Portfolio for UCL MArch Urban Design 2022

Page 1


CONTENTS 01. 1934 Paper mill Renewal Design of Industrial Heritage Graduate Work, Guangzhou

01

02. STEPPING UP Collective Housing Complex Design Core Studio Work, Guangzhou

07

03. THE PROMENADE Art Museum Design Core Studio Work, Guangzhou

13

04. BRIDGE ON THE HILL New Dyeing Workshop Design Competition Project, Guizhou

19

05. THE RED CABIN Ecological Toilet Construction Construction Project, Guangzhou

22

OTHER WORKS

25

Architecture as a mediator of communication between people and the city.


01. 1934 Paper Mill Renewal Design of Industrial Heritage Guangzhou, China Graduate Project Instructor: Hanfei Qu Individual Work, 03/2021-05/2021

Under Guangzhou's policy of "retreating two into three"[1], factories along the Pearl River, including paper mills, are to be relocated to the suburbs. The industrial sites fracture history while showing the glorious industrial history and civilization on the ground, and it is their existence that continues the cultural lineage of industrial abandoned sites. At the same time, the reproduced relics are easy to stimulate individuals' identification and imagination of the places they once were. How to transform the testimony of the former glory of the old industrial heritage into the guide of the new life of the contemporary city, and how to connect the two different time vectors of the fractured history of the past and the future of the everchanging creative industry are the issues to be considered in this design. In this design, reposition the paper mill with rich history with the focus on art, culture and economy to create a cultural and commercial complex. It is hoped that this approach will activate the Guangzhou Paper Mill area and link up the industrial heritage along the Pearl River.

[1] Secondary industries will be withdrawn from the urban area and tertiary industries such as commerce and services will be developed.“Retreating the second” means relocating, renovating or closing down industrial enterprises within and near the inner ring road that are heavily polluting, consume a lot of energy and have poor efficiency. 1


the industrial heritage of the riverfront The site is located along the back channel of the Pearl River, where a large number of historically significant industrial sites are located, and they are sometimes closely connected in the temporal dimension. However, the renovation of industrial buildings by the government or enterprises is point-to-point,

site problem & Solution

and there is a lack of connection with other industrial heritage along the Pearl River. The design builds connections between them in terms of space, sight lines and architectural language, which is conducive to creating a cultural tour path of industrial heritage along the waterfront.

Start from 1960s Built in 1960s Abandoned in 2003 Converted to Office Area

Lack of Vitality

Public Activities Bring Vitality to the Neighborhood

Pacific Warehouse Start from 1905 Built in 1905 Abandoned in 2005 Converted to Catering Area

Lutheran Hall

Start from 1911 Built in 1915 Abandoned in 2007 Converted to Creative Industrial Park

Wuyang Bicycle Factory

Lack of Cultural Facilities

Set Up Cultural Complexes

Poor Accessibility

Adding Connections

Huadi Warehouse

Guangzhou Paper Mill

Start from 1933 Built in 1950Ss Abandoned in 2012 Planned to Creative Industrial Park

Guangzhou Paper Mill

Guangzhou Iron and Steel Plant Planned to Park/Residential District Abandoned in 2004 Built in 1954 Start from 1954

Start from 1934 Built in 1950 Abandoned in 2010 Planned in 2013 Part of Area Converted to Park

Guangzhou Shipyard

Concern 2: How to transform the testimony of the former glory of the old industrial heritage into the guide of the new life of the contemporary city Concern 1: How to keep the memories of local people while creating new experiences?

History of Paper mill In its 87-year history, the Guangzhou Paper Mill has grown in size, and most of the surrounding residents were employees back Extension

Extension

Removal

then, and they have deep memories of the place. But with the relocation of the factory in 2010 and the demolition of three-quarters of the building in 2011. How should people’s common memories be reproduced? 2


Site Axonometric 1

2

2

2 1 2 3

3

1 4

5 5

6

7

SITE PLAN

8

1.OFFICES 2.PLAZA 3.RETAILS 4.MARKET 5.RESTAURANTS 6.PAPER MILL MUSEUM 7.AIR CORRIDOR 8.ART CENTER 9.WATERFRONT PARK Layer 1:

Layer 2:

Layer 3:

Points, lines and surfaces are used to set

The open roof structure is used to limit the

Use the corridor to connect the north and south par-

up the landscape to suit the different qual-

temporary event space, where bazaars,

cels to alleviate the problem of being divided by urban

ities of the site, which is long and narrow

pop-up events, etc. can be held.

roads, and at the same time, respond to the surround-

in the north and open in the south.

