C h a o L u n Wa n g new environments
This is a collec tion of my wor k over the pa s t thr ee year s a t C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y ’s G r a d u a t e S c h o o l o f A r c h i t e c t u r e , Planning and Preser vation. It would not exis t were it not for the ex tr aordinar y ef for ts from my tireless teammates whom I had the plea sur e of collabor ating with; the unconditional suppor t from my loving family and fr iends whose encour aging words a ssis ted me through moment s of doubt , the cons tr uc tive comment s from my insight ful colleagues whose inf luence per meates this collec tion, and the liber ating guidance from my wise professor s whose intellec tual r igor and open mindedness infused a professional education wi th the joy exper ience of s e l f d i s c o v e r y.
0 5 / 2 013 N e w Yo r k , N Y
new environments
Selec ted wor k s from Mas ter of Architec ture G S A P P, C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y 2 010 - 2 013
Core Studio I
• Wa t e r F i l t e r i n g B a c k p a c k • L ab of IsoNec tion
Architec tur al Dr awing & Repr esent ation I+I I
• Cultural Center Tjibaou • Notation | Sensation
Core Studio II
• Libr ar y of Pleasure • E n d o f Ye a r S h o w
Visual Studies
• F o r m w o r k s - H y p e r b o l i c We a v e s • R e - t h i n k i n g B I M - Wo v e n B a s k e r s
Core Studio III
• Foam Aggregation • Foam Outer wear
Advanced Studio IV
• Wo r m h o l e • Collabor ative Au tonomy
Architectural Te c h n o l o g y
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Advanced Studio V Advanced Studio VI
Fish Sock Bronx Fab-Lab Singule Sur face: A Study Full- Body Inter face
• Ultrastructure
• Silhouet te Cinematheque
C A R I B O U PAC K F a l l 2 010 | C o r e S t u d i o I Critic: Mark Rakatansk y
The Car ibou Pack is a water f iltr ation back pack designed for t h e i n d i g e n o u s p e o p l e o f Ya m a l P e n i n s u l a , t h e N e n e t s , a n d their semi-domesticated caribous. The design envisions an ac tive inter ac tion with the sur rounding environment . The back pack , car r ied by the car ibous, ex tr ac ts water sit ting above the per mafros t in the arc tic tundr a , f ilter s i t u n d e r t h e i n t e n s e u l t r a v i o l e t r a d i a t i o n o f t h e N o r t h Po l e , and f inally stores fresh water into a hand sewn leather pouch. The process is synchronized with the perennial migr ation of the Nenets and their herds of car ibous bet ween summer and winter pasture grounds along the peninsula. In this simple projec t, the backpack is not designed as a boundar y bet ween the natur al and the ar tif icial environments, but as a negotiation between them. It establishes a new r e l a t i o n s h i p b e t w e e n t h e N e n e t s a n d t h e Tu n d r a t h a t w o u l d allow the continuation of their migr ator y lifes t yle in this fr agile ecosys tem.
N
m i g r ato ry
Kara Sea
Summer Pasture
co m m u n a l
Baidarata Bay
Ob Bay
Winter Pasture
ya m a l pe n i n s u l a
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n at u r a l g a s d i s t r i b u t i o n
Ya m a l , a p e n i n s u l a r o u g h l y t h e s i z e o f F r a n c e , i s a t u n d r a i n S i b e r i a R u s s i a . T h e p r e c i p i t a t i o n i n t h e r e g i o n i s c o m p a r a b l e t o t h a t o f a d e s e r t . F o r t u n a t e l y, i t s e q u a l l y m i n i m a l e v a p o r a t i o n a l l o w s a thin layer of t water to accumulate above the per mafros t . This delicate sur face is intr insic to all life on the tundr a . T h e l a n d i s i n d i g e n o u s t o 42 , 0 0 0 n o m a t i c c a r i b o u h e r d e r s w h o c a l l t h e m s e l v e s N e n e t s , w h i c h m e a n s ‘ T h e M a n ’. F o r g e n e r a t i o n s , t h e y h a v e b e e n m i g r a t i n g w i t h t h e i r s e m i - d o m e s t i c c a r i b o u s m o r e t h a n 3 0 0 m i l e s b e t w e e n s u m m e r a n d w i n t e r p a s t u r e s e v e r y y e a r. 8•
T he Nenet s’ unique way of life ha s become thr eatened in r ecent year s . G eologis t s have discover ed that the seemingly bar r en landscape cont ains the highes t concentr ation of natur al ga s in all of R u s s i a . E n e r g y c o m p a n i e s b e g a n e x t r a c t i o n i n t h e m i d - 8 0 s . C u r r e n t l y, t h e n u m b e r o f f o r e i g n g a s w o r k e r s a l r e a d y o u t- n u m b e r t h e N e n e t s . U n s u s t a i n a b l e p r a c t i c e h a s c a u s e d i r r e v e r s a l b e e n v i r o n m e n t a l d a m a g e t o t h e f i n i t e r e s o u r c e s o f Ya m a l .
•9
w i n t e r co n f i g u r at i o n
Container pouch: a sof t sac with a Barita f ilter at input and a pressure nozzel for output
ETFE pack: taking advantage of the norctic sun, high in ultraviolet rays, to eliminate bacteria
Suction Plate: absorbs liquid from the ground and pumps it upwards
Saturated Sur face Permafrost
s u m m e r co n f i g u r at i o n
C a r i b o u P a c k i s a m o b i l e w a t e r - f i l t r a t i o n d e v i c e . I t r e s p o n d s t o t h e i n c r e a s i n g p o l l u t i o n o f Ya m a l ’s f i n i t e s o u r c e o f f r e s h w a t e r. T h e p a c k s a r e c a r r i e d b y m i g r a t i n g c a r i b o u s t h a t h a v e b e e n s e m i d o m e s t i c a t e d b y t h e N e n e t s . D u r i n g s u m m e r, w a t e r i s e x t r a c t e d f r o m t h e s u r f a c e o f t h e t e r r a i n b y s u c t i o n p l a t e s m o u n t e d u n d e r t h e a n i m a l ’s f e e t . D u r i n g w i n t e r, i c e a n d s n o w c a n b e m e l t e d b y s o l a r r a d i a t i o n i n s i d e a m i n i E T F E g r e e n h o u s e o n t h e a n i m a l ’s b a c k .
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When the Nenet s set up camps for 3 days each week , the back pack s are also assembled to for m a communal k itchen.
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ISO-NECT L AB F a l l 2 010 | C o r e S t u d i o I Critic: Mark Rakatansk y
Iso -nec t L ab is an atmospher ic research center in sou th-side seapor t , Manhat t an. The design conceptualizes architec tur e a s a collec tion of isolated atmospher ic conditions and the ar ticulated connec tions bet ween them. Isolation allows for the simulation of fu ture scener ios under exacer bated conditions inside the labor ator ies . Connec tion allows for the by-produc ts of the labor ator ies to mix and produce new environment s and func tions for the public spaces . The architec tur e behaves like a s team engine, with cons t ant i n t a k e , e x h a u s t , a n d c h e m i c a l r e a c t i o n o f e l e m e n t s . Tr a d i t i o n a l architec tur al elements are infes ted with vegetation, infr as tr uc ture, greenhouse gases, and marine animals. The result is a mechanize environment for research, education and for inhabit ation.
When asked “ If global war ming is already unequivocal, what then is the fu ture direc tion of the p r o f e s s i o n ? ” T h e c l i m a t o l o g i s t a n s w e r e d “ I t s e f f e c t .” T h e l a b o r a t o r y c o n s i s t s o f m o d u l e s f o r t e s t i n g t h e e f f e c t s o f a t m o s p h e r i c c h a n g e . Po s s i b l e f u t u r e scener ios ar e simulated in cont ained environment s under exacer bated conditions . These isolated m o d u l e s a r e t h e n c o n n e c t e d (a s t h e y w o u l d i n t h e n a t u r a l c y c l e) b y a s e r i e s o f g a t h e r i n g s p a c e s for the inter ac tion bet ween elements and the exchange of interdisciplinar y k nowledge.
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T he si te , Peck Slip, is a quiet cor ner wi thin the bus tling tour is t a r e a o f S o u t h S i d e S e a Po r t . M o s t o f t h e p e d e s t r i a n t r a f f i c a r e along the commercial s tr ip of Fulton St . Connec ting the Fulton St . and Peck slip is Fr ont Str eet . I t can ac t a s an umbilical cor d that dr aws life onto the site. N
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1. CO 2 intake 2. Atmospheric gases 3. Sauna 4. Air module 5. Marine module 6. Core 7. Rest area 8. Lap pool 9. Ethanol fermentation 10. Energy lab 11. Monitoring cell
1
12. Pully irrigation belt 13. Indoor lab space 14. Air lab off ices 15. Air module access 16. Roof terrace 17. Corn wall 18. Experimental gardens 19. Public plaza 20. Incubator seating 21. Entrance 22. Public atrium
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The agr icultur al lab and the mar ine lab meet at a featured water f iltr ation sys tem three s tor ies above ground levelt . Some of the circulating water get collec ted for ir r igation pur poses , the r es t plunges down into a f iltr ation t ank at ground level . The agr icultur al lab accesses the ver tical cor n far m using a set of ex ter ior s t air s . In bet ween the isolated Mar ine and Air Modules are spaces d e d i c a t e d t o p h y s i c a l a c t i v i t y. A l a p p o o l d i v i n g i n t o t h e a q u a r i u m a n d a s a u n a f e e d i n g i n t o t h e s team garden connec t s the people and element s of the t wo labor ator ies .
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T h e C O2 i n t a k e v e n t a n d t h e A i r M o d u l e b o t h r e a c h o u t t o the FDR , highlighting their presences to passing vehicles . The image of au tomobile exhaus t suf focating a pr is tine landscape is a provocative message, r aising public awareness on air pollution.
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A RC H I T E C T U R A L D R AW I N G A N D R E P R E S E N TAT I O N I + I I
C U LT U R A L C E N T E R T J I B AO U F a l l 2 010 | A D + R I Ins tr uc tor s: Josh Uhl, David Fano R e p r e s e n t a t i o n a n d a n a l y s i s o f t h e R e n z o P i a n o ’s C u l t u r a l Center Tjibaou in New Guinea.
