-2016 - 0NGOING STUDENT AT POLITECNICO DI MILANO MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
BOJANA MARKOVIKJ ADDRESS: VIA FRANCESCO CUCCHI 3, 20133 MILANO TELEPHONE: +39 348 160 4830 E-MAIL: BOJANAMARKOVICH@HOTMAIL.COM NATIONALITY: MACEDONIAN & SERBIAN DATE OF BIRTH: 17.09.1991
OF THE ANNUAL STUDENT EXHIBITION OF THE “UNIVERSITY AMERICAN COLLEGE” SKOPJE AND ALSO A PARTICIPANT (WITH PROJECTS IN THE FOLLOWING COURSES: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 3 AND 4 AND GRAPHIC DESIGN)
-2012-2015 GRADUATED FROM UNIVERSITY AMERICAN COLLEGE SKOPJE, MACEDONIA
-01.07.2013 - 07.07.2013 PARTICIPATING IN THE INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE SUMMER SCHOOL “ARCHITECTURE AS PERFORMANCE”, OHRID, MACEDONIA. TUTORS: PENEZIC&ROGINA ARCHITECTS.
-2006-2010 GRADUATED FROM “JOSIP BROZ TITO” HIGH SCHOOL, SKOPJE, MACEDONIA GRADU INTERNATIONAL BACCALAUREATE PROGRAMME
-08.10.2012 - 14.10.2012 VOLUNTEER AT “SKOPJE ARCHITECTURE WEEK 2012” - WORKSHOP ORGANIZATION.
-03.08.2015 - 01.03.2019 JUNIOR ARCHITECT IN THE ARCHITECTURAL FIRM “A DESIGN”, PRISTINA. MANAGING SMALL PROJECTS UNDER SUPERVISION OF DR.SC. BUJAR DEMJAHA -12.04.2018 - 19.04.2018 PARTICIPATING IN “URBAN SPONGE” WORKSHOP, PRATO, ITALY PROFESSOR: RICHARD INGERSOLL -25.05.2015 - 01.06.2015 VOLUNTEER IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE ANNUAL STUDENT EXHIBITION OF “UNIVERSITY AMERICAN COLLEGE SKOPJE” AND ALSO A PARTICIPANT (WITH PROJECTS OF THE FOLLOWING COURSES: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 5 AND 6, DESIGN OF URBAN EQUIPMENT, INTERIOR DESIGN 1 AND 2, BASICS OF URBANISM). -03.11.2014 - 18.02.2015 PARTICIPATING IN DESIGNING THE DETAILED PLAN FOR “RASHTAK” OUTDOOR PRESCHOOL PROJECT. -15.07.2014 - 15.09.2014 INTERNSHIP IN “A DESIGN”, PRISTINA, ASSISTING IN PROJECTS IN A PERIOD OF 2 MONTHS -30.06.2014 - 06.07.2014 PARTICIPATING IN THE INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE SUMMER SCHOOL “METABOLISM REVISTED”, OHRID. TU TUTORS: ATELIER BOW-WOW + PENEZIC & ROGINA ARCHITECTS -26.05.2014 - 01.06.2014 VOLUNTEER IN THE PREPARATION OF THE ANNUAL STUDENT EXHIBITION
-01.03.2011 - 01.07.2012 FULL TIME JOB AS MARKETING MANAGER IN “VENUSTAS” LTD, SKOPJE. -10.08.2010 - 20.02.2011 PART-TIME JOB AS AN EVENT PLANNER ASSISTANT OF “FASHION WEEKEND SKOPJE”.
-10.10.2011 - ONGOING VOLUNTEER AT “SOROPTIMIST” MACEDONIA - SINGLE CLUB STRUGA. -01.09.2008 - 01.07.2010 VOLUNTEER IN ORPHANAGE “11 OCTOBER” SKOPJE
AUTODESK AUTOCAD 2D, AUTODESK REVIT, SKETCHUP, ADOBE PHOTOSHOP, ADOBE ILUSTRATOR, ADOBE INDESIGN, QGIS. BASIC KNOWLEDGE OF RHINOCEROS 3D AND GRASSHOPPER.
NATIVE MACEDONIAN, SERBIAN AND CROATIAN, FLUENT ENGLISH AND BULGARIAN, BASIC SPANISH, ITALIAN AND FRENCH.
-PAINTING, PHOTOGRAPHY AND CREATING VARIOUS FORMS OF ARTS AND CRAFTS. -READING, SOCIALIZING, TRAVELLING. -PLAYING TENNIS AND SKIING.
