Summer 2019 Academic Portfolio - Bradley Winograd

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Bradley Winograd Architecture Portfolio

Summer 2019


TABLE OF CONTENTS THE PHILADELPHIA ROWHOME Multigenerational Living p. 1 THE APARTMENT COMPLEX Mixed-Use Redevelopment p. 5 THE POWEL SCHOOL Powelton Community Center p. 9 THE BOATHOUSE Philly City Rowing Project p.11

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SELECTIONS FROM REPRESENTATION Design Exercises & Skill Development p.15 ELMWOOD

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THE CUBE Spatial & Hierarchial Discovery p.13

Elmwood Orchards Landbridge

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ORCHARDS

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THE CHARRETTE Pedestrian“Living Street Design Edge” p.17

“Hilldings”

Cultu

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FOYER KITCHEN LIVING ROOM BATHROOM BEDROOM STUDY DRIVEWAY

FLOOR PLAN 1/8” = 1’-0”

PES REFINERY REDEVELOPMENT Sustainable Urbanism p.18 SCHUYLKILL WATERFRONT

CREATIVE WORKS Non-architectural Works p.19

SECTION 1/8” = 1’-0”

SCOT PARK


BRADLEY WINOGRAD blw76@drexel.edu (845) 608-9201

EDUCATION: Philadelphia, PA September 2017 - Present 3.68 GPA

DREXEL UNIVERSITY Bachelor of Architecture 2+4 Option, AIAS Member Minors in Sustainability in the Built Environment & Construction Management

Reykjavik, Iceland December 2018

THE GREEN PROGRAM - ICELAND ABROAD Two-week program at Reykjavik University to study renewable energy Gave presentation on sustainable housing for disaster affected areas Won a $5000 scholarship sponsored by Lonely Planet & STA Travel to fund trip

New City, NY September 2013 - June 2017 3.97 GPA Suffern, NY July 2016 Troy, NY July 2014

CLARKSTOWN HIGH SCHOOL NORTH National, Math, Art, English Honor Societies World Language Honor Society Secretary (17/18), Senior Award for Japanese Proficiency All-County Band (Trumpet), JV Golf Team, AP 2D Design Portfolio 5/5 ROCKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE STEM EXPLORATORY PROGRAM Highly selective one-week exploratory program exploring various fields in STEM Included trips in manufacturing, fabrication, and computer technology RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE ARCHITECTURE SUMMER PROGRAM Two-week introductory program exploring analog and digital architecture Included tour of New York City, end with final crit with jurors (local architects and professors)

WORK EXPERIENCE: New City, NY July 2015

OFFICE ASSISTANT NEW YORK STATE SENATOR DAVID CARLUCCI Performed various tasks including answering calls from constituents, organized community events, made flyers, and wrote condolence cards for families, helped with community service

SKILLS: SOFTWARE: CRAFT: LANGUAGES:

Autocad, Rhino, Revit, ArcGIS Adobe Creative Suite (Photoshop, Illustrator, Indesign, Acrobat) Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, Powerpoint) Hand-drafting, Hand-rendering, Sketching Laser-Cutting, 3D-Printing, Model-making, Woodworking English, Japanese

REFERENCES: Rachel Schade Jacklynn Niemiec David Woeltjen

Professor of Architecture, schadesr@drexel.edu Professor of Architecture, jnn33@drexel.edu Senior Architect, email available upon request


01 THE PHILADELPHIA ROWHOME Multi-generational Living Fall 2018 | Ten Weeks | Rachel Schade The rowhome has become a staple of Philadelphian architecture dating back to its founding. Its successful design was attributed in the fact that they were simple to build, contained a small footprint, and allowed families to have their own personal space in the city. With the increase of urbanism, immigration, and rising living expenses the rowhome has brought the possibilities of multi-generational living into the question. Can the Philly Rowhome support three generations while keeping up with new building codes and accessibility?

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Christian Street Elevation Depicts major facade and context

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Process Circulation Axons

Rendered Longitudinal Elevation

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02 THE APARTMENT COMPLEX Mantua Mixed-Use Redevelopment Project Winter 2019 | Ten Weeks | Simon Tickell When designing a troubled neighborhood an architect needs to be cautious about their design decisions and the repurcussions they might afflict upon the surrounding site. In the case of Mantua, a neighborhood that has encountered abandonment and decreasing land value due to a deficiency of ammenities, we were tasked in developing a new housing project that would help encourage a renewal for Mantua. As a food desert and a relatively dead commercial corridor, Mantua was in need of a grocery store and some commerce to give it a push. While developing this project, gentrification was a persistent thought that needed to be minimized. As a result, the project was designed in a way to cover the needs of the neighborhood while trying to respect the pre-existing urban fabric of the neighborhood.

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View from Haverford & 37th Street Depicts main apartment entry and grocery store

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37th Street Elevation Facing Eastward towards Schuylkill River

Process Mass to Form Diagram

Site Analysis Diagrams Car Circulation | Means of Egress | Morning Exposure | Truck Circulation

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EPDM Roof

Stucco Veneer Rigid Insulation

Aluminum Siding

Hollow Core Floor Slab

Smoke-Tint Glass Fence

Metal Coated Cornice

Steel Framing

Masonry Sill

Metal Studs with Batt Insulation

Steel Frame Windows with Double Glazing

HVAC System

Slate Panel Veneer

Perforated Drainage Pipe

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03 THE POWEL SCHOOL

Creating Social Infrastructure in Powelton Spring 2019 | Ten Weeks | Jeremy Voorhees Inspired by the words of Eric Klinenberg in his book “Palaces for the People”, schools play an important role in creating an identity for a neighborhood to which he calls “social infrastructure.” By creating social infrastructure, the qualms of life including inequality, division, and unhappiness could be resolved in a structure that embodies pride, beauty, and growth. In this project, our goal was to transform the current Powel School, a K-5 school into a center for Powelton residents could take advantage of while increasing enrollment to a K-8 school. The original site included the pre-existing Powel School, its blacktop, and a small playground across the street. By creating a seamless and safe transition of spaces, landscape and sustainable design played a crucial role in creating a cohesive site rather than one divided.