N OTAT I O N | S E N S AT I O N S p r i n g 2 011 | A D + R I I I n s t r u c t o r : M i c h a e l Yo u n g N o t a t i o n : X- R a y s u p e r i m p o s i t i o n o f a e l e c t r i c t o y t o p Sensation: Illuminations from a Bas-Relief
a rch i t e c t u r a l d r aw i n g a n d r e p r e s e n tat i o n i c u lt u r a l ce n t e r t j i b ao u by r e n zo p i a n o
laminated timber columns with tubular steel bracing (inner ring) cast-steel horizontal & diagonal wind bracing
laminated wood screen
laminated timber columns with tubular steel bracing (outer ring)
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cast-steel ground connector
p h ys i c a l m o d e l
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a rch i t e c t u r a l d r aw i n g
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r e p r e s e n tat i o n i i
n otat i o n
sectional
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x - r ay sc a n n i n g
x - r ay s u pe r i m p os i t i o n w i t h o b l i q u e p ro j e c t i o n
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a rch i t e c t u r a l d r aw i n g s e n s at i o n
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L I B R A RY O F P L E A S U R E S p r i n g 2 011 | C o r e S t u d i o I I Critic: Cristina Goberna
The Libr ar y of Plea sure is ba sed on the hypothesis that public spaces for lear ning is slowly becoming obsolete in the digit al a g e o f b o u n d l e s s f l o w. T h e p r o p o s a l r e i n v e n t s t h e l i b r a r y into a public space for k nowledge and pleasure, both spir itual and car nal. The projec t thus integr ates the t wo ways humanbeings exper ience pleasure and ex tr ac t k nowledge , through t h e m i n d a n d t h e b o d y. P r o g r a m m a t i c a l l y, a p u b l i c b a t h h a s b e e n i n t r o d u c e d i n t o t h e l i b r a r y. I t i s c o n c e i v e d a s a b a t h i n a n c i e n t R o m e w h e r e the shar ing of k nowledge through conver sation and debates t a k e s p l a c e . R e a d i n g a n d b a t h i n g , m i n d a n d b o d y, p r i v a c y a n d publicit y not only coexis t s in this building bu t each ac tivit y e n h a n c e s t h e e x p e r i e n c e o f a n o t h e r. The hybr id environment challenges the notion of the libr ar y a s a f o r t r e s s f o r b o o k s i n m u l t i p l e w a y s . M a t e r i a l l y, b o o k s a r e e x p o s e d t o m o i s t u r e . A c o u s t i c a l l y, s i l e n c e i s b r o k e n b y t h e j o y f u l s o u n d s . Te c t o n i c a l l y, e n c l o s e d v o l u m e s a r e r e p l a c e d b y shif ting planes.
假作真时真亦假
a s r e a l i t y i s ta k e n a s i l lu s i o n , t h e i l lu s i o n b e co m e s m o r e r e a l .
A my thical libr ar y from the chinese liter ature: dream of the red chamber
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无为有处有还无
a s b e i n g i s ta k e n a s n ot h i n g , t h e n n ot h i n g co m e s i n to b e i n g .
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site and sight
m ov e m e n t s
at t r ac t i o n s
s e n so ry m os i ac
T h e N e w Yo r k C h i n a t o w n c a n n o t b e a d e q u a t e l y d e s c r i b e d w i t h a s e t o f c o n d i t i o n s . I t i s a w o r l d within and of it self, a mir age of China composed of sources both eclec tic and mys ter ious . O ver the cour se of 20 0+ year s , what once used to be a pr ac tical set tlement for migr ant Chinese wor ker s ha s un-manifes ted it self into a compilation of illusions . The plea sur e of Chinatown is the submission to the illusions . This analysis will inves tigate four par ameter s , in cor r elation with the previous exercise, to reveal the illusions . The par ameter s are 1 site + sight , 2 ethereal movement, 3 sensor y mosaic, and 4 gr avitational at tr ac tion.
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g e ot h e r m a l g a r d e n
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pe r s pe c t i v e
_
g r a n d s t.
/
ce n t e r s t .
T h e t r a d i t i o n a l l i b r a r y, w h i c h w a s o n c e t h e c e n t e r o f k n o w l e d g e a n d l e a r n i n g w i t h i n a c o m m u n i t y, ha s slowly los t it s prominence. The digit al net wor k of boundless f low is compromising the physical presence of infor mation. Bombarded by a wave of digit al media , book s had to reinvent themselves . In addition to being s tor ages of infor mation, book s have become objec t s of plea sur e. They ar e now desir ed and enjoyed both for their subjec t s and a s objec t s . The libr ar y a s a public space will need to go through a similar transition in the digital realm.
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pl an: level
1- 6
outdoor pool
+
media pl a z a
The libr ar y should not be consider ed solely a s a place of public lear ning, bu t r ather a s a place of p u b l i c p l e a s u r e . T h e t w o d i s p a r a t e r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s w i l l h e i g h t e n t h e d i m i n i s h i n g r o l e o f t h e l i b r a r y. It will also r adicalize the social exper ience. The seek ing and shar ing of pleasure will be it s fu ture.
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m e d i a l i b r a ry w i t h ch i l d r e n ’ s p o o l u n d e r n e at h a n d a d u lt s p o o l a b ov e , lv l
2-3
In contr a s t to r eading, which is pr edominantly visual and cer ebr al, bathing is the r educ tion of this dominance and the heightening our other senses . The Libr ar y of Pleasure integr ates t wo i n f l u e n t i a l p u b l i c t y p o l o g i e s i n h u m a n h i s t o r y, t h e l i b r a r y a n d t h e b a t h . T h e i n f u s i o n o f s e n s o r y element s cr eate hybr idized conditions wher e both ac tivities can benef it from. A s water can be u s e d a t m o s p h e r i c a l l y, a c o u s t i c a l l y, a n d s p i r i t u a l l y t o e n l i g h t e n l e a r n i n g , p r i n t a n d d i g i t a l m e d i a c a n promote the shar ing of k nowledge and produce a for um-like environment .
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UZQJDBM NF[[BOJOF ˍPPS QMBO
reading
stacks
service block
WHAT IS THE ARCHITECTURE OF A CYBERNETIC LIBRARY?
GSAPP
service block
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Incorporating artificial intelligence into the curation and circulation systems of a public library would allow for a more trabeated construction - exeter library coursed masonry construction - midtown library ‘trabeatedThe - coursed’ construction - proposed mid manhattan library informed and responsive archive. cybernetic algorithms would transform analog archiving into a constantly updating network of knowledge accumulation and consumption. 2
1
golden rectangle
The core of the library is a vending system that stores, catalogs, tracks, clusters, and dispenses books according to what it leans ‘bounding box’ wall generation grid + partiand diagram howEJBHSBNNBUJD TFDUJPO UISV TJOHMF ˍPPS CFBN DPVSTJOH EJBHSBN from the collection it is used. The books are filtered through an hierarchical vertical system to leak onto the facades, where the requested information becomes accessible. The design challenge is creating an efficient circulation system to grant visitors access to the entire library field.
30ft. x 30ft. module
event
exhibit
2. Spectral typology of the Mid-Manhattan Library in the city membrane
3. Pods’ horizontal and vertical access to the library fields
4. The structural frame enables responsive movement of the pod/spaces
Therese Diede
3. The unfolded hypercube: a theoretical construct to contain Jorges Borges infinite library.
However, a successful management of inter-spatial movement of occupants is not as simple as placing arrow signs. Directional signals must induce a sense of surprise and excitement creating a movement that is voluntary, not strained. Each successive space therefore has to imbue a sense of excitement for the space beyond.
Elaine Hoffman
4. Inter-layering of programs for added desirability
REBECCA COSTANZO STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
BY BOTH ENTICING AND FORBIDDING, CAN THE LIBRARY ESTABLISH EPHEMERALITY AND A CONSTANTLY SHIFTING STATE OF DESIRE?
The moment a desire becomes known, the attempt is to reach it. Desire is enhanced when the object of desire is forbidden, beyond reach. And once reached, the desire must morph or project onto something else. Desire is an illusion. It is a distortion of reality. And once a desire is fulfilled, it fails to meet its own expectations. It is ephemeral.
The library of desire is an attempt to fill a void that is constantly changing, shifting, rotating. Opportunities are opened and closed, revealed and concealed, according to subjective projections of desire. Visibility entices, but the desire to reach something is a continuous disillusion.
HOW CAN THE ACOUSTIC PROPERTIES OF SOUND BE USED PROGRAMATICALLY TO DESIGN SPACE? Acoustical qualities are an under-estimated part of our spatial experience. Architects typically think about materials, lighting, and spatial organization in general while designing, but variations in acoustics will drastically alter our experience of a space. These acoustical exaggerations make us more aware of the sounds that we make within a space.
The design of my library focuses on the different acoustical needs of its distinct areas. The library manipulates parameters such as geometry, material and angles to control sound. As we enter, people are encouraged to lower their voices by exaggerating the echo in the lobby. The computer area, is designed to deflect sound. For the café loud noises are contained within its walls with sound proofing. In the auditorium, the flow of sound is enhanced from the stage to the audience through the design of the ceiling and walls. In the children’s whispering pods, I created little laboratories for experiments with sound. And last, but not least, as we enter the main reading room, the interlocking bookshelves are designed to absorb sound and maintain the silence.
Rebecca Costanzo
GSAPP
3. Once built, the camouflage panels hide the library from the public space that it infiltrates.
Architects understand the very fact that all occupants in a space are always on a look out for directional cues or signals to guide themselves through a new environment. Therefore the role of an architect in this sense is the director of public movement and the eventual routes visitors takes becomes the architect’s message and agenda.
GSAPP
2. These materials include a folding canvas structure, camouflage panels, and scaffolding.
ELAINE HOFFMAN STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
HOW CAN BUILDING FORMS INVOKE CURIOSITY AND ENCOURAGE OCCUPANTS TO BE MORE EXPLORATIVE?
3. The library is comprised of stacks and reading rooms with changed moods for each collection.
A xelle Zemouli
Targeting the spatial spaces – blind spots, and scalar breakdown is a temporary work s underground informa such as Anonymous G
2. The schematic design uses tension and compression to create spaces of different moods.
The Secret Library: A hidden, malleable, compact space that infiltrates public facilities. Library and Mood: How light, structure,1.materiality, and confinement can transform The client sneaks all of the materials, whichreading fit in a backpack, into the target building. Reading the Light. Translucent concrete1. filters the light, revealing a constellation stars.changes the atmosphere of the space.space. Precedent studies examine how adjustingoflight
2. The book is replaced by the holocube.
This proposal responds to these two limitations by using holographic technology- the future of information storage- to capture the memories, aspirations, conjectures, and imagery of the everyday person. The collection, which consists of holocubes rather than books, is organized by author- the deceased are placed in the subterranean archives of lost memory; the living are placed in the circulating library, suspended from above at an elevation which corresponds to their year of birth. The intervention- more a construction site than a building- aggregates in time, tracking cycles of birth and death, with each floor serving as a cross-section through the consciousness of any given era.
2. From left to right: entrance, lobby, handwashing room, path to stacks.
STUDIO GOBERNA
CAN A SECR HOW CAN A
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This investigation began with a reading of Jorge Borges library of Babel- an infinite library of unrestrained dimension and content, which contains all possible realities- every coherent book that has ever, or could ever be written, every conceivable past and future state. While viable in fiction, the built library can afford no such luxury: limited by the storage capacity of the traditional book and restricted to scholarly writings and the fictional work of creatives, it is inherently finite in scope.
4. Changing circulation access generates a new set of possible paths every time a user enters.
social
auditorium
CORE STUDIO II MMXI programmed spaces
STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI INFORMATION IS INFINITE BUT THE LIBRARY IS NOT; HOW CAN HOLOGRAPHIC TECHNOLOGY BE USED TO RENEGOTIATE THE EXTENTS OF THE LIBRARY?
Rebecca Costanzo
1. The outer walls of the reading towers form the stacks.
4. The rail system becomes the armature which carries the ‘architecture’
AYAKA KOBAYASHI HALES
outdoor
3. Visual attraction from the exterior
4. The main public pool act as a multi-media forum surrounded by educational programs
UZQJDBM VQQFS ˍPPS QMBO
Therese Diede
2. Enrique Miralles and curiosity invoking strategies
Structural Beams
4. Classical design nethods are reimagined to govern the arrangement of building elements.
This project proposes to re-appropriate and reinterpret traditional coursed masonry and trabeated construction and its attendant Classical / Beaux-Arts design methodologies in an attempt to integrate and understand structure, services and program as commingled elements of a single entity.