B A C H E L O R S T U D I E S
CONT ENT
01 02 03 04 M A S T E R S T U D I E S
DESIGN STUDIO 1/ HOSTEL & LANDSCAPE DESIGN TOWN PLANNING DESIGN/ RAILWAY YARDS RECONSTRUCTION BUILDING TECHNOLOGY STUDIO/ AQUATIC CENTER DESIGN STUDIO 2/ INSTABILITY
05 06 07 08 09
BASICS OF URBANISM/ CULTURAL INTERACTION CENTER ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 5/ HOTEL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 4/ RESIDENTAL BUILDING DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN 6/ STUDENT HOUSING DESIGN ART EXHIBITION/ FEAR
Professors: Cino Zucchi, Matilde Cassani, Paola Sturla The project area is located in the dilapidated railway yard of Porta Genova station. The given site is positioned in the heart of an district which has its primary forms on the east (towards Darsena and the Ticinese) and more dynamic part for new interventions on the west (towards the street Solari and the areas Savona and Tortona). The existence of the water from Naviglio Grande and Darsena is one of the crucial elements in this area. It has a remarkable historical significance and at the same time it gives a huge potential for designing a contemporary landscape. This vivid area is overloaded by different kind of activities (Sinigaglia Fair, Milano nightlife, Fuori Salone and populations, but Porta Genova railway yard has always been a barrier, an obstacle to connect the two “islands� on this site. By this project designing an hostel building, multipurpose space and outdoor space, new attraction, connection and monument is created.and outdoor space,
Bojana Markovikj I Design Studio 2 I Hostel and Landscape Design
DESIGN STUDIO1/ HOSTEL & LANDSCAPE DESIGN
MASTERPLAN AND ELEVATION
EXPLODED AXONOMETRY
BUILDING FORM In relation with the heights of the buildings in the surrounding
ACTIVITIES IN THE BUILDING
BUILDING SHAPE Using the main connections and paths the site could have DIFFERENT ROOMS, FOR DIFFERENT NUMBER OF PEOPLE
INNER YARD Following the typology of the milanese architecture
BUILDING FORM In relation with the heights of the buildings in the surrounding
INNER YARD Following the typology of the milanese architecture
PERMABILITY Connecting the user and the site using the building asGROUND the intermediary FLOOR
SECOND FIRST FLOOR
FIRST FLOOR
PERMABILITY Connecting the user and the site using the building as the inermediary Second Floor
First Floor Second First Floor
Cross-Section
+16.20
+13.50
+10.62
+7.92
+5.04
±0.00
ELEVATIONS -2.50
floor treatment scread (sand and cement) insulation
ceiling
unfaced mineral wool batts 2 layers gypsum-based board light steel frame separating wall
DETAIL OF DUPLEX ROOMS
Professors: Stefano Boeri & Azura Muzzonigro
Looking to the city from a zenital point of view we can easily visualize the railway system. Even if the yards appeare as linked elements on the map they don’t interact anymore.[o] A system, according to Ludwing Von Bertalanffy, the founder of general theoy of systems, in “a set of elements that stand in interactiom - that is, they are linked by such relations that if one is modified, the others are too, and, as a result, the entire set is modified.” Instead of keeping considering the old railway tracks, each yard could more easly belong to different systems, which are made by those heterogeneous spacial configurations, movements, actions of the complex urban environment. Theordinary empty-full sequence of the city is suddently interrupted by these vast areas. The overlapping of elements produces a dense pattern, in which the seven yards emerge. A change of scale makes them evident whthin the urban morphology. Moreover if we consider the city as an accumulation of manifold, simultaneous and, often, contradictory actions and experiences each yard is often a place of encounter of these different elements. They are alterities within the pattern. In the fragmented city the 7 yards are not the unique alterities. They can be associated to other exceptional areas, that have in common same spatial conditions of abandon within the regolated city surface. The awareness that these yards are not the only ones in that condition confirms the fact that the existence of ‘railway system’ has not sense anymore. They are not special against the others, but special against the city. They do not follow neither formal laws nor functional ones. They are obstacles within the regolated urban territory expansion. The city has surpassed them, without involving. Or, on the contrary, they are anticipations of future times, anticipations of third paissage. The a-scalarity represents the most exceptional feauture of these spaces. a unique dimension for the speedy and scarcely distinguishable expansion of urban territory. The aim of the masterplan is to maintain and emphasize their a-scalarity and alterity. They could become happy island, redempting for the inhabitants of tomorrow. Spaces as fortresses againt
the widespreaded urbanism. Space protected as if they were be sacer places. Spaces to be activated by human action. As the philosopher Deluze pointed out in his “abécédairede” (letter d: desire), it is needed to be two in order to create: the space and the inhabitant.[*so every time someone says, i desire this or that, that person is in the process of constructing an assemblage, nothing else, desire is nothing else]. It is a function of the society taking possession of or agreeing upon extraordinarily important places on the earth’s surface and of the society’s celebrating their pre-eminence. The idea is to use devices capable of stimulating, inducing or producing any number of global trajectories in space. Dispositifs in order to active a process of relationships. Devices to induce a mechanism of reaction: reactive vis-a’-vis place.