9

N 0

20

40

60

80

100

ing environment as a landscape corridor. Adding to the interest of the tour, people can appreciate the industrial buildings from different heights. 3


OFFICE

SHOPS

RESTAURANT

MARKET

OFFICE

BAR

GALLERY

VIEWPOINTS

ACTIVITY

RESTAURANT

VIEWPOINTS

PARK

PARKING

4


A

coal bunker paper Mill Museum

1st FLOOR

EXHIBITION

Area B is currently the largest and most complete This area is therefore suitable for a museum-type proEXHIBITION building remaining in the Paper Mill, with huge interject, where the original industrial buildings are adapted nal space and no load-bearing structure in the middle, to suit new functions. The site also has a strong industricharacteristics that determine its great potential for al feel to the coal conveyor, which can be be used as an renovation. important design element in the design of the building.

1 2

3 4 5

6

1

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION EXHIEXHIEXHIEXHIBIBIBIBITION TION TION TION EXHIBITION

2nd FLOOR

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION

2

3

4

5

10

N

O

I IT

N O TI BI HI EXHIBITION X E

7 6

7

B HI EX EXHIBITION

8 10

8

BITION

BITION

EXHIBITION

EXHIBITION

•High level of openness •High level of public participation •Multi-angle experience of industrial buildings •Abundant variation in spatial scale •Increased façadeNvariety

A

2nd FLOOR

•Circular tour route •Creating an immersive industrial exhibition •Multiple ways to experience paper making culture

1.PAPERMAKING MACHINERY DISPLAY 2.ATRIUM 3.EXHIBITION HALL 2 4.EXHIBITS CORRIDOR 2 5.EXHIBITION HALL 3 6.WAREHOUSE 7.LAVATORY 8.ART CENTER

1

I IB H X EXHIBITION

5

4

5

2 2

3

4th FLOOR

1

7

3

6

4

8

Section A-A

1.OPEN AIR THEATRE 2.OPEN PLATFORM 3.INFORMATION STAND 4.DEPOSIT CENTER 5.REST AREA 6.EXHIBITION HALL 1 7.ATRIUM 8.EXHIBITS CORRIDOR 1 9.LOGISTICS AREA 10.LAVATORY

3rd FLOOR

O TI

E

9

9

GROUND FLOOR

•The ground floor of the building is partially elevated to connect the north and south parts •At the intersection of the two moving lines, the museum entrance plaza is set up EXHIEXHI-

1.COMMUNITY CENTRE 2.PLAZA 3.RETAILS 4.MARKET 5.RESTAURANTS 6.OFFICES 7.WAREHOUSE 8.ART CENTER 9.LAVATORY 10.UNLOADING AREA

3rd FLOOR

4th FLOOR

1.VIEWING PLATFORM 2.EXHIBITION HALL 3.LAVATORY 4.WAREHOUSE 5.PAPERMAKING MACHINERY DISPLAY

5


coal bunker Cultural centre

三种策略

Huandao

THREE STRATEGIES

Road

Area A used to be a coal bunker and its main feature is the river frontage with a loading dock. Area A straddles the riverfront 三种策略 greenway and has a good view of the landscape. This area is suitable for the arrangement of a more open and free cultural and THREE STRATEGIES creative centre, which will drive the cultural industry while providing an open urban living room for the riverside green belt. UR

BA

UR

BA

N

N

M

AI

M

AI

N

RO AD

N

RO CULTURAL A D

6

8 7 5

4

CULTURAL PARK

4

PARK

3

5

4

PARK

BUSY

PARK

•A pedestrian bridge connects the north and south sides of the building. •Part of the building is elevated on the ground floor to provide a leisure route along the river.

QUIET

BUSY

QUIET

•Commercial space is set back to allow open space for the riverfront promenade. •The building opens up to the landscape to allow the landscape to penetrate into the building.