2. The library of desire appears and disappears as the stacks and reading rooms pop out!
The Holographic Library. The reading rooms are situated in the shadiest regions of the site.
In this increasingly connected, networked world, a person’s sense of privacy has been steadily eroded over the past 10-15 years. The need for a place that mitigates this condition is more urgent than ever. As it stands today, the library is the only secular venue in our architectural heritage that successfully meets this need.
GSAPP
3. Each floor opens and closes around hinge points that move along fixed tracks.
THERESE DIEDE STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
2. Plans designed to encourage acoustical variations according to programmatic differences
The Library of Pleasure creates a harmonious condition between the pleasures of body and mind, by integrating the two contradicting, yet simultaneously diminishing public spaces into one building: The Library and the Bath. The infusion of different sensory stimulants create hybrid conditions where the experience of both activities can benefit from.
IS IT POSSIBLE TO RECALIBRATE THE EVER NARROWING DISTANCE BETWEEN THE INDIVIDUAL AND THE COLLECTIVE THROUGH THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE PUBLIC LIBRARY?
1. Wireframe of library of sound.
1. Study of the public library myth (Centre Pompidou)
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Sangwook Lee
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2. Conceptual sketch model of the mobile library with the tendril like rails
3. The stair system which communicates to users books used and spaces occupied
‘Carnal Pleasure’ and the ‘Cataloguing of Fate’ are the two intertwining elements of a fictional library that appeared in the Chinese Classic Novel “Dream of the Red Chambre” The ephemeral quality of pleasure and the suffocating burden of knowledge presents a powerful duality with incredible architectural potential and challenges.
Aldo Cherdabayev
36 •
CAN THE DIMINISHING ROLE OF THE LIBRARY AS A PUBLIC SPACE FOR LEARNING BE REVITALIZED WITH POSSIBILITY OF PLEASURE?
6
GSAPP
SANGWOOK LEE STUDIO GOBERNA
5
STUDIO GOBERNA
In a mobile book library, users can now request books which travel to them through a rail system meanwhile communicating to others what books are being read nad which library spaces are being used. The books are protected but they are not tethered to one single location. This allows for pop-up libraries and pop-up spaces to be created as needed.
CORE STUDIO II MMXI
2
ALDO CHERDABAYEV CORE STUDIO II MMXI
GSAPP
Michelle O’Carroll
4
Karl Bengzon
Libraries today try to focus on the content-nature of books. That leaves many other functions of the book left unexplored. In addition to their content, books can be communication tools, spacecreators, and even fetishized objects. How can a system maximize all these ‘alternate’ yet equally valuable functions of a book?
1
GSAPP
2. Experimental mutation of OMA’s Seattle Library into a palace of pleasure by the picturesque
KARL BENGZON STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
3. The spatial collision of bath and library to create multi-dimensional sensory conditions
Chao Lun Wang
2. Contemplative spaces arise from the gaps and elisions between building elements.
The library of pleasure: harmony of mind (library)orwell’s and body (bath)of truth” in 1984 1. George ministry
Shared solitude: structure, services and 1.program niches contemplative spacethe intertwining elements of a fictional library “Carnalcreate Pleasure” andand “Cataloguing of Fate”: The Cybernetic Library: Library of non-linear network algorithms 1. Reading niches are defined through the arrangement of beams, services and bookstacks.
GSAPP
3. This project reinterprets trabeated and masonry construction in order to generate space.
CHAO LUN WANG STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
AXELLE ZEMOULI
STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
Invocation of curiosity: creating desires1.to explorerooms extend into the city, occupying the dark, interstitial spaces between buildings. Reading
Sherr y Yang
MICHELLE O’CARROLL
IF A NEW ‘LIBRARY’ UTILIZED THE BOOKS TO CREATE SPACES, FETISHIZE OBJECTS AND COMMUNICATE MESSAGES, WILL IT STILL BE A LIBRARY?
Library of desire: Voids instill visibility to adjacent spaces, but then obstruct physical reach. 1. Curiosity for the space beyond leads to exploration
GSAPP
7
SHERRY YANG STUDIO GOBERNA CORE STUDIO II MMXI
The library of sound: intensification of 1. experience New program spaces open up and reveal new connections as the library rotates outward.
The library of Peripatetic books: objects, communication and spaces created by book mobility.
e n d o f y e a r s h ow
HOW CAN TRANSFOR
How can architecture sphere that affects m grew out of an exami Lost in a Good Book in which the atmosph morphs based on the character. In the prec studies, different par to architecture, includ artificial light, confin materiality, were isola each affects mood.
CAN THE F
Can light make us sto importantly – can ligh centration?
1 Book per polemic 1 Po l e m i c p e r d e s i g n 12 A u t h o r s / 12 T i t l e s / 12 R o b o t s 6 0 0 Vo l u m e s
• 37
VISUAL STUDIES
H Y P E R B O L I C W E AV E F a l l 2 011 | F o r m w o r k s Instruc tor : Joshua Dr aper In Collabor ation with: Bo Liu, Demitr a Kons tantinidis A par abolic modular sys tem, ca s ted in r esin, connec ted with magnets
WOV E N B A S K E R S F a l l 2 011 | R e -T h i n k i n g B I M Instruc tor : Mark Green In Collabor ation with: Jus tin Fabr ikant, Stephen Chou, Shuning Zhao Using the par ametr ic capabilities of B IM sof t wares, gener ate a component that can intelligently adapt to dif fer ent sys tems of or ganization
h y pe r b o l i c w e av e
1.
f oa m p os i t i v e cnc milled
40 •
2.
3.
s i l i co n n e g at i v e c asted:
20
hrs
2- pa rt
resin casting
mold with pour spout
4.
r e s i n p os i t v e
c asted:
45
min
• 41
wov e n b a s k e r s
p lov e r p l at i n g ,
“ ch i d o r i
ami”
Ty p e o f s i m p l e p l a i t i n g i n w h i c h e a c h r o w is supplemented by t wo f ine s tr ings that undulate and cross one another as they
a da p t i v e co m p o n e n t
zig zag above and below the hor izont al strip; creat delicate crosses resembling tiny bird tr ack s on sand, hence it s name.
the hammock
the hammock thehfloor 01. ammock the hammock the floor the screen the floor 02. f lo o r the screen
the screen
03.
scr e e n
g a l a x y , h o n da s yo ry u
C a p i t a l i z i n g o n R e v i t ’s p a n e l i z a t i o n c a p a b i l i t i e s , w e c r e a t e d a s t a n d a r d c u r t a i n p a t t e r n - b a s e d family a s well a s thr ee dis tinc t conceptual ma sses to hos t the panel. The projec t is inspir ed by a e s t h e t i c a n d s t r u c t u r a l q u a l i t i e s o f a w e a v i n g b a s k e t . S p e c i f i c a l l y, o u r c u r t a i n p a t t e r n i s b a s e d on a tr aditional “plover plaiting” weaving pat ter n and is hos ted on each of the three t ypes of i n t e r v e n t i o n s (w h i c h a r e d i s t i n c t c o n c e p t u a l m a s s e s) . E a c h t y p e o f i n t e r v e n t i o n u s e s a d i f f e r e n t t y p e o f t h e c u r t a i n p a t t e r n - b a s e d f a m i l y. T h e d i f f e r e n c e s l i e i n t h e f o r m u l a s t h a t c a l i b r a t e t h e thick nesses , wid ths , and leng ths of the dif fer ent component s of the cur t ain pat ter n. These for mula s var y ba sed on the dif fer ent func tions of each conceptual ma ss . 42 •
woven Bask-ers the B h a m:m o c k 01.
woven Bask-ers
asketcases
Stephen Chou + Justin Fabrikant + Chao Lun Wang + Shuning Zhao
the hammock rethinking BIM | fall 2011 the Basketcases:
Stephen Chou + Justin Fabrikant + Chao Lun Wang + Shuning Zhao
rethinking 01. the HAMMOCK BIM | fall 2011 Exhausted students can snooze comfortably in the woven hammock hanging in the double-high stairwell between the fifth and sixth floors of avery. Using the chidori-ami weave as a base, the Hammock is designed for parameteric adjustment. In the conceptual mass level of Revit, the Hammock has adjustable width, depth, and parabolic connection geometery. The combination of adjustable elements can generate infinite variety customizable paraboloids and parabolic hyperboloids.
01. the HAMMOCK the floor
Exhausted students can snooze comfortably in the woven hammock hangand sixth floors of avery.
Successfuling designs maydouble-high be built by outputting the flattened geometery in the stairwell between theoffifth the woven slats and measuring the length of hanging ropes.
Using the chidori-ami weave as a base, the Hammock is designed for parameteric adjustment. In the conceptual mass level of Revit, the Hammock has adjustable width, depth, and parabolic connection geometery. The combination of adjustable elements can generate infinite variety customizable paraboloids and parabolic hyperboloids.
the screen
Successful designs may be built by outputting the flattened geometery of the woven slats and measuring the length of hanging ropes.
E x h a u s t e d s t u d e n t s c a n s n o oz e c o m f o r t a b l y i n t h e w o v e n h a m m o c k h a n g i n g i n t h e d o u b l e - h i g h s t a i r w e l l b e t w e e n t h e f i f t h a n d s i x t h f l o o r s o f a v e r y. U s i n g t h e c h i d o r i - a m i w e a v e a s a b a s e , t h e Hammock is designed for par ameter ic adjus tment . In the conceptual ma ss level of Revit , the H a m m o c k h a s a d j u s t a b l e w i d t h , d e p t h , a n d p a r a b o l i c c o n n e c t i o n g e o m e t e r y. T h e c o m b i n a t i o n of adjus t able elements can gener ate inf inite var iet y cus tomizable par aboloids and par abolic hyper boloids . Successful designs may be built by ou tpu t ting the f lat tened geometer y of the woven slats and measur ing the leng th of hanging ropes.
• 43
the hammock
02.
f lo o r
the floor
the screen
T i r e d s t u d e n t s l o o k i n g f o r a p l a c e t o l o i t e r, c o n v e r s e , o r s i t c a n e n j o y t h e n e w u n d u l a t i n g f l o o r on the mez zanine level of Aver y hall. This second inter vention is set up a s a lof t of four cur ves , t wo each of dis tinc t prof iles. The heights, wid ths, and depths of the individual cur ves and over all for m ar e set up a s dis tinc t par ameter s in the conceptual ma ss . A change in the par ameter s cr eate dif ferent sized zones that can be made to be suit able for seating or s t anding depending on the i n p u t .T h e c u r t a i n p a n e l f a m i l y f o r t h i s t y p e t h i c k e n s t h e c i r c u l a r r o d s t o p r o v i d e s t r u c t u r a l r i g i d i t y so that the undulation can be occupiable.
44 •
the floor
03.
scr e e n
the screen
The Scr een will hang at the window of the six th f loor elevator lobby of Aver y Hall. For this i n t e r v e n t i o n , p a r a m e t e r s i n t h e p a n e l f a m i l y t y p e w e r e s e t t o p o r t r a y a l i g h t- w e i g h t , p o r o u s cons tr uc tion. All thr ee dir ec tional element s - the hor izont al, ver tical and diagonal - ar e of almos t equal weight to accentuate the sense of a weaved, delicate sur face. This family t ype is then applied to a undulating sur face that would ou tline the over all shape of the screen. The sur face is built ou t of splines that have var iable control geometr y to specif y the peak s and valleys of the undulation.
