONORS + RECOGNITION
STUDENT INITIATED GRANT AWARD | CAUS, Virginia Tech Awarded for The Vertebrae: Felt Installation | Fall 2014 NAEF INTERNATIONAL TOY DESIGN COMPETITION | Naef Company Honorable Mention | Spring 2012 UNIVERSITY DEAN’S LIST | CAUS, Virginia Tech Spring 2012, Fall 2013 to Present NATIONAL SOCIETY OF COLLEGIATE SCHOLARS Member | Fall 2012 to Present STUDENT BODY VICE-PRESIDENT | Scottsdale Christian Academy May 2009 to May 2010
INVOLVEMENT + OUTREACH
DIGITAL MENTORSHIP COLLABORATIVE, CO-PRESIDENT | A + D, Virginia Tech Co-President: Fall 2014 to Present; Leadership Team: Fall 2011 to Present DIVERSITY COMMITTEE, MEMBER | CAUS, Virginia Tech Spring 2013 to Present COLLEGE AMBASSADORS, AMBASSADOR | CAUS, Virginia Tech Fall 2012 to Present DEAN’S FORUM, STUDENT ADVISORY COMMITTEE | Virginia Tech Fall 2013 to Spring 2014 PORTFOLIO WORKSHOP | A + D, Virginia Tech Initiator and Instructor | Spring 2012 AIAS, MEMBER | Virginia Tech Fall 2012 to Present NCARB, MEMBER | Virginia Tech February 2014 to Present
SKILLS
DIGITAL SKILLS | Mac and PC Operating Systems Proficient in: Rhino, Grasshopper, AutoCAD, SketchUp, 3DS Max, V-Ray for Rhino and 3DS Max, Adobe Creative Suite: Photoshop, Lightroom, Illustrator, InDesign, Bridge, Acrobat Pro; LaserCAMM software, CNC software, Prezi, Microsoft Office Suite: Word, PowerPoint, Excel; iWork: Pages, Keynote, Numbers | Familiar with: Revit, Maya MANUAL SKILLS Drafting, sketching, manual rendering, wood working, metal working, ceramics, vacuum forming, model making, book making, water color, oil paint, zinc-plate graphic printing, screen printing
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CONTACT INFORMATION bryce beckwith
+1.480.729.1229 bryceb@vt.edu www.babeckwith.com Scottsdale, Arizona Virginia Tech College of Architecture + Urban Studies School of Architecture + Design 201 Cowgill Hall 1325 Perry Street Blacksburg, Virginia
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