Bojana Markovikj I Architecture I Town Planning Design I Railway Yards
TOWN PLANNING/ RECONSTRUCTION OF MILAN RAILWAY YARDS
PROCESSES OF RE-ORGANIZATION OF URBAN SYSTEM INTO MULTIPLE CONSIDERING THE CITY CONSIDERING ASPARTS A FRAGMENTED WHOLE YARD WILLWHOLE BECOME THEYARD TOOLWILL TO BECOME THE TOOL TO THE HIGHER CITY ASRANGE AEACH FRAGMENTED EACH STRUCTURE OF AUTONOMOUS PROVIDING OF FLEXINTENSIFY SPECIFIC AREAS OF THE SPECIFIC CITY. LOCAL FEATURES ENHANCE AND THEIR INTENSIFY AREAS OF THEWILL CITY.BE LOCAL FEATURES WILL BE ENHANCE AND THEIR IBILITY AND ADAPTABILITY OF THE SYSTEM IDENTITY WILL BECOME IDENTITY STRONGER. WILL BECOME STRONGER.
fragmentation + seriality
FRAMED A WHOLE TERRITORIAL EXTENSION BY REPEATING SINGLE AR-
magazine, The System, acceleration and rationalization. Ref. Schinkel, Havellandschaft.)
STRATEGY OF INTENSIFICATION: SET OF TACTICS GENERATING DISPERSED STRATEGY OFAND INTENSIFICATION: SET TACTICS GENERATING CONCENTRATION STRATEGY OFOF INTENSIFICATION: SET GENOFDISPERSED TACTICS GENERATING DISPERSED CONCENTRATION CONCENTRATION FLOATING INTENSITIES INTO URBAN SYSTEM, AND FLOATING INTO URBAN SYSTEM, GENERAL URBAN DESIGN APPROACH TO DESIGN APPROACH TO ANDTO FLOATING INTENSITIES INTO URBAN SYSTEM, GENERAL URBAN ERAL URBAN DESIGNINTENSITIES APPROACH INCREASING SPATIAL AND PROGRAMINCREASING SPATIAL AND PROGRAMMATIC DENSITY OF GIVEN CONDITION. INCREASING AND PROGRAMMATIC DENSITY OF GIVEN CONDITION. MATIC DENSITY OF GIVENSPATIAL CONDITION. OPERATING IN OVERLAPPED LAYERS,INHORIZONTAL SURFACES WILL REMAINSURFACES FLAT, WHILE OPERATING OVERLAPPED LAYERS, HORIZONTAL WILL REMAIN FLAT, WHILE OPERATING IN OVERLAPPED LAYERS, HORIZONTAL SURFACES WILL RETHE SURROUNDING WILL BECOME MORE DENSE. TO SATURATE WITH MATTER THE EMPTY THE SURROUNDING WILL BECOME MORE DENSE. TO SATURATE WITH MATTER THE EMPTY MAIN FLAT, WHILE THE SURROUNDING WILL BECOME MORE DENSE, TO SURFACES DOESN’T MEAN TO FULLFIL THEM.MEAN TO FULLFIL THEM. SURFACES DOESN’T SATURATE WITH MATTER THE EMPTY SURFACES DOESN’T MEAN TO FULLFIL THEM.