• 45
HARLEM HOUSING F a l l 2 011 | C o r e S t u d i o I I I : D i f f e r e n t S t a t e o f H o u s i n g Critic: Douglas Gauthier In Collabor ation with: Elaine Hof fman
F OA M AG G R E G AT I O N E x p l o i t i n g t e t r a h e d r o n ’s p o t e n t i a l t o g e n e r a t e a c o n t i n u o u s l y ag gr egating sys tem designed to accomodate change.
F OA M O U T E RW E A R E x p l o i t i n g t e t r a h e d r o n ’s p o t e n t i a l t o f u n c t i o n o f a s a p e r f o r m a t i v e o u t e r w e a r f o r a M a x FA R b u i l d i n g d e s i g n e d f r o m the outside in.
F OA M AG G R E G AT I O N E x p l o i t i n g t e t r a h e d r o n ’s p o t e n t i a l t o g e n e r a t e a c o n t i n u o u s l y a g g r e g a t i n g s y s t e m .
link
15
units
mid-rise i
mid-rise ii
tow e r
58
55
40
48 •
units
units
units
• 49
th
on
Lex
in
gt
12 5
th
tm
en
t
w
et
la
nd
ird
12 4
ea
Th
tr
site pl an N
section
T h e t h r e e t e t r a h e d r o n t y p e s a r e e x p l o i t e d a s f l e x i b l e v ox e l u n i t s f o r c o n t i n u o u s a g g r e g a t i o n without having to add additional s tr uc ture
50 •
• 51
F OA M O U T E RW E A R
124 th Street - Nor th
E x p l o i t i n g t e t r a h e d r o n ’s p o t e n t i a l t o f u n c t i o n o f a s a p e r f o r m a t i v e o u t e r w e a r f o r a m a x f a r building designed from the outside in.
52 •
125 th Street - South
• 53
CONNECTION: MTA + METRO NORTH 1. Max FAR COMMERCIAL PROGRAM
3. Ground Level Retail
2. Bonus FAR GALLERY PROGRAM
4. Top Level Galler y
LOUD CORRIDOR IN MASSING
5. Loggia FINAL MESSING
7. Light and Air Voids m a ss i n g s t r at e g i e s
54 •
6. Urban Circulation through Loggia CIRCULATION
8. Perimeter Circulation
FIRE
FIRE
FIRE
FIRE
FIRE
FIRE
l i v e / wo r k u n i t s
1
b e d ro o m ,
550
sf
s h a r e d acco m o dat i o n
fa m i ly u n i t
5
3
b e d ro o m ,
2650
sf
b e d ro o m ,
1950
sf
• 55
e l e vat i o n n o rt h
- 125t h
street
e l e vat i o n s o u t h
- 124 t h
street
56 •
• 57
C O L U M B I A B U I L D I N G I N T E L L I G E N C E P RO J E C T (C - B I P ) S p r i n g 2 012 | A d v a n c e d S t u d i o I V: C - B I P Cr itic: Scot t Mar ble
B U I L D I N G E L E M E N T: WO R M H O L E Element s’ pr imar y design role is to tr ans for m exis ting b u i l d i n g s p r o g r a m m a t i c a l l y, a e s t h e t i c a l l y a n d c u l t u r a l l y, w h i l e a l s o a d d r e s s i n g t h e P l a N YC g o a l s o f r e d u c i n g e n e r g y u s a g e and carbon emissions.
B U I L D I N G S T R AT E G Y: C O L L A B O R AT I V E AU TO N O M Y In Collabor ation with: Rebecca Mar r iot , Michelle Par k , Kar l B eng zon B uilding on the r esearch and design concept s developed dur ing Pha ses 1 and 2, s tudent s will continue to addr ess the mandate for ener g y mitigation and car bon emissions reduc tion through the technical precision of their Element , along with the broader social and cultur al implications of applying these Elements to an existing building.
e l e m e n t : wo r m h o l e
DF%
10
5
1 0 > 3.4 m: Too Dark
2.0 m ~ 3.4 m: Just Right
< 2.0 m: Too Bright
1 2 3 4 5
D a y l i g h t p a s s i n g t h r o u g h c o n v e n t i o n a l w i n d o w s f a l l s o f f r a p i d l y. There is excessive amount of light near the per imeter and not enough beyong 3. 5m.
10m
20m
67 % o f f l o o r s p a c e o n t h i s lof t building requires ar tif icial l i g h t i n g t h r o u g h o u t t h e d a y.
DF%
10
5
1 0 1 2 3 4 5
6
5
4
3
2
1
Can we redis tr ibu te the excessive amount of light at the building per ipher y to places depr ived of it?
60 â&#x20AC;˘
10m
20m
0
O n l y 18 % o f f l o o r s p a c e o n this lof t building requires ar tif icial lighting through out t h e d a y.
a rt i f i c i a l l i g h t e f f i c ac y
7% Light 22% Light
30% Light
35% Light
78% Heat
70% Heat
65% Heat
Fluorescent
Metal Halide
65% Heat
60% Light
High Pressure Sodium
93% Heat 30% Light
35% Light
Incandescent
70% n at u rHeat a l l i g h t e f f i c ac y
75% Light
40% Heat 60% Light
75% Light
40% Heat
25% Heat
Sunlight through Clear Glass
Sunlight through Low-E Glazing
1
2
25% Heat
Collector 1. Acr ylic Protector 2. Glazing 3. Lightshelf 4. Parabolic Mirror 5. Receiver
6
3
Conduit 6. Optical Fibers - Bundled as Conduit
5
Diffuser 7. Optical Fibers - Dispersed as Diffuser
4
7
wo r m h o l e
â&#x20AC;˘ 61
t y pe o f ac t i v i t y
r e ce i v e r r at i o
Off ice Work Illumination Required = 500 Lux
Receiver Ratio Ratio= 0.65
Detail Work Illumination Required = 1500 Lux
Receiver Ratio Ratio= 0.95
Photosynthesis Illumination Required = 4000 Lux
Photosynthesis Illumination Required = 4000 Lux
Inputs
Implied Numeric Values Illumination Required
Parameter 1:
a.
Office Work
Type of Activity
b. c. d.
Visual Work Detail Work Photosynthesis
Luminous Flux
Parameter 2: Type of Exposure
Parameter 3: Collection to Transmission Ratio
62 â&#x20AC;˘
a. b.
Direct Sunlight Indirect Full Daylight
Real Number: 0.00 ~ 1.00
D
500 lux 750 lux 1500 lux 4000 lux
100,000 lm 15,000 lm
(
I
Operation 1
T Total Light Collected =
(
(Luminous Flux) x (Ratio) x (Area of Opeing) x (0.92)
(
Measurement from Input Geometry
d i f f u s e r s h a pe
Diffuser.Shape Shape = Circle
Diffuser.Shape Shape = Square
Diffuser.Shape Shape = Hybrid
Operation 3
DistributaryArea =
Output DistributaryArea
(Total Light Transmitted) /
Illumination Required Operation 2
Output
Total Light Transmitted =
Total Light Transmitted
(Total Light Collected) x
(0.98964) ^ (Length of Fiber)
Measurement from Input Geometry so l a r pa r a m e t e r s
â&#x20AC;˘ 63
d i f f u s e r p ro p o rt i o n
d i f f u s e r lo c at i o n
Diffuser.Propor tion Propor tion = 0.5
Orientation/Location Orientation = x y plane - Ceiling
Diffuser.Propor tion Propor tion = 1.6
Orientation/Location Orientation = x y plane - Ground
Orientation/Location Orientation = yz plane - Wall
Inputs
Parameter 4:
a.
Circular
Shape
b. c.
Rectalinear Hybrid
Parameter 5:
Real Number: 0.2 ~ 5.00
Proportion
Parameter 6: Lighting Type
a. b. c. d.
Area Spot Linear Gradient
Basic Geometry Diffuser Outline
Size from Distributary Area Output
l i g h t i n g t y pe
Diffuser.Type Type = Spot
Diffuser.Type Type = Linear
Diffuser.Type Type = Linear
Diffuser.Type Type = Gradient
g e o m e t r i c pa r a m e t e r s
09:0 0 e a s t fac i n g w i n d ow s t r a n s m i t t i n g l i g h t
12:0 0 so u t h fac i n g w i n d ow s t r a n s m i t t i n g l i g h t
66 â&#x20AC;˘
16:0 0 w e s t fac i n g w i n d ow s t r a n s m i t t i n g l i g h t
I n t h e m o r n i n g , t h e s u r f a c e s l i n k e d t o E a s t- F a c i n g w i n d o w s a r e l i t u p . At noon, the sur faces linked to Sou th- Facing windows are lit up. I n t h e a f t e r n o o n , t h e s u r f a c e s l i n k e d t o We s t- F a c i n g w i n d o w s a r e l i t- u p . L i g h t p a s s i n g t h r o u g h t h e w o r m h o l e c a r r y t h e c o l o r t e m p e r a t u r e a t t h e h o u r.
â&#x20AC;˘ 67
S T R AT E G Y: C O L L A B O R AT I V E AU TO N O M Y In Collabor ation with: Rebecca Mar r iot , Michelle Par k , K ar l B eng zon
p u b l i c sch o o l s
1,141 TOTAL SCHOOLS
3.7% of All of NYC SF 8.3% of All of 50K+ & <1990
FILTERS THE DISTRIBUTION OF SCHOOLS IS RELATED TO LAND-USE AND DENSITY
1,141
tota l sch o o l s
YEAR BU
CONSTRUCTION TRENDS REFLECT SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CHANGES
f i lt e r s :
• The distribution of schools is related to land-use and density
TARGET RANGE FOR TYPICAL SCHOOL: 1950-1975
1975
1949
1932
1919
s e a rch r e t u r n :
Yea Lot Bu Flo Bu Ma
Year Built: 1968 Lot Area: 339,154 SF Building Area: 1,012,000 SF Floors: 4 Built FAR: 2.98 Max FAR: 2.43
0
0
1
1980 LAFAYETT
l a fay e t t e av e , b ro n x , n yc
98
1
97
0
0
1
96
0
1
95
1
94
0
0
0
0
1
93
92
91
90
1
1
Located in-between Pugsley Avenue
L o c a t e d i n - b e t w e e n P u g s l e y A v e n u e a n d W h i t e P l a i n s R o a d o nand L a fWhite a y e t t ePlains A v e nRoad u e , t on h i s Lafayette school c a m p u s i s t w o b l o c k s f r o m t h e B r u c k n e r E x p r e s s w a y i n t h e B r o n xAvenue, . A f o uthis r s t oschool r y school complex , t h e s i t e o r i g i n a l l y h o u s e d o n e s i n g l e s c h o o l p r o g r a m b u t a f t e r campus a b r i e f is t i mtwo e sblocks t a n d i n from g v a cthe ant, it Expressway c u r r e n t l y i s o c c u p i e d b y 8 s e p a r a t e s c h o o l s , r a n g i n g f r o m p r i v aBruckner te to com m u n i t y p rin o gthe r a mBronx. ming. L ar ger amenities are shared by the dif ferent progr ams, such as the g ym, cafeter ia and auditor ium b u t t h e f o u r f l o o r p l a t e s a r e d i v i d e d a x i a l l y t o h o u s e t h e n i n e dAi f ffour e r e nstory t o c cschool u p a n t scomplex, . T h e c a the mpus site originally housed one single inhabit s the entire block with additional par k ing and green space.