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Vignettes of Gathering Spaces Cafeteria | Courtyard | Gymnasium

Programmatic Study Models

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04 THE BOATHOUSE

Establishing a client: Philly City Rowing Spring 2018 | Ten Weeks | Jacklynn Niemiec

In the rowing community, the Schuylkill River plays an important part of history as the beginning of competitive rowing in America. As a result, rowing has become a popular sport within the city and local communities. While universities and private boat clubs have taken residence along the river’s “Boathouse Row” not all teams are fortunate. Our client, Philadelphia City Rowing was a non-profit middle and high school rowing team that lacked a space where all of their students could gather, store their equipment, and have easy access to the river. The goal of the project was to create a space that not only satisfied their storage needs, but also acted as a space where children could study and bring a community together to support the students.

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Iteration #1 Site forces cause a spatial pyramid to form create a more formal street facade and expansive waterside view.

Iteration #2 Shearing forces create pressure to put heavier programmatic elements towards the northside of the site.

Iteration #3 Interlocking forces create a shift the design as the building responds to existing vegetation.

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05 THE CUBE

Developing Hierarchies within Space Fall 2017 | Five Weeks | Wolfram Arendt Architecture is a profession centered around designing unique space, places where people can interact, connect, and use for their own means, but in order to understand this, the architect is tasked to design within the boundaries of a cube. This conceptual design problem helps enable the architect to relate a series of horizontals, verticals, solids and voids to help develop what it means to create space. By incorporating a hierarchy of materials and considering ideas of solid and void, spatial sequencing, and grids, an abstracted space was formed.

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Unfolded Elevation of Final Model

Axonometric Drawings of Final Model

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Site Analysis with ArcGIS Neighborhood Study of Mantua, Philadelphia

06 SELECTIONS FROM REPRESENTATION Development of an Architect’s Craft Fall 2017 - Spring 2019 An architect’s representation is a crucial tool to help visualize space and design concepts. By developing a balance between analog, digital, and hybrid forms the architect can better define their ideas to the client in what could not otherwise be described in words. In the field today, while analog techniques have lessened for more efficient and precise digital diagramming and modeling, the feeling of tangibility helps the architect express without the constraints of the program that they are working with. The following works are a selection from a two-year sequence of understanding the various design tools architects use in order to develop a unique creative workflow and sense of identity.

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M

Isometric Model Visualization of a Detail from Carlos Scarpa

Mass to Form Case Study

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COLLABORATIVE WORK: Research & Design

Section Perspective Sketch | Myself

07 THE CHARRETTE

Site Analysis Diagrams | Myself

Serial Sections | Joseline Castillo & Myself

Re-imagining Streets as Pedestrian Spaces Spring 2019 | April 12-15 | Drexel Architecture Over the past century, the use for a street has drastically changed. Before the car, roads were rich in culture and importance to the people who used them. When cars finally came around, they were initially slow moving which meant that people and cars could coexist on the same plane. However, as time went on the car started to dominate the road, forcing people off the street. The main idea for the charrette was to imagine what it would be like to take back the street from cars and restore it to its former glory and use. In conjunction with increasing sustainability in urbanism, people have already started to push the idea of discouraging cars due to their harmful impacts to the environment and society. In the charrette, we were tasked to transform a busy Philadelphian street into a pedestrian gathering space utilizing context and integrating sustainable design.

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Sections through Residential and Canal | Class Av e

Holistic Key Subsystems Diagram | Class

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Elmwood Orchards Landbridge

Dendrite Canal System

“Hilldings”

Cultural Learning Center

“Living Edge”

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Pedestrian Paths

26th Street

ELMWOOD ORCHARDS

SCHUYLKILL WATERFRONT

SCOT PARK

RESIDENTIAL

Detailed Master Zoning Plan | Myself

08 PES REFINERY REDEVELOPMENT PROJECT Creating the “Schuylkill Community of Tomorrow” Spring 2019 | Ten Weeks | Max Zahniser The Philadelphia Oil Refinery has been an important part of the history of Philadelphia for over a century. As the largest oil refinery on the east coast, the refinery attributed to the rise of the automobile and fossil fuel consumption. However, due to the rise of renewables, a presence of climate change, bankruptcy, and public backlash, the Refinery’s time had been waning. In the event that the oil fields were to close, our project was to develop a massive urban master plan on how to remediate the polluted soil and transform the area into a new sustainable community to which we dubbed, the “Schuylkill Community of Tomorrow.” At the time of this project, the explosion at the refinery had yet to happen which caused the refinery to shutter its doors after 153 years.

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2016 | Pencil & Marker

09 CREATIVE WORKS

Assorted Analog & Digital Works As architects and designers, we resonate with precision in our design due to regulations and code. Yet, at times this can cause our thoughts to lock up and be unable to “design� anymore. By designing outside of the field, we can break loose and let our ideas to flow. As a result, these renewed ideas help strengthen our work. These following works come from outside the architectural studio and exhibit some of my passions that are difficult to articulate in architectural design.

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2015 | Oil Paint on Canvas

2016 | Pastel & Pencil

2017 | Illustrator

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