-dissociations-dissociations + connections+ connections -vectors as actions -vectors as actions -temporary + permanent -temporary + permanent -event + monument -event + monument -fragmentation-fragmentation + seriality + seriality -program disfunction -program disfunction -contest + experiment -contest + experiment
PHISYCAL DISPOSITIVESPHISYCAL CAN TRASFORM VECTORS INTO ACTIONS.VECTORS THERE WILL BEACTIONS. DIFFERENT DISPOSITIVES CAN TRASFORM INTO THERE WILL BE DIFFERENT KIND OF ACTIONS: BODIES DISPLACEMENTS, VERTICAL OR HORIZONTAL, VISUAL - OR CON KIND OF ACTIONS: BODIES DISPLACEMENTS, VERTICAL HORIZONTAL, VISUAL - CON NECTION, FUNCTIONAL CONNECTION, ECT. NECTION, FUNCTIONAL CONNECTION, ECT. example of dispositif: BRIDGES, TUNNELS, TRACKS, PATHS, STAIRS, TOWERS, ECT. STAIRS, TOWERS, ECT. example of dispositif: BRIDGES, TUNNELS, TRACKS, PATHS,
. EVENTS MILAN IS DOMINATED BY THE SPACIAL AND TEMPORAL DIMENSION OF THE SYSTEM MILAN IS DOMINATED BY THE SPACIAL AND EVENTS TEMPORAL DIMENSION OF THE SYSTEM. A SYSTEMATIC SUCCESION OF SITUATIONS THAT INVOLVE SPACES AND HAPAND OBJECTS. THEY A SYSTEMATIC SUCCESION OF SITUATIONS THATOBJECTS. INVOLVETHEY SPACES HAP PEN ONCE IN REALITY BUT THEY CAN REPRODUCED THROUGH MEDIA. PARTSTHROUGH MEDIA. PARTS PEN ONCE IN BE REALITY BUT THEYINFINITELY CAN BE REPRODUCED INFINITELY OF THE CITY (SPACE) AND INHABITANTS ARE THE RESOURCES EXPLOITED FOR OFITS THE CITY (SPACE)(OBJECTS) AND ITS INHABITANTS (OBJECTS) ARE THE RESOURCES EXPLOITED FOR THE REALIZATION OF THOSE EVENTS. THE REALIZATION OF THOSE EVENTS. -CITY AS A PERMANENT EVENT-CITY AS A PERMANENT EVENT-
vectors as actions
PHISYCAL DISPOSITIVES TRANSFORM VECTORS INTO ACTIONS. THEY WILL PRODUCE DIFFERENT KIND OF ACTIONS: BODIES DISPLACEMENTS, VERTICAL OR HORIZONTAL, VISUAL CONNECTION, FUNCTIONAL CONNECTION, HAVING TEMPORARY PROGRAMS ON A FIXED STRUCTURE. HAVING TEMPORARY PROGRAMS ON A FIXED STRUCTURE. ECT. THE STRUCTURE WILL BECOME THE ICONWILL BUILDING (MONUMENT) OF THE TEMPORARY EVENT. THE STRUCTURE BECOME THE ICON BUILDING (MONUMENT) OF THE TEMPORARY EVENT. example of dispositif: BRIDGES, TUNNELS, TRACKS, PATHS, STAIRS, TOWERS, ECT.
Manifesto for the Urban Territory of Milan
intensification + emptyness
contest + experiment
FRAMED A WHOLE TERRITORIAL BY REPEATING SINGLE ARCHITECTURAL - ELEMEN FRAMEDEXTENSION A WHOLE TERRITORIAL EXTENSION BY REPEATING SINGLE ARCHITECTURAL- ELEMEN A FUNCTION THATMORPHOLOGICAL BELONG TO THE PARTICULAR CONTEST AND TS, SUCH AS A BRIDGE OR COLUMN, SERIESOR OFASELF-INTERPRETATIVE MORPHOLOGICAL TS,ASUCH AS A IN BRIDGE COLUMN, IN SERIES COMBINE OF SELF-INTERPRETATIVE (VolumeTRANSFORMATION. 47 magazine, The System, (Volume acceleration andThe rationalization. Ref. Schinkel, TRANSFORMATION. 47 magazine, System, Aacceleration and rationalization. Ref.DIRECT Schinkel, EXPERIMENTAL ONE, WITH NO RELATION WITH THE PLACE AND
permanent event
Havellandschaft.)