68 •
1
1980 L AFAYET TE AVE. • • • • • •
1
1980
1
9
9
1
• Target range for typical school: 1950 -1975 y e a r b u i lt :
0
0
• Construction trends ref lect social and economic changes
school program but after a brief time standing vacant, it currently is occupied by 8 separate schools, ranging from private to community programming.
06
06 05 05
04
06
01
01. CENTRAL ATRIA STRATEGY
02
02. ATRIA CONNECTION TO FACADE STRATEGY 01. Central Atria Strategy 03. FACADE STRATEGY 04. Atria COURYARD STRATEGY 02. Connection to Facade 05. ROOF STRATEGY 03. 06. Facade PERIMETERStrategy BUILDING STRATEGY 04. Cour tyard Strategy 05. Roof Strategy {collaborative - autonomies} 06. Perimeter Building Strategy
03
STATEMENT
Adding boundaries to a school can enforce c
increased presents The design score card separation is a real timeissues of terri and colla evalution basedAn ideal on balance the between level autonomy of environment by allowing to deve collaboration and autonomy desiredstudents at various scales. environment, engaging with each other and th
human scale
DESIGN SCORECARD
degree of autonomy
This thesis is embodied in the form of our s
autonomy and collaboration along three axes scale and the site scale.
existing building score ideal or target score current design variation score
bldg. scale
site scale
degrees of collaboration converge at origin point
degree of autonomy
thesis
elements
human scale
degree of autonomy
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
The redevelopment for the Stevenson School is based on the belief that s tudents need both c o l l a b o r a t i v e a n d a u t o n o m o u s e n v i r o n m e n t s t o s u c c e s s f u l l y d e v e l o p e a c a d e m i c a l l y a n d s o c i a l l y.
â&#x20AC;˘ 69
at r i u m
{collaborative - autonomies}
{collaborative - autonomies} atrium workflow hydroponic atrium
atrium workflow hydroponic atrium
element inputs
zoning element element inputs (as massing)
hydroponic atrium** jenna miller 2012 nyc zoning element ryan lovett 2011
zoning element (as massing)
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team
hydroponic atrium** jenna miller 2012 nyc zoning element ryan lovett 2011 human scale
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
circulation diagram
* feature requested **hacked by team
bldg. scale
{collaborative - autonomies} atrium workflow thesis hydroponic atrium
elements
human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
site scale
design map
element inputs
zoning element (as massing)
hydroponic atrium** jenna miller 2012 nyc zoning element ryan lovett 2011
circulation diagram
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team
SYSTEM INPUTS
000 000 000 000 000
atrium distance from courtyard average distance between atria school size (number of students) number of landings occupancy per landing SYSTEM OUTPUTS circulation percent shared space diagram
percent autonomous space total sf of shared space maximum distance classroom to classroom
thesis
elements
human scale
maximum distance school to school
total sf of shared space between schools (inter) total sf of shared space withiin each school (intra)
human scale
000 000 000 000 000
building scale
site scale
energy
bldg. scale
{collaborative - autonomies} atrium workflow thesis
elements
human scale
element inputs hydroponic atrium SYSTEM INPUTS atrium distance from courtyard average distance between atriahuman scale school size (number of students) zoning element (as massing)number of landings occupancy per landing
hydroponic atrium** SYSTEM OUTPUTS jenna miller 2012 percent shared space percent autonomous space nyc zoning element ryan lovett 2011total sf of shared space bldg.
maximum distance classroom to classroom paver planter filter** scale dolores o’connormaximum 2012 distance school to school
scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
* feature requested total sf of shared space between schools (inter) **hacked bymap team design total sf of shared space withiin each school (intra)
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
design system variations
000 000
site scale
design map
000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000
site scale
000 000
human scale
human scale
circulation diagram
bldg. scale
site scale
bldg. scale
scale
site scale
energy
design map
design system variations
thesis
70 •
elements
human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
site scale
man scale
{collaborative - autonomies}
fac a d e
SYSTEM INPUTS
{collaborative - autonomies}
shared space opacity from residential
facade workflow atrium element
element inputs
hot box
element inputs
shared space opacity from comm. program shared space opacity from school classroom opacity from residential
facade workflow element inputs
atrium element
classroom opacity from comm. program classroom opacity from school SYSTEM OUTPUTS
50% 000 80% 000 471
shading percentage
angle inputs
flexible louver
glazing percentage energy saved (MBtu)
energy model calculations
3
shading element
element inputs
hot box
000 50% 30% 000 0000% 100% 50% 50%
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012 hotbox jayson walker 2011 flexible louver strip chris geist 2011
angle inputs
flexible louver
shading element* sam yul huh 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team human scale
energy model calculations shading element
{collaborative - autonomies} SYSTEM INPUTS shared space opacity from residential
facade workflow atrium element
element inputs
hot box
element inputs
shared space opacity from comm. program shared space opacity from school classroom opacity from residential
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
thesis
hotbox jayson walker 2011
classroom opacity from comm. program classroom bldg. opacity from school scale
elements
human scale
building scale
angle inputs
flexible louver
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
scale
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
30% 000 80% 000 414
shading percentage glazing percentage energy saved (MBtu)
flexible louver strip chris geist 2011
000 30% 50% 000 0000% 50% 100% 30% site
energy model calculations
3
shading element
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
shading element* sam yul huh 2012
hotbox jayson walker 2011 flexible louver strip chris geist 2011
* feature requested **hacked by team
shading element* sam yul huh 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team human scale
{collaborative - autonomies} SYSTEM INPUTS shared space opacity from residential
facade workflow atrium element
element inputs
hot box
element inputs
shared space opacity from comm. program shared space opacity from school classroom opacity from residential
thesis
classroom opacity from comm. program classroom bldg. opacity from school scale
elements
human scale
building scale
angle inputs
flexible louver
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
scale
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
60% 000 80% 000 490
shading percentage glazing percentage
SYSTEM INPUTS
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
50% 30% 0% 100% classroom opacity from residential 50% classroom opacity from comm. program scale scale50% classroom opacity frombuilding school
hotbox jayson walker 2011
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
energy saved (MBtu)
shared space opacity from residential
000 50% 50% 000 50% 000 100% 50% 50% site
energy model
shared space opacity from comm. program calculations
shading element
thesis
COMMUNITY PROGRAM
elements
human
RESIDENTIAL 2
3
SCHOOL
1 4
5
flexible louver strip chris geist 2011 shading element* sam yul huh 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team
shading percentage (S) shading percentage (E) shading percentage (W) glazing percentage (S) glazing percentage (E) glazing percentage (W)
{collaborativeenergy - autonomies} saved (MBtu)
6
site scale
energy
design map
design system variations
20% 70% 50% 50% 80% 80% 80% 80% 567
shading percentage (N)
glazing percentage (N)
COMMUNITY PROGRAM
3
shared space opacity from school
human scale
SYSTEM INPUTS
COMMUNITY PROGRAM
shared space opacity from residential
facade workflow atrium element
element inputs
hot box
element inputs
shared space opacity from comm. program shared space opacity from school classroom opacity from residential
thesis
classroom opacity from comm. program classroom bldg. opacity from school scale
elements angle inputs
flexible louver
human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
scale
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
75% 000 80% 000 512
shading percentage glazing percentage energy saved (MBtu)
energy model calculations
3
shading element
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
000 80% 60% 000 0000% 100% 80% 80% site
designatrium* map hydroponic jenna miller 2012
hotbox jayson walker 2011 flexible louver strip chris geist 2011
{collaborative - autonomies} shading element* sam yul huh 2012
SYS
* feature requested **hacked by team
sha
human scale
facade workflow atrium element
sha
element inputs
sha
clas
hot box
thesis
flexible louver
clas
element inputs
bldg. scale
elements
human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
site scale
design map
clas
SYS
sha
angle inputs
gla
ene energy model calculations shading element
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012 hotbox jayson walker 2011 flexible louver strip chris geist 2011 shading element* sam yul huh 2012
â&#x20AC;˘ 71
{collaborative - autonomies}
{collaborative - autonomies}
SYSTEM INPUTS
atrium element
co u rt ya r d
topography depth
element inputs
atrium element
column grid spacing roof height
point of entry
point of entry
path spline
subdivisions
{collaborative - autonomies} plaza gen.
all surfaces
paver planter element as glazing inputs
atrium element
point of entry
path spline
plaza gen.
paver planter
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
all surfaces
paver planter as glazing
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
**hacked by team
* feature requested **hacked by team
subdivisions * feature requested {collaborative - autonomies}
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. element spline factor inputs
atrium element elements
greenscape percentage
site scale
paver planter
path spline
mondrian surf.
paver planter
paver planter as glazing
all surfaces
t
r
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
paver planter as glazing
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
rain roof
all surfaces
design map human scale
topography depth building scale
column grid spacing
site scale
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
selective surfaces
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
freedom of motion
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
greenscape percentage
atrium element elements
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
human scale
building scale
site scale
thesis elements atrium element design system variations
energy
design map human scale
topography depth building scale
column grid spacing
site scale
roof height
plaza gen.
subdivisions
mondrian surf.
all surfaces
selective surfaces
paver planter as glazing
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor topo depth path width
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
plaza gen.
Fragmentation = High Lot Size = Small
building scale
site scale
SYSTEM INPUTS
atrium element elements
path width element inputs topography depth human scale roof height
plaza gen.
freedom of motion
mondrian surf.
epth idth
all surfaces
selective surfaces
paver planter as glazing
energy
human scale
energy
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
topography depth column grid spacing
SYSTEM OUTPUTS intimacy freedom of motion greenscape percentage
Fragmentation = Low Lot Size = Large
Preferable to physical activities
design system variations
design map
human
element inputs
human scale design map
rain roof
topography depth building scale
column grid spacing
site scale
roof height SYSTEM OUTPUTS
vert. subdiv. spline factor
plaza gen.
topo depth path width paver planter
grid spacing roof height
mondrian surf.
all surfaces
selective surfaces
paver planter as glazing
rain roof
freedom of motion
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
3x scale 6’ 1.5’ 8’ o/c energy 57’
scale
circulatory subdivision path width design system variations
design map
greenscape percentage
topography depth column grid spacing roof height SYSTEM OUTPUTS
3/10 7/10 15%
intimacy
subdivisions
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
site
path width
thesis elements atrium element design system variations
path spline
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
intimacy freedom of motion greenscape percentage
topo depth path width
grid spacing roof height
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
human scale
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
* feature requested **hacked by team
72 •
design map
roof height
roof height
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
7/10 7/10 30%
intimacy
subdivisions
greenscape percentage horiz. subdiv.