GROUND FLOOR

2

1.HYDROPHILIC PLATFORM 2.ENTRANCE SQUARE 3.ATRIUM 4.RESTAURANTS 5.BARS 6.LAVATORY 7.GYM 8.YOGA STUDIO

0

5

10 15 20

1

Pearl River

N

4

4

4

10

2 3

9

2

2

6 8 2 6 2

5

1

2nd FLOOR

7

3rd FLOOR

1.OPEN SPACE 2.ART SHOPS 3.ART TOWER 4.LAVATORY 5.OPEN PLATFORM 6.ART CLASSROOMS 7.VOCAL MUSIC ROOM 8.DANCE ROOM 9.DRINKS SHOP 10.INSTRUMENT ROOM

4th FLOOR

0

5

10

15

20 N

6


02. Stepping up Collective Housing Complex Design Guangzhou, China Academic Project Instructor: Yunjiang Wu Individual Work, 04/2019-06/2019

Many of today's university graduates face the problem of renting accommodation, and with the diversity of working styles, they have very different needs for living and working space. The site is located at the junction of the university campus and the city. The design is intended to provide students, graduates and teachers with a variety of options for living and working during the transition period, which caters for new forms of cohabitation[1]. In the design I have organised the shared work and living spaces together, weakening the boundaries between the two is dangerous, which possibly makes it difficult to separate work and life for people. However, the combination of the two can greatly increase productivity and save time and resources. To make use of the sharing of built space to minimise the burden of domestic labour, including work activities based on cooperation and assistance, such as joint cleaning, cooking, etc. To resist the fragmentation of domestic space and the tendency to divide it into 'family homes'.

[1] PierVittorio Aureli, Martino Tattara.“Production/Reproduction: Housing beyond the Family”, No. 41 / Family Planning, Harvard Design Magazine. 7


The school has not allocated me a dormitory and I need to find a house near the school in order to work.

It’s difficult to find a job now so I’ m going to become a freelancer working at home

After graduation I would like to live near the school, so that I could start my business with my schoolmate conveniently.

With the difficulties of finding a job upon graduation, and the expensive and inaccessible nature of renting an apartment, we needed a place where we could transition to.

8


CONCEPT

1. Original Apartment Prototype

2. Expand Traffic Space

4. Bring Function to " Boundary "

3. Place "Boundary"

Baiyun Mountain

Teaching building

Administrative building

CITY VIEW

City skyline

Dwelling district

Park

Sea of flower Sport ground

Lake

CAMPUS VIEW

WuShan Road

THE TRANSFORMATION OF TWO SIDES

"OBVERSE"

The shared living space is oriented towards the lively city, with the blocks projecting outwards in a positive response to the city. The massing changes in response to the change in view of the landscape.

"REVERSE"

The shared office area is located on the quieter side of the building, with the block retracted inwards to reduce urban distractions.

9


LIFE

- VOLUME + + -

+

SCALE PRIVACY

+

SCALE PRIVACY

+ -

WORK

THE TRANSITIONS According to the texture of the site, the volume of the building gradually increases from west to east. The transition from an informal living and entertainment space to a formal working and meeting space. And the privacy of this building gradually increases from bottom to top, showing three different clusters.

5th FLOOR

10th FLOOR

15th FLOOR

20th FLOOR

6th FLOOR

11th FLOOR

16th FLOOR

21th FLOOR

7th FLOOR

12th FLOOR

17th FLOOR

22th FLOOR

8th FLOOR

13th FLOOR

18th FLOOR

23th FLOOR

9th FLOOR

14th FLOOR

19th FLOOR

24th FLOOR

GRADUATION SEASON JOB FAIR

-3.500

3

0.800

7 3.500

1.700

5 1

8

BUSINESS SEASON CONFERENCE

9

1.600

1.600 1.500 ±0.000

4

6 5

2

-3.500

WUSHAN ROAD

0 5 10 15 20

0

GROUND FLOOR PLAN 1.PLAZA 2.RESTAURANT 3.ART GALLERY 4.BOOKSHOP 5.SUPERMARKET 6.FOOD COURT 7.CAFE 8.ENTRANCE HALL 9.FLEXIBLE SPACE(FOR BUSINESS)

10

20

30

40

50

TYPOLOGICAL AGGREGATION The floor plan shows a variation of public spaces on different levels. And the function of the "yellow area" change with it. Some of the space of individual units such as workspace, kitchen, leisure space, etc. Which are extracted into shared spaces that can minimise the labour and financial burden on families, while gaining more space for activities. 10


TYPOLOGY STUDY SPATIAL COMBINATIONS TYPOLOGY

CELL Original Plan

CLUSTER Corrected Plan

SELECTED FLOOR PLAN FROM THREE CLUSTERS

8th FLOOR PLAN (Cluster 1)

14th FLOOR PLAN (Cluster 2)

22nd FLOOR PLAN (Cluster 3) 11


The yellow pedestrian walkway becomes an extension of the urban interface. The privacy of the public space changes from the lower to the higher floors. The ground floor the more open commercial space and the upper floors are more private space such as, tea rooms and reading spaces. A sense of the street is created from ground level all the way up to the tower.