Havellandschaft.) NEEDS. THE FIRST WILL PRODUCE A KNOWN REACTION, THE SECOND AN MILAN IS DOMINATED BY THE SPACIAL AND TEMPORAL DIMENSION OF THE UNKOWN (B. Tschumi, Architecture and Disjunction, The MIT Press, CamEVENTS SYSTEM. A SYSTEMATIC SUCCESION OF SITUATIONS THAT INVOLVE bridge 1996.) TRANS G: COMBINATION OFREALITY DIFFERENT PROGRAMS ONE SPACE, REGARD TRANS ONCE PROGRAMMIN G: COMBINATION DIFFERENT PROGRAMS IN ONE SPACE, REGARD SPACES ANDPROGRAMMIN OBJECTS. THEY HAPPEN IN BUT THEY CAN OF BE IN LESS OF THEIR INCOMPATIBILITY WITH PARTS THEIR RESPECTIVE SPATIAL CONFIGURATION. LESS OFMEDIA, THEIR INCOMPATIBILITY THEIR RESPECTIVE SPATIAL CONFIGURATION. REPRODUCED INFINITELY THROUGH OF THE CITY WITH (SPACE) AND ITS INHABITANTS (OBJECTS) ARE THE RESOURCES EXPLOITED FOR THE REALIZATION OF THOSE EVENTS - CITY AS PERMANENT EVENT - HAVING TEMPORARY PROGRAMS ON A FIXED STRUCTURE. THE STRUCTURE WILL BECOMEA THE ICON BUILDING (MONUMENT THE BELONG TEMPORARY COMBINE FUNCTION THAT BELONG TO THE OF PARTICULAR CONTEST A EXPERIMENTAL COMBINE A FUNCTION THAT TO THEAND PARTICULAR CONTEST AND A EXPERIMENTAL ONE, WITH NO DIRECT RELATION WITH PLACE AND NEEDS WITH THE CLIENT). ONE,EVENT. WITH NO THE DIRECT RELATION WITH (MAYBE THE PLACE AND NEEDS (MAYBE WITH THE CLIENT).
THE FIRST WILL PRODUCE A KNOWN REACTION THE AN UNKOWN (B. Tschumi, THE FIRST WILL PRODUCE A SECOND KNOWN REACTION THEONE. SECOND AN UNKOWN ONE. (B. Tschumi, Architecture and Disjunction, The MITand Press, Cambridge 1996.) Architecture Disjunction, The MIT Press, Cambridge 1996.)
Manifesto for the Urban Territory of Milan
THE CONNECTORS PARADOXICALLY WORK WITH THE LOGIC OF THEWITH “ARCIPELAGO”: THE CONNECTORS PARADOXICALLY WORK THE LOGICTHEY OF THE “ARCIPELAGO”: THEY AS A BRIDGE REPRESENT THE FLOWS THAT MAKE THE THISFLOWS SCENARIO POSSIBLE. THEY ARECHITECTURAL THEPOSSIBLE. DEVICESELEMENTS, THAT REPRESENT THAT MAKE THIS SCENARIO THEY ARE SUCH THE DEVICES THATOR A COLUMN, IN SERIES OFCONFIGURATION SELF-INTERPRETATIVE TRANSFORMATION. (Volume INFLUECE THE NORMAL INFLUECE SPACIAL AND CONFIGURATION OF THE URBAN TERRITORY. THE DYNAMIC NORMAL SPACIAL AND DYNAMIC OF THEMORPHOLOGICAL URBAN TERRITORY.
- The Permanent Event -
- The Permanent Event -
dissociations + connections
DISASSOCIATION: DISJUNCTION, FRAGMENTATION: TRANSFORMATIVE PROCESSES OF DISASSOCIATION: DISJUNCTION, FRAGMENTATION: TRANSFORMATIVE PROCESSES OF RE-ORGANIZATION OF URBAN SYSTEM INTOOF MULTIPLE STRUCTURE AUTONOMOUS PARTS RE-ORGANIZATION URBAN SYSTEM INTOOF MULTIPLE STRUCTURE OF AUTONOMOUS PARTS DESASSOCIATION: DISJUNCTION, TRANSFORMATIVE PROVIDING HIGHER RANGE OFFRAGMENTATION: FLEXIBILITY ADAPTABILITY OF THE PROVIDING HIGHERAND RANGE OF FLEXIBILITY ANDSYSTEM. ADAPTABILITY OF THE SYSTEM.
-Pt. Genova- ART & SPORT SYSTEM -San Cristoforo- AGRICULTURE SYSTEM -Pt. Romana- EDUCATION & RESERACH SYSTEM -Rogoredo- LEISURE SYSTEM -Lambrate - EDUCATION & ART SYSTEM -Greco- ART & EDUCATION SYSTEM -Farini- LEISURE & EDUCATION SYSTEM
VIEW OF PORTA GENOVA ART & SPORT SYSTEM
Professors: Paolo Debiaggi, Fabrizio Leonforte, Alessandro Carrera
Bojana Markovikj I Architecture I Building Technology Studio I Aquatic Center
BUILDING TECHNOLOGY STUDIO/ AQUATIC CENTER
The theme of the design project covers the definition of measures to requalify an urban area placed in the south-east sector of the city of Milan, Corvetto-Chiaravalle-Porto di Mare. The application context is located at the border of Mazzinidistrict, near p.le Corvetto. An environmental renovation project related to sports activities, is done through the complexity of the building design process - starting from the preliminary concept and briefing stage to the development of the documents needed to communicate design information to the construction stage. Building technologies, structural elements and building physics behavior are main parts inside the design process.