thesis
path width
grid spacing Preferable to Class size activities
point of entry
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
design system variations
scale
circulatory subdivision
design system variations
Fragmentation = Mid Lot Size = Medium
courtyard workflow
site scale
8’ o/c 57’
column grid spacing
path spline
energy
rain roof
greenscape percentage
scale subdivision circulatory
3x 4’
1.5’ building scale
point of entry
site scale
selective surfaces
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
topo depth path width
{collaborative - autonomies}
circulatory subdivision
courtyard workflow
building scale
all surfaces
paver planter as glazing
freedom of motion
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
3x scale 4’ 1.5’ 8’ o/c energy 57’
* feature requested **hacked by team
* feature requested **hacked by team
uman scale
human
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
paver planter
greenscape percentage
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
{collaborative - autonomies}
grid spacing roof height
freedom of motion
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
human scale
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
subdiv. ubdiv. factor
intimacy
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
thesis
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
6/10 6/10 30%
intimacy
subdivisions
mondrian surf.
paver planter
Preferable to small group activiiteis
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
elements
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
path spline
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
thesis
column grid spacing roof height
site
path width element inputs
point of entry
path spline
paver planter
topography depth
human scale
courtyard workflow
element inputs
point of entry
* feature requested **hacked by team
path width
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
scale circulatory subdivision
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
scale
circulatory subdivision
design map
topo depth path width
{collaborative - autonomies}
courtyard workflow
thesis
g
SYSTEM INPUTS bldg.
design system variations
* feature requested **hacked by team
{collaborative - autonomies}
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
2x scale 4’ 1.5’ 8’ o/c energy 57’ 5/10 3/10 35%
intimacy
subdivisions
paver planter as glazing
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
* feature requested **hacked by team
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
human
site
path width element inputs
mondrian surf.
paver planter
grid spacing grid spacing roof height roof height
rain roof
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
plaza gen.
topo depth path width
selective surfaces
S
n
point of entry
plaza gen.
greenscape percentage
f
path spline
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
freedom of motion
S
point of entry
selective surfaces
all surfaces
intimacy
p
roof height
topo depth path width subdivisions
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
human scale
thesis elements design system variations atrium element
energy
roof height
c
scale circulatory subdivision
building scale
column grid spacing
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
courtyard workflow
human scale
topography depth
topo depth path width
{collaborative - autonomies}
courtyard workflow
path width
c
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
mondrian surf.thesis
selective surfaces
freedom of motion
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
circulatory subdivision
5/10 2/10 40%
intimacy
subdivisions
mondrian surf.
topo depth path width
selective surfaces
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
path spline
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
mondrian surf.
paver planter
courtyard workflow
plaza gen.
path width
courtyard workflow
element inputs
SYSTEM INPUTS
1x 4’ 1.5’ 8’ o/c 57’
circulatory subdivision courtyard workflow
bldg. scale
site scale
co lu m n d e n s i t y
human scale
* feature requested **hacked by team
bldg. scale
design map
elements
human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
human
thesis elements design system variations
human scale design map
building scale
bldg. scale
site scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
nomies}
{collaborative - autonomies}
{collaborative - autonomies}
SYSTEM INPUTS
000 000 000 000 000
circulatory subdivision path width
courtyard workflow
element inputs
topography depth
element inputs
atrium element
column grid spacing roof height
point of entry
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
f.
ective faces
plaza gen.
paver planter as glazing
freedom of motion
plaza gen.
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
3x 4’ 2.5’ 11’energy o/c 57’
circulatory subdivision path width
to p o g r a p h i c d i v i s i o n
building scale
site scale
energy
elements design map
design systemthesis variations
topography depth human scale
element inputs
atrium element
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
site scale
column grid spacing
SYSTEM INPUTS SYSTEM OUTPUTS circulatory subdivision intimacy path width freedom of motion topography depth greenscape percentage column grid spacing
courtyard workflow
sions
t
building scale
roof height
{collaborative - autonomies}
es}
3x 7/10 4’ 7/10 2.5’ 30% 11’ o/c 57’
roof height
Depth = 30” Effect = Concealing
topo depth path width
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. grid spacing spline factor roof height
SYSTEM OUTPUTS path spline
plaza gen.
Depth = 30” Effect = Concealing
topo depth path width
Slope = 1:1 Effect = Definitive
point of entry
sions
paver planter
mondrian surf.
all surfaces
intimacy
subdivisions
selective surfaces
paver planter as glazing
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
freedom of motion greenscape percentage
COLUMBIA BUILDING INTELLIGENCE PROJECT site scale energy INTEGRATED DESIGN STUDIO - COLUMBIA GSAPP Depth = 18” SPRING 2012
to p o g r a p h i c d e p t h
000 000 000
number of classrooms freedom of motion greenscape percentage
topography depth
element inputs
atrium element
column grid spacing roof height SYSTEM OUTPUTS
mondrian surf.
all surfaces
selective surfaces
paver planter as glazing
rain roof
freedom of motion
horiz. subdiv. vert. subdiv. spline factor
design system variations
design map
SYSTEM INPUTS circulatory subdivision path width topography depth column grid spacing roof height SYSTEM OUTPUTS
5.5/10 7/10 30%
intimacy
subdivisions
energy
3x 4’ 1.5’ 11’ o/c 57’
greenscape percentage
intimacy freedom of motion greenscape percentage
topo depth path width
grid spacing roof height
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
bldg. scale
human scale
mondrian surface* joe brennan 2012
human scale
Slope = 1:4 Effect = Fluid
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012
human
paver planter filter** dolores o’connor 2012 site scale
* feature requested **hacked by team
rain roof caroline lebar 2012 * feature requested **hacked by team
design system variations
design map
cSlope a n=o1:4 py height Effect = Fluid bldg. scale
thesis
COLUMBIA BUILDING INTELLIGENCE PROJECT site scale energy INTEGRATED DESIGN STUDIO - COLUMBIA GSAPP SPRING 2012
building scale
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
Effect = Exposing
human scale
site scale
path width
courtyard workflow
paver planter
human scale
building scale
SYSTEM INPUTS circulatory subdivision
plaza gen.
grid spacing roof height
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
building scale
human scale
{collaborative - autonomies}
path spline
Slope = 1:1 Effect = Definitive
topo depth path width
elements design map
design systemthesis variations
7/10 7/10 30%
kayden plaza generator** omar morales armstrong 2011
human scale
roof height
grid spacing roof height
point of entry
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
Depth = 18” Effect = Exposing
column grid spacing
* feature requested **hacked by team
SYSTEM INPUTS
human scale
topography depth
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
* feature requested **hacked by team
t
path width
topo depth path width
rain roof
hydroponic atrium* jenna miller 2012
freedom of motion
000 000 000 000 000
circulatory subdivision
000 000 000
number of classrooms
horiz. subdiv. greenscape percentage vert. subdiv. spline factor
selective surfaces
all surfaces
paver planter as glazing
rain roof caroline lebar 2012
es}
subdivisions
mondrian surf.
paver planter
grid spacing roof height
rain roof
column grid spacing
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
path spline
topo depth path width
selective surfaces
all surfaces
paver planter
grid spacing roof height
topography depth roof height
000 000 000
number of classrooms
horiz. subdiv. greenscape percentage vert. subdiv. spline factor
mondrian surf.
topo depth path width
ain roof
subdivisions
SYSTEM INPUTS
000 000 000 000 000
path width element inputs
atrium element
point of entry
SYSTEM OUTPUTS
path spline
subdivisions
SYSTEM INPUTS circulatory subdivision
courtyard workflow
elements
design system variations
human scale
building scale
site scale
bldg. scale
site scale
bldg. scale
site scale
energy
thesisdesign system variations elements
design map human scale
building scale
site scale
energy
design system variations
design map
design map
• 73
{collaborative - autonomies} d e s i g n wo r k f low
element input element input element input
element
element
element input element input element input
element
element
element input element input element input
element
element
system outputs
system inputs
courtyard system outputs
system inputs
facade
ATRIUM AS MAIN DRIVING ELEMENT
number of atria size of atria location position distance FAR
school atrium size
roof
perimeter buildings community program
shared space
system inputs number of students sf per occupant percentage overlap distance FAR
small school size
environmental input environmental input environmental input
energy modeling
74 â&#x20AC;˘
system outputs
system inputs
system outputs
design variations
geometric outputs
parameter outputs
quanttitative comparison
design scorecard outputs
â&#x20AC;˘ 75
A RC H I T E C T U R A L T E C H N O LO G Y
F I S H S O C K | FA L L 2 011 F a l l 2 011 | M a n , M a c h i n e , a n d t h e I n d u s t r i a l L a n d s c a p e s Instruc tor : Sean Gallagher In collabor ation with: David Seo A f ish hatcher y at the Three Gorges Dam exploiting the r a p i d d i s c h a r g e s t o a c h i e v e u n p r e c e d e n t e d d e n s i t y.
B RO N X FA B - L A B S p r i n g 2 012 | A r c h i t e c t u r a l Te c h n o l o g y V Cr itic: Sandr a McKee In collabor ation with: Ther ese Diede, Damon L au, Samantha Leung T his seven s tor ey lof t building, 28 0 ’ long by 70 ’ deep, is designed for one of the quintessential indus tr ies of New Yo r k : F a s h i o n a n d Te x t i l e s .
TA I C H U N G M E T RO P O L I TA N O P E R A H O U S E S T U DY F a l l 2 012 | E x a l t e d S t r u c t u r e s Ins tr uc tor : Zachar y Kos tur a In collabor ation with: Samantha Leung, Eivind K ar lsen F i n i t e e l e m e n t a n a l y s i s a n d p h y s i c a l m o d e l l i n g o f To y o I t o’s Catanoid structural system
F U L L- B O DY D E S I G N I N T E R FAC E S p r i n g 2 013 | Po s t- P a r a m e t r i c Ins tr uc tor : David Benjamin In collabor ation with: Damon L au, B r ian Lee, David Hacht , Hank Byron U s i n g X B ox K i n e c t a s t h e i n p u t i n t e r f a c e t o m o d e l i n R h i n o
F I S H S O C K | FA L L 2 011
JIANGJIN pop. 1,460,000
BANAN pop. 860,000
YUBEI pop. 800, 000 ZHONGXIAN pop. 980,000
CHANGSHOU pop. 880,000 displaced 100,793
displaced 87,362
DISTANCE: 360 MI
WANZHOU pop. 1,670,000 displaced 236,516
CHONGQING pop. 5,420, 000
FULING pop. 1,100,000
FENGDU pop. 770,000
SHIZHU pop. 510,000
YUNYANG pop. 1,270,000
displaced 101,882
displaced 74,579
displaced 11,447
displaced 157,813
Reser voir - 1993
Reser voir - 2007
D i s p l a c e d Po p u l a t i o n A s t h e T h r e e G o r g e s D a m c a m e o n l i n e i n 2 0 0 9. A r e s e r v o i r o v e r 3 0 0 k m l o n g w a s b a c k e d u p b e t w e e n Y i c h a n g a n d C h o n g q i n g . T h e r i s d w a t e r l e v e l f o r c e d 1, 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 l o c a l h a b i t a n t s t o m o v e ou t of their homes, of ten to higher altitudes where the land is not suit able for agr iculture. Now set tled, the migr ant s have to f ind a new source of food produc tion, not only to satif y their own demands bu t also a s a way to gener ate income.