DETAILS CONSTRUCTION 12


03. THE PROMENADE Art Museum Design Guangzhou, China Core Studio Project Instructor: Hanfei Qu Individual Work, 09/2018-10/2018 The site is located on the central axis of the city, where the large buildings and empty hard squares make the public buildings less civic friendly. What should it look like for an urban art museum? In this design, I have tried to abandon the traditional modern urban construction model of large plazas with large signage and replace the large plaza with a landscaped park, with undulating landscapes and dense trees that do not allow one to fully perceive the shape of the building within the site.As one promenades through the park, one inadvertently walks through the shade of the trees into the grey space of the building, creating a continuous experience of inner and outer space, meeting the basic functional needs of the building while linking nature with the material world of human civilisation.The idea is to find a balance between nature, architecture and the city, creating a space where people can be in the CBD but still feel like they are in the middle of a forest.

13


Promenade Architecture

Story Board

"Strolling space" can be defined as a participatory space that can provide people to traverse and travel in the building. During the journey, people interact and dialogue with the space itself through visual, auditory, tactile or other behaviors. The development of the building presents different forms of expression in different buildings. In Villa Savoy, Cobb replaced the term "streamline" in the traditional architectural vocabulary with an architectural walk, and the nature of architectural design also changed accordingly, and modernist architecture began a new era. The emergence of walking breaks through the rigid definition of traditional streamlined design.

The life and death of architecture depends on the extent to which the rule of “movement” is ignored or developed extraordinary.

After the evolution, some features of the [Promenade Architecture] of the current era in the West: Communicative Rational concrete

When walking, the power is induced by function, and the randomness of walking is weak. Strength is a purposeful and linear walking.

“I am not interested in the real space created by architecture. This kind of space that appears and disappears gently from timeto time fascinates me” References: [1] Flora Samuel. Le Corbusier and the Architectural Promenade [2] Han Shuang. The Spetial Character of“Promenade Architecture”——From Villa Savoy to Contemporary Architecture [3] Liu Qian&Lin Tao. Architectural Ramp Design with an Urban Perspective: Taking Rem Koolhass as an Example

Over the past two decades, the development of Guangzhou’s city centre has transformed what were once greenfield into high-density high-rise buildings and some large and imposing public buildings. Urban development inevitably leads to a reduction in green space,

what can we do to combat this situation?

14


PROMENADE ARCHITECTURE TYPOLOGY STUDY

Roof

1

2

3

Fourth Floor

1.Roof Garden 2.Permanent Exhibition 3.Sculpture Exhibition

1

2 3

Third Floor

SITE STRATEGY

7

4

6 5

CHIGANG TOWER

SITE

GUANGZHOU TOWER

URBAN AXIS

1.Temporary Exhibition 2.Leisure Courtyard 3.Permanent Exhibition 4.Permanent Exhibition 5.Temporary Exhibition 6.Temporary Exhibition 7.Storage

1 6

2

Hill Floor

3

5

4

1.Office 2.Art Salon 3.Park Cafeteria 4.Open Workshop 5.Reference Room 6.Sculpture Hill

Park Floor

1

1.Lounge 2.Hall Entrance 3.Restaurant 4.Lobby 5.Office 6.Lecture Hall

2 6

3

5

4

Respond to the Historic Tower

The site and the historic pagoda are located at opposite ends of the city's central axis, and the large volume of the public building separates the central plaza from its surroundings. By elevating the ground floor of the museum, it becomes an extension of the urban space. The first floor is made into a cladding building, creating a landscape that echoes the pagoda Park. At the same time, the de-boundary design weakens the majesty of the public building and allows art to become a part of the citizens' daily life. 15


A

I hope the gallery to be integrated into the park, where art is more accessible to the public. The separation of the glass skin from the solid interior walls adds a layer to the façade, allowing the building to fade into the trees. Lounge

Restaurant

Hall Entrance Open Square Lecture hall Shop Info

Office

Deposit

A

PARK FLOOR PLAN (+2.500)

Park Cafeteria

0

10

20

30

40m

Void Salon

Permanent Exhibition

Office

Sculpture Hill

Permanent Exhibition Workshop

Temporary Storage Exhibition Reference Room

Void

Void Roof Garden Void

Permanent Exhibition

Void Temporary Exhibition

Storage

Void Storage

Lounge

HILL FLOOR PLAN(+6.000)