GIVEN SITE
MAIN AXES
OUTLINE OF THE SITE
AGRICULTURE
GIVEN SITESPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS
MAIN AXES AGRICULTURE
GIVEN SITE
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS MAIN AXES SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS AXES SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS PRESERVING EXHISTING FACILITIES KEEPING MAIN AXES MOVE SOMEMAIN EXISTING FACILITIES
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
POSITIONING CHANGING ROOMS AND SERVICES IN THE MIDDLE OF THE BUILDING, BETWEEN 2 VOLUMES WITH POOLS
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
GIVENGIVEN SITESITE
SITESITE VEN
SPORT FACILITIES AND FACILITIES AND PARKS SPORT FACILITIES AND SPORT PARKS MAIN MAIN AXES AXES SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS
MAIN AXES
PARKS MAIN MAINAXES AXES MAIN AXES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
PROJECT MASTERPLAN CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE OUTLINE OF THE SITE OUTLINE OF THE SITE
AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE
OUTLINE OF THE SITE
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES OUTLINE OF THE SITE
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS ROTATING THE 2 VOLUMES ROTATING THE 2 VOLUMES FORMING AN ANGLE FOR BIGGERFORMING AN ANGLE FOR BIGGER ENTRANCE OF LIGHT ENTRANCE OF LIGHT
OUTLINEAGRICULTURE OF THE SITE
MAIN AXES INTRODUCING NEW FUNCTIONS
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
CREATING RAMPS AND CONNECTING THE BUILDING WITH THE LANDSCAPE
PROJECT MASTERPLAN
INTRODUCING NEW SPORT FUNCTIONS CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES CHANGING OF SOME INTRODUCING NEW SPORTINTRO FUNC CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME THE POSITION KEEPING MAIN AXES SPORT FUNCTIONS CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME KEEPING MAIN AXES INTRODUCING NEW KEEPING MAIN AXES PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES THE EXISTING FACILITIES OFOF THE THE EXISTING FACILITIESOFFACILITIES PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES EXISTING FACILITIES KEEPING MAIN AXESOF THE EXISTING FACILITIES KEEPING MAINPRESERVING AXES EXISTING PROJECT MASTERPLAN OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
MAIN AXES
MAIN AXES
MAIN AXES THE ENTRANCE FOR DESIGNING
SPECTATORS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
OF THEINTRODUCING EXISTING FACILITIES NEW SPORT
FUNCTIONS Masterplan diagrams
AGRICULTURE
MAIN AXES
EAST SHADOW
EAST S
AGRICULTURE
DESIGNING THE ENTRANCE FOR SPECTATORS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
SOUTH SHADOW
NORTH SHADOW
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
XISTING FACILITIES
NAXES AXES AXES
SPORT FACILITIES & PARKS
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
MAIN MAINAXES AXES MAIN AXES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURE
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES PROJECT MASTERPLAN
KEEPING MAIN AXES
AGRICULTURE AGRICULTURE
AGRICULTURE
DESIGNING THE ENTRANCE FOR SPECTATORS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
PROJECT MASTERPLAN
KEEPING MAIN AXES
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
CREATING RAMPS AND CONNECTING THE BUILDING WITH THE LANDSCAPE
KEEPING MAIN AXES KEEPING MAIN AXES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
KEEPING MAIN AXES KEEPING MAIN AXES
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES OFOF THE THE EXISTING FACILITIES FACILITIES EXISTING
OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
INTRODUCING NEWINTRODUCING SPORT FUNCTIONS NEW SPORT FUNCTIONS
INTRODUCING NEWINTRODUCING SPORT FUNCTIONS NEW SPORT FUNCTIONS
EAST SHADOW BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
BREAKING THE REGULAR CUBOID
ROTATING THE 2 VOLUMES ROTATING THE 2 VOLUMES FORMING AN ANGLE FOR BIGGER FORMING AN ANGLE FOR BIGGER ENTRANCE OF LIGHT ENTRANCE OF LIGHT
DESIGNING THE ENTRANCE FOR SPECTATORS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
EAST SHADOW
DESIGNING THE ENTRANCE FOR SPECTATORS ON THE FIRST FLOOR
Masterplan
GIVEN SITE
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS
THE BUILDING The idea of this Aquatic Center is to be monumental in it’s expression. While the landcscape design is pretty clear and simple, we desicided our building to be the focal point of the site. One idea stood out as a legitimation of this monumentality: The concept of togetherness, joint ownership, easy and open access for all. To achieve a monumentality, we wished to make the Aquatic Center accessible in the widest possible sense, by laying out a ‘carpet’ of horizontal and sloping surfaces on top of the building. This carpet has been given an articulated form, related to the cityscape. Monumentality is achieved through horizontal extension and not verticality. The building itself is composed of two floors. Ground floor is created for the users of aquatic center facilities and first floor is dedicated to spectators. Two different entrances are designed for these two different groups of users. On the ground floor there are pools, changing rooms & spa ( “wet” zone of the building ), while on the first floor there is entrance hall, reception, sport shop, restaurant, gym and spectators seats ( “dry” zone of the building). Two ramps are designed which are creating access to the second floor and rooftop terrace.