78 â&#x20AC;˘
f i s h so c k t h e t h r e e go rg e s da m
KAIXIAN pop. 1,500,000 displaced 154,318
WUXI pop. 510,000
XINGSHAN pop. 180,000 displaced 34,033
FENGJIE pop. 990,000
WUSHAN pop. 590,000
BADONG pop. 480,000 displaced 48,141
displaced 123,077
displaced 81,896
ZIGUI 390,000 displaced 94,781
YICHANG pop. 1,300,000
The development of f ish farms near Bohai Sea - 1979 / 2001
Changing Diet: L e s s L a n d , M o r e Wa t e r | L e s s R i c e , M o r e F i s h • • • • •
A n n u a l f i s h c o n s u m p t i o n / c a p i t a = 2 6 .1 K g D i s p l a c e d p o p u l a t i o n t o f e e d = 1, 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 To t a l a n n u a l c o n s u m p t i o n = 33 , 93 0 , 0 0 0 k g F i s h p r o d u c t i o n p e r m 2 = 0 . 3 2 k g /m 2 A r e a r e q u i r e d f o r a q u a c u l t u r e = 10 6 , 69 8 ,113 m 2 • 79
Radius = Area = Count = Total =
80m 2 20,106m 2 185 3,719,610m 2
Radius = Area = Count = Total =
200m 2 125,664m 2 101 12,692,064m 2
Radius = Area = Count = Total =
400m 2 502,656m 2 1 502,656m 2 h y d ro - e l e c t r i c t u r b i n e s
Total Area = 16,914,330m 2 by 6 levels = 106,458,978 m 2 @ 0.32Kg/m 2 34,066,873Kg Annual f ish production
Up Stream, Low Densit y S i n c e t h e r i v e r ’s r a t e o f f l o w i s t h e l o w e s t a t t h e d a m , ox y g e n a n d o t h e r n u t r i e n t s , v i t a l t o s u s t a i n a q u a t i c l i f e , c a n n o t r e f r e s h f a s t e n o u g h f o r a h i g h d e n s i t y h a t c h e r y. C o n s e q u e n t l y, t h e d e n s i t y o f t h e f i s h p o p u l a t i o n i s l i m i t e d t o o n l y 0 . 3 2 k g /m 2 .
80 •
Carr ying capacity 18 Kg/m 3 Total volume of hatcher y 1,892,604m3
f i s h h atch e ry
Number of turbines 26 Rate of discharge 600m3 - 950m3 Volume of an individual hatcher y 79,792m3 Rate of exchange 83 seconds
c v e r f low
da m
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Down Stream, High Density I f o x y g e n a n d n u t r i e n t s w e r e p l e n t i f u l , t h e d e n s i t y o f t h e f i s h f a r m c a n r e a c h 2 0 K g /m 3 b e f o r e social problems ar ise and af fec t yield. If the hatcher ies are linked to the tur bines, captur ing t h e d i s c h a r g e a s a w a y t o r a p i d l y r e f r e s h t h e w a t e r, t h e n t h e c a r r y i n g c a p a c i t y c a n b e g r e a t l y increased.
â&#x20AC;˘ 81
B RO N X FA B L A B | S P R I N G 2 012
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• 87
TA I C H U N G M E T RO P O L I TA N O P E R A H O U S E S T U DY | FA L L 2 012
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If we spend so much of our wak ing lives inter ac ting with digit al screens , why is the inter face a l w a y s a s l i m i t i n g a s a m o u s e a n d k e y b o a r d ? C o m p u t e r i n t e r a c t i o n a n d a r c h i t e c t â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s d i g i t a l t o o l s have a new emer ging posibilit y in high resolu tion motion sensing. This tool as an inter face allows t h e d e s i g n e r t o m o d e l v i r t u a l g e o m e t r y a t 1:1 s c a l e i n r e a l w o r l d s p a c e .
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• 91
U LT R A S T R U C T U R E F a l l 2 012 A d v a n c e d S t u d i o V: N e a r - I n f r a s t r u c t u r a l A r c h i t e c t u r e Professor : Michael Bell
A f ive thousand feet long housing projec t in the concept of a compressed atmosphere.
Semi- ou tdoor spaces make up the major it y of the building. A thin E TFE roof membr ane encloses a r ich inter ior jus t as the thin ephemer al layer of atmosphere that maint ains the r ich environment of our planet amid the vaccum of space. Inside t h i s 3 0 f e e t i n t e r i o r, t h e e f f e c t s o f o u r 11k m h i g h a t m o s p h e r e is reproduced. Evapor ation, Condensation, Covec tion, Conduc tion, Desalination, make up the sys tem of Ultr as tr uc ture. The semi- ou tdoor spaces inhabit a realm bet ween architec ture and landscape. These spaces , both indoor and ou tdoor har bor the potential to become new environment s that def y the common notion of indoor shelter and ou tdoor landscape.
Rem Koolhaas - “Mutations” Sanford Kwinter & Daniela Fabricius 1. Generica 2. Contact with America c u pe rt i n o c i t y h a l l oct
12, 2012
Instead of looking at where obag is providing affordable units, we should look for where the low-income demographic actually are.
A c c o r d i n g t o t h e O B AG p l a n , C u p e r t i n o’s e i g h t y e a r h o u s i n g e l e m e n t i s 103 5 u n i t s . Tw o t h i r d s o f w h i c h s h o u l d b e b e l o w m a r k e t r a t e , w h i c h m a k e s 69 0 a f f o r d a b l e u n i t s . T h e d e n s i t y f o r t h i s d e v e l o p m e n t s h o u l d b e 2 0 u n i t s /a c r e . C u r r e n t l y, t h e r e a r e 8 p e o p l e i n C u p e r t i n o o n t h e w a i t i n g list. Silicon valley ha s the one of the highes t concentr ation of mobile home communities in the wes t c o a s t . “ I n S a n F r a n c i s c o’s S i l i c o n Va l l e y . . . i n 19 9 9, 3 4 % o f S i l i c o n Va l l e y ’s 10 , 0 0 0 h o m e l e s s h a d f u l l t i m e j o b s . . . m a n y w e r e e a r n i n g m o r e t h a n $ 5 0 K p e r y e a r.” 94 •
â&#x20AC;&#x153;The second fastest growing categor y of housing in America over the last 2 decades has been mobile homes. More than 1 in 7 of the nations residences today is mobile â&#x20AC;?
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Real Proper ty: Land
Market Value
Market Value
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Personal Proper ty: Land
Time
If both the real proper ty and the personal p r o p e r t y c a n a c t i v e l y p r o d u c e c o m m o d i t y, then their value can be func tion of quant at ative production.
â&#x20AC;˘ 95
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Construction
H O U S E d o e s n ’ t s i m p l y b e c o m e a p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y, w h i c h w o u l d d e p r e c i a t e r a p i d l y o v e r t i m e . I t t akes on the role of a manufac tured machine that can capture and tr ansmit elec tr ic tiy wirelessly on site. L AN D doesn’ t simply become a featur eless r eal es t ate , w hose value is ex posed to the f luc tuations o f t h e m a r k e t . I t i s i n v e s t e d w i t h e c o l o g i c a l l a b o r, a n a b i l i t y t o c o n v e r t s e a w a t e r i n t o d r i n k i n g water through desalination.
• 97
t ro p os p h e r e :
11k m
s e c t i o n o f t h e e a rt h â&#x20AC;&#x2122; s at m os p h e r e
M o s t c l o u d s o r i g i n a t e f r o m a p o r t i o n o f t h e E a r t h â&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a t m o s p h e r e k n o w n a s t h e t r o p o s p h e r e . F o r the size of our planet , the troposphere - where we live - is ex tremely thin, yet it maint ains an ex tremely r ich inter ior amid the vas t vacuum of space.
98 â&#x20AC;˘
6,40
0 km
11 k
m
120
km
Troposphere
D r a w i n g s b y 19 t h c e n t u r y E n g l i s h m e t e o r o l o g i s t J a m e s G l a i s h e r. G l a i s h e r c a r r i e d o u t 2 8 m e t e o r o l o g i c a l o b s e r v a t i o n e x p e d i t i o n s b y b a l o o n . O v e r t h e c o u r s e t h i s 1. 5 h o u r, 8 0 k m f l i g h t o n J u n e 2 6 , 18 6 3 , h e e n c o u n t e r e d r a i n , t h u n d e r, a n d f o g , a n d e x p e r i e n c e d t e m p e r a t u r e e x t r e m e s from the summer heat to the winter chill.
â&#x20AC;˘ 99
co m p r e ss e d t ro p os p h e r e :
30 f t
co n ce p t ua l b u i l d i n g s e c t i o n
5,000 ft. full building section
The ef fec t s of the tropopher e ha s been compr essed down to a height of 30 feet . Evapor ation, Condensation, Covec tion, Conduc tion, Desalination, make up the sys tem of Ultr as tr uc ture. The ground is freed from infr us tr uc ture, and is reclaimed by br ine and vegetation.
100 â&#x20AC;˘
30 ft.
• 101
Adobe Systems
San Jose
9,925
Software
4.21
Advanced Micro Devices
Sunnyvale
11,705
Semiconductors
6.57
Agilent Technologies
Santa Clara
18,700
Medical
6.62
Apple Inc.
Cupertino
60,400
Computers, Electronics
108.25
Applied Materials
Santa Clara
13,000
Semiconductors
10.50
Cisco Systems
San Jose
71,825
Network
46.06
eBay
San Jose
27,770
Website
11.65
Mountain View
54,604
Internet
37.91
Hewlett-Packard
Palo Alto
349,600
Computers, Electronics
127.24
Intel
Santa Clara
100,100
Semiconductors
54.00
Intuit
Mountain View
8,000
Software
3.85
Juniper Networks
Sunnyvale
9,129
Network
4.49
KLA Tencor
Milpitas
5,800
Semiconductors
3.20
LSI Logic
Milpitas
4,730
Semiconductors
2.04
Maxim Integrated Products
San Jose
9,300
Integrated Circuits
2.40
National Semiconductor
Santa Clara
5,800
Semiconductors
1.42
NetApp
Sunnyvale
12,000
Data
6.23
Nvidia
Santa Clara
6,029
Semiconductors
3.99
Oracle Corporation
Redwood City
115,166
Enterprise service
37.10
Salesforce.com
San Francisco
8,335
Enterprise service
2.27
SanDisk
Milpitas
3,939
Data
5.66
Sanmina-SCI
San Jose
48,000
Electrtonic Manufacturing
6.32
Symantec
Mountain View
20,500
Software
6.19
Yahoo!
Sunnyvale
12,000
Internet
A10 Networks
San Jose
400
Network
Altera
San Jose
2,884
Integrated Circuits
Atmel
San Jose
5,100
Semiconductors
1.80
Brocade Communications Systems
San Jose
5,000
Network
2.15
Cypress Semiconductor
San Jose
3,495
Semiconductors
0.97
Electronic Arts
Redwood City
7,645
Gaming
4.14
Palo Alto
3,500
Social Networking
3.71
Fairchild Semiconductor
San Jose
9,000
Semiconductor
1.60
Foundry Networks
Santa Clara
1,100
Network
0.61
Hitachi Data Systems
Santa Clara
5,300
Data
1.00
Hitachi Global Storage Tech.