MAIN AXES
breaking the regular cuboid
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
GIVEN SITE
KEEPING MAIN AXES
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS
MAIN AXES
PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
rotating the 2 volumes, forming an angle fore bigger entrance of light AGRICULTURE
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
EAST SHA
Ground Floor
GIVEN SITE
SPECTATORS SERVICES 01 Spectators Seating 02 Spectators Ecntrance Hall 03 Spectators Toilets POOLS 11 Swimming Pool (50x25) 12 Diving Pool 13 Secondary Pool (25x125) 14 FOP Equipment Storage 15 First Aid
SPORT FACILITIES AND PARKS
MAIN AXES
21 Entrance Hall SPORT PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES 22 Reception 32 Spa Center 23 Bar Restorant 33 Spa Area Secondary Pool 24 Sport Store 34 Beauty Center 25 Changing Room 35 MEdical Center 26 Team’s Changing Room 36 Physuittherapy Area 27 Fitness Room 37 Athletes Changing Room 28 Cycling Room 38 Diving Dry Land 29 Activities Room 39 Athletes Gym 30 Personal Trainer Room 40 Athletes Medical Area 31 Storage 41 Federation Offices 42 Toilets
AGRICULTURE
EAST SHADOW
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
EAST SHADOW PRESERVING EXISTING FACILITIES
KEEPING MAIN AXES
WEST SHADOW INTRODUCING NEW SPORT FUNCTIONS
CHANGING THE POSITION OF SOME OF THE EXISTING FACILITIES
positioning changing rooms OUTLINE OF THE SITE and services in the middle of the building, between 2 INTRODUCING NEW SPORT FUNCTIONS WEST SHADOW volumes with pools
creating ramps and SOUTH SHADOW connecting the building PROJECT MASTERPLAN with the landscape
First Floor
EAST SHADOW
WEST SHADOW
SOUTH SHADOW
designing the entrance for NORTH SHADOW spectatiors on the first floor
Section 1-1
Section 2-2
M20 HEB 500 (10.9)
IPE 400
M20 (10.9)
3
IPE 400
28''
M20 HEB 500 (10.9)
3
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
29''
M20 (10.9)
3
IPE 400 3
30''
M20 (10.9)
HEB 500
3
M20 (10.9)
IPE 400
32''
M20 (10.9)
IPE 400
3
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
3 BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
200
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
31''
1750
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
BOX SHS 30 300 x 3000x 10
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
3
3
3
HEB 500
3
BOX SHS 300 x 3000x 10
3
HEB 500
HEB 500
3
3
50
IPE 400
27''
2
50
26''
25''
1.FACADE LAYERS · Concrete panels ( limestone)15 cm (h=2.5m) · Mineral fiber Thermal insulation 10 cm · Steel box constructive column 1.4 m x 1.2 m 3. GROUNDFLOOR FLOORING LAYERS · Ceramic tiles 1cm · hydroinsulation 1 cm · scread base 8 cm · pressed cellular insulation 8 cm · hydroinsulation and weapor layer 1cm · concrete slab 15 cm · cement milk 2 cm · hydroinsulation 1 cm · concrete base 5 cm · gravel · earth
2. ROOF LAYERS · Stone tiles 30mm · Cement drapping pad 35 mm · Calendered polymeric roofing, 2 layers · Thermal insulation 120 mm · Vapour barrier (Reasons: residual moisture in concrete, temporary roof during construction, protection, against vapour diffusion, especially at cracks and penetrations) · Screed laid to falls 30–60 mm · Concrete slab 150 mm Greenery · Topsoil · Dreinage layer · Calendered polymeric roofing, 2 layers · Thermal insulation 60 mm · Vapour barrier (Reasons: residual moisture in concrete, temporary roof during construction, protection, against vapour diffusion, especially at cracks and penetrations) · Screed laid to falls 30–60 mm · Concrete slab 150 mm
Corrosion-resistant metal pin to connect panels
Precast panel
Outer sealant
8
1
600
7
6
140
5
140
140
Inner sealant
4
3
2
1
310
280
Steel supporting beam
3
Steel box profile for panel joints and substructure
Professors: Simone Giostra, Elisa Cataneo
Bojana Markovikj I Architecture I Design Studio 2 I Instability in Umbria
DESIGN STUDIO2/ ( IN )STABILITY