San Jose
45,000
Data
4.80
IDEO
Palo Alto
550
Design Innovation
0.10
Intuitive Surgical
Sunnyvale
935
Medical
0.60
Mountain View
2,447
Social Networking
0.52
Mozilla
Mountain View
Network
1.04
Netflix
Los Gatos
2,348
Website
3.20
Ning
Palo Alto
100
Social Networking
0.03
Playdom
Palo Alto
470
Gaming
0.05
PlayPhone
San Jose
Gaming
0.10
Quantcast
San Francisco
Advertising
1.00
Rambus
Sunnyvale
Semiconductor
0.20
Riverbed Technology
San Francisco
1,244
Network
0.55
Silicon Graphics
Fremont
1,155
Semiconductors
0.34
Silicon Image
Sunnyvale
SRI International
Menlo Park
SunPower Synopsys Inc.
100
4.98 Proposal Site: Salt Pond A8 0.10
Cuper tino
2.06
Semiconductors
0.07
2,200
Research & Development
0.58
San Jose
5,220
Solar Energy
2.30
Mountain View
6,700
Software
1.38
Tibco Software
Palo Alto
2,500
Software
0.92
Tesla Motors
Palo Alto
1,400
Automotives
0.20
San Francisco
900
Social Networking
VMware
Palo Alto
11,200
Software
Vocera
San Jose
130
Wireless
Xilinx
San Jose
3,145
Integrated Circuits
1.82
YouTube (acquired by Google)
San Bruno
Website
3.60
Yelp, Inc.
San Francisco
150
Website
0.08
Zoran Corporation
Sunnyvale
1,411
Semiconductor
0.44
102 •
0.14
3.77 ters Tech Corp. Headquar 0.80
Mobile Home Communities
Infrastructure
Water Treatment Plant Recycling Plant Infrastructure collection/conversion Quarr y
Nature
Nature
Salt Ponds
s t u dy s i t e
$ 4,980,000,000
Net App:
$ 6,230,000,000
Brocade:
$ 2,130,000,000
LRTInfrastructure transportation
Tech Offices
Tech .Off ices
Tech Offices
Yahoo:
Hw yInfrastructure 237 transportation
Mobile Homes Community & Medium Density Residential
Willow Ranch: Cape Cod Village:
236 spaces 188 spaces
Total area: Density:
50 acres 8.5 units/acre
Price Range: $40,000 ~ $180,000
Commercial
Commercial
Mobile Home Community & Medium Density Residential
Mobile Home Communities
Hw yInfrastructure 101 transportation
High tech of f ices and mobile home in silicon valley are of ten located where land pr ices are the cheapes t . This is usually near the Bay side per imeter of the cities . A interes ting site condition is created where B illion dollar companies are situated within a mile from low income housing, while both are compressed bet ween an s t ate highway and the augmented landscape of the San F r a n c i s c o B a y.
â&#x20AC;˘ 103
2. Server Tube: 48 x 1350 BTU/hr
1. Salt Water: 20 psu, 8 °C
4: Condensation: 100% RH
3: Evaporation + Desalination: 28°C
5: Consumption
104 •
N
site pl an
Cargill 134 billion
Apple 108 billion
The salt ponds are owned nationally and oper ated pr ivately by the Car gill Group, which has an a n n u a l r e v e n u e o f $13 4 b i l l i o n . T h e s e r v e r s a r e o w n e d a n d o p e r a t e d p r i v a t e l y b y A p p l e , w h i c h h a s a n a n n u a l r e v e n u e o f $10 8 billion.
â&#x20AC;˘ 105
u lt r a s t r u c t u r e d i ag r a m
1 5
4
3
2
1. salt water : 20 psu, 8°c 2. ser ver tube: 48 x 1350 btu/hr 3: evaporation and desalination: 28°C 4: condensation: 100% rh 5: consumption
Elements
Wa l l s Floors Roofs Floors Columns Arches Va u l t s Openings 106 •
Composition
Heat Moisture Light Elec trons Wa t e r Iner tia Albedo
Sy mmetr y Randomization Addition Subtraction Inclusion Superposition Jux taposition
Convec tion Conduction Radiation Evaporation Conver sion Pressure
pl an
s e c t i o n : d e s a l i n at i o n
s e c t i o n : e va p o r at i o n
s e c t i o n : e va p o r at i o n
G e n e r a l l y s p e a k i n g t h e f l o o r p l a n a n d t h e r o o f p l a n a r e d r a w n s e p a r a t e l y. B u t a s o n e endeavor ed to design a space on land that included the cur r ent weather conditions , clouds and l a n d w o u l d h a v e t o b e s h o w n s i m u l t a n e o u s l y, l i k e a w e a t h e r m a p . F o r t h i s b u i l d i n g , t h e r o o f a n d t h e f l o o r b e l o w a r e d r a w n s i m u l t a n e o u s l y, o n e o n t o p o f a n o t h e r.
â&#x20AC;˘ 107
to p : s a lt m a r s h b ot to m : s e m i - o u t d o o r
108 â&#x20AC;˘
s e m i -t h r e s h h o l d
Semi- ou tdoor spaces make up the major it y of the building. A thin E TFE roof membr ane encloses a r ich inter ior jus t as the thin ephemer al layer of atmosphere that maint ains the r ich environment o f o u r p l a n e t a m i d t h e v a c c u m o f s p a c e . I n s i d e t h i s 3 0 f e e t i n t e r i o r, t h e e f f e c t s o f o u r 11k m h i g h atmosphere is reproduced. Evapor ation, Condensation, Covec tion, Conduc tion, Desalination, make up the sys tem of Ultr as tr uc ture. The semi- ou tdoor spaces inhabit a realm bet ween architec ture and landscape. These spaces , both indoor and ou tdoor har bor the potential to become new environment s that def y the common notion of indoor shelter and ou tdoor landscape.
â&#x20AC;˘ 109
S I L H O U E T T E C I N E M AT H E Q U E S p r i n g 2 013 | A d v a n c e d S t u d i o V I : D i c t i o n a r y o f R e c e i v e d I d e a s C r i t i c : E n r i q u e Wa l k e r I n C o l l a b o r a t i o n w i t h : P a b l o F e r n a n d e z -V i l l a v e r d e , S a r a h Ly o n , Ye h - S e n S u
The s tudio at temps to redif ine received ideas . Af ter the selec tion of the cliche of the Silhouet te building, a f lat ex tr usion of r econgnizable f igue, our team adapted the or iginal concept to the a ssigned progr am, a cinematheque. In our projec t , we r ever t the conventional under s t anding of the received idea by using the following guidelines: 01. D i s c i p l i n e d I n t e r s e c t i o n B e t w e e n S e r v i n g a n d S e r v e d 02. Spir al Circulation 03 : F o y e r C a t e g o r i z a t i o n 04: Ur ban Acupunc ture 0 5 : Tr a n s g r e s s i o n t h e C l i c h e
S I L H O U E T T E C I N E M AT H E Q U E 1. 0
+10 m P lan 1. C inema 2. O pen to B elow 3. C lassrooms 0
5
10
5
10
20
30
40
20
30
40
50
+21 m P lan 1. C inema 2. O pen to B elow 3. O utdoor C inema 4. E xhibition 5. P rojection B ooth 6. C inema F oyer 0
6.5
23.1
6.5
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14.2
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23.2 27.2
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2.0
2.0
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c u t a xo n o m e t r i c
• 113
1. Cinema 2. Administration 3. Outdoor Cinema 4. Exhibition / Archive 5. Classrooms 6. Cafe 7. Entrance 8. Lobby
0
114 â&#x20AC;˘
5
10
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50
6
10
8
7
20
30
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D
on, 5 - classrooms, 6 - cafe, 7 - entrance, 8 - lobby
D section D-D
0
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â&#x20AC;˘ 115
s k i n a n d e n v e lo pe co n d i t i o n s
t u d i o
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1
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33 Wrap creates a double
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5
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116 â&#x20AC;˘
relationships louver and screen
a xo n o m e t r i c co r e a n d p ro g r a m
â&#x20AC;˘ 117
a d m i n i s t r at i v e pac k ag e
ac a d e m i c pac k ag e
e x h i b i t i o n pac k ag e
118 â&#x20AC;˘
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pe r s pe c t i v e c i t y v i e w
â&#x20AC;˘ 119
S I L H O U E T T E C I N E M AT H E Q U E 2 . 0
REDEFINED RECEIVED IDEA
RECEIVED IDEA
STRUCTURAL CONCEPT: CINEMAS
RECEIVED IDEA
REDEFINED RECEIVED IDEA
RECEIVED IDEA
co n v e n t i o n a l u s e o f t h e s i l h o u e t t e
t r a n sg r e ss i o n o f t h e s i l h o u e t t e
The silhouet te is at the same time the main s tr uc ture of the building and the space for the “back o f t h e h o u s e ”, a l l t h e s e r v i n g s p a c e s t h a t a r e n o t a p a r t o f t h e r e l a t i o n b e t w e e n c i r c u l a t i o n a n d cinemas. The silhouet te spans six s tr uc tur al walls that provide for mal and or ganizational freedom for cinema s and rou te conf igur ation.
120 •
s i t e s t r at e g y
48th St
10th Ave 10th Ave
48th St
SITE PLAN AND ELEVATION SITE PLAN AND ELEVATION
47th St 47th St
SITE AXON
T h e c i n e m a t e q u e i s l o c a t e d i n a s t a n d a r d n e i g h b o r h o o d i n s i d e t h e N Y u r b a n f a b r i c g r i d ( H e l l ’s K i t c h e n) . T h i s m i n i m u m u r b a n i n t e r v e n t i o n a i m s t o g e n e r a t e a m a x i m u m e f f e c t c r e a t i n g a r e c o g n i z a b l e s y m b o l o f c u l t u r a l i d e n t i t y f o r a g e n e r i c c o m m u n i t y.
• 121
c i n e m a pat h s
indoor spir al
outdoor spir al
pat h a n d scr e e n s
The indoor spir al circulates along the per ipher y of four indoor cinemas, either behind screens or por jec tion booths or beside the audience, and across the inside of the treys . The ou tdoor spir al circulates across the roof of the tr eys , connec t s t wo ou tdoor cinema s at the t o p . T h e p u b l i c c a n a c c e s s t h e s e t w o c i n e m a s w i t h o u t e v e r e n t e r i n g t h e b u i l d i n g ’s i n t e r i o r. The cinematheque is a public exper ience of circulating “ through” cinemas . The cinematic exper ience would leak ou t into the circulation and the foyer tr eys to ac tivate them 122 •
• 123
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• 125
126 •
• 127
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128 •
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• 129
Outdoor Cinema 01 / Semi-Exposed 154 Seats 1. Education 2. Circulation 3. Roof
5
0
1
1
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3
2
3
Indoor Cinema 04 / Seminar 70 Seats 1. Education 2. Circulation
Circulation System
5
0
2
0
1
10
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3
Circulation System
Circulation System
Indoor Cinema 02 / Main + Auditorium 146 Seats 1. Bookstore 2. Circulation 3. Education
5
0
1
0
130 â&#x20AC;˘
2
10
3
Service Core
Trus
Outdoor Cinema 02 / Open Air 66 Seats
5
1. Roof 2. Circulation
0
1
1
3
2 10
0
2 1
Circulation System 2
Administration Core
1
1
2
3
Indoor Cinema 03 / Performance 74 Seats
5
1. Roof 2. Circulation 3. Cafe
0
0
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2
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10
1
Indoor Cinema 01 / Entrance Billboard
2
56 Seats
10
1. Exhibition 2. Circulation
5
0
Circulation System
sses
1 0
2 10
â&#x20AC;˘ 131
132 •