In a time of almost total domination of man over nature, earthquakes are maybe among the last natural events to defy prediction or control. (in)Stability studio took on one of the most pressing challenges facing architects today: post-earthquake reconstruction in Italy, Umbria region. Many areas hit by the quake in 2016 were already struggling for decades; some of the villages affected by destruction had been experiencing a sharp decline in population and a shrinking economy for a long time. An earthquake is often a human tragedy of tremendous consequences, including unspeakable losses of people’s lives, cultural heritage and commercial assets. At the same time, they are events with the ability to unlock potentials that are out of reach under normal circumstances. This studio used the earthquake as conceptual model to identify opposing forces that have been threatening affected communities long before the earthquake struck. Once the fear of loosing everything, the nostalgia for a mythical past, the greed spurred by reckless financial incentives are all put aside, larger patterns start to emerge. Geological layers, topography, hydrology, energy potential, natural resources can be finally seen in their full potential. Unencumbered by the deeds of the past, a virgin land re-emerges from the rubble. An emerging practice in both architecture and landscape design looks for ways to incorporate rapid transformation and flexibility as means of embracing instability. This project for (in)Stability studio is about bringing bamboo in Italy. By bringing (planting) bamboo in Italy we can: prevent landslides, increase the stability of structures (as bamboo is excellent earthquake resistant construction material), contribute to cleaning of the water (which is highly polluted in Umbria region) and last but not least increase the agricultural production and by it improve the economy in this area. The checking of all requirements for planting bamboo was done (climate, soil type, level of humidity and water type) and Umbria is perfectly matching with them.
Hydrographic
Soil permeability
Instability
Seismic zone
Land use
Geological composition
Vegetation
Landslides & direction
Norcia
Perice
Foligno
Trevi
Perugia
Citta di Castello
Spoleto
Valtopina
Cascia
Spello
Instability
Landslide direction
Seismic zone
Soil permability
Geological
Nocera Umbra
Instability
Landslide direction
Seismic zone
Soil permability
Geological
Gubbio
New area of innovation emerges with the exceptional precision and resolution of available data. As geological, hydrological, topographical and statistical information starts to get interpolated in detailed multi-layer digital maps called micro-zoning, new and often unexpected results offer an unprecedented level of understanding to decision makers. After doing several maps five main factors influenced on choosing our site: local seismic hazards, seismic risks, landslide amount and direction, type of soil, permeability of soil to absorb the water. Then we choose 16 cities which are in the eastern part where the most of the hazards are happening; cities which are the most vulnerable. We evaluated them deeper by comparing how high is the instability risk, water permeability, amount of landslides, fertility of soil. After doing the analysis for each of these 16 cities, we choose the one which is the most attractive for planting bamboos. The city that we choose to be our project area is Foligno.
FOLIGNO OVERLAPPED MAP
ZOOM TO ATTRACTIVE PROJECT SITE
THE BUILDING One of the buildings that we are designing in Foligno area is structure that is serving for “agri-tourism”. Agri-tourism is imagined in a way that visitors/guests can work in agriculture - bamboo fields (which are located next to the hostel) by it they can have a room for free in this pleasant area. Thanks to this non-classical way of tourism, visitors can contribute in a process of providing new resources, and by it they will help in increasing economy and at the same time they will save money. This new way of tourism will establish unique relationship between the people and the nature. Contrary to classical way of tourism where there is no relation with the landscape, with the new way tourist can have a opportunity to live in the nature and improve it. The structure of the building is totally flexible and can be adopt in different surroundings. Bamboo is used as a main structure element. The focus was to create the connection which won’t have impact on the site also not impact on bamboo itself.
Bamboo structure with steel joints
Aluminium window frame
Bamboo dowel Clamping fitter Bamboo column
Section 1-1
Detail
Ground Floor
Axonometry of the site
First Floor