Void

Temporary Exhibition

THIRD FLOOR PLAN(+12.000)

Void

Sculpture Exhibition

FOURTH FLOOR PLAN(+18.000) PHYSICAL MODEL 16


Wa n d e r in g in Museum Pa rk When we walk in the shadow of the ground floor overhead, we are first drawn by the sight of the light court and move towards the important narrative starting space of the building. The weak directionality at the bottom of the building makes the human body lose the sense of direction, but the upward steps bring new hope. When they walk to the second floor space, they begin the narrative experience of the exhibition. Using continuous ramp to guide people to move forward, to eliminate the limitation between layers, so as to bring a kind of "fuzzy" walking experience.

SECTION A-A 17


B

A

The museum's main exhibition space was arranged around a spiralling ramp. People will be guided forward unobtrusively, gaining a different visual focus at any location. Brightness and darkness imply the transformation of different functional spaces.

View A

1. LOW PLANTS 2. MEDIUM GROWTH 3. DRAINAGE LAYER 4. PROTECTION LAYER 5. ROOT BARRIER 6. WATERPROOFING MEMBRANE

View B

7. CONCRETE ON METAL DECK 8. ALUMINUM CURB 9. VEGETATION-FREE STRIP RAVEL, PAVERS 10. DRAINAGE DITCH 11. STEEL ANGLE 12. STEEL BEAM 13. ALUMINIUM FRAME

DETAILS CONSTRUCTION 18


04.BRIDGE ON THE HILL Dyeing Workshop Design Guizhou, China Competition Project Instructor: Juliet Ju Individual Work, 07/2020 The base is located in a natural Miao village in Danzhai County, Guizhou Province - Pai Pai Village, which is one of the birthplaces of the art of batik in China. In the past, women were trained in the art of batik, but nowadays they leave their elderly and children behind to work for a higher income, and the art of batik is gradually being lost. In my design, using the dyeing workshop as a starting point, we want to give more space for young and old to do activities and feel nature in this place. It is hoped that this place will awaken people's awareness of nature, build a collective memory of the batik craft and the local people, and shape the cultural identity of the place. The building consists mainly of an activity space for the old and young, and a batik display and experience area. The interaction between the old and the young, the batik and the people, the space and the natural landscape is accommodated under the flowing roof. The space for the old and the young is shaped in a "linear" way, linking the "surfaces" with specific functions, such as the water terraces, through a "linear" flowing space. The batik space acts as a bridge between the whole building, opening up the space and providing more opportunities for communication and dialogue between different groups of people. People can watch the whole process of batik immersively through the batik flow and build up a common emotional memory.

19


VOLUME STRATEGY

PAIDAO VILLAGE 100 150 200

Beijing Shanghai

Guizhou

0

50

Qiandongnan Autonomous Region

DYEING WORKSHOP

DYEING WORKSHOP MARKETPLACE

E

DYEING WORKSHOP

SIT

INDIGO PLANTING AREA

DYEING WORKSHOP

INDIGO PLANTING AREA

Step 1: TRANSFER

Step 2: PUSH

Step 3: ROTATE

The architectural image is extracted from the local traditional structures, the wind and rain bridge, used to connect the two banks of the river. In this scheme it is used to connect residential and nature.

Push the volume to obtain more linear flow space in the limited field.

The rotating block makes one of the semi-enclosed courtyards face the natural landscape and the other the cultural landscape of the village.

Step 4: CONNECT

Step 5: INSERT

Step 6: FLOW

The two ends of the volume are connected by the corridor bridge to strengthen the connection between them.

Placing different functions in a linear space. The corridor bridge connects a series of processes of dyeing cloth.

The interior space is connected with various functions by continuous ramp, and people can walk freely among them.

DYEING & LIVING HAPPEN UNDER THE SAME ROOF

Airing

DAILY ACTIVITIES

DYEING PROCESS

Indoor Activities

Picking indigo

Making dyes

Weaving Polish fabrics

Drawing wax

Dewaxing

Dyeing

Indoor Activities Cooking

Music Dance

Farming

Handcarft Chatting

Playing chess Reading

ISOLATION The locals have abundant daily activities and traditional handicraft techniques, but being scattered around the village is not conducive to people gathering and communication, so a community center is needed to organize them.

Based on the research on the daily life of the local residents in Paidao village, and the schedule of dyeing workshop. People's daily activities are arranged on the longer flow line, and the production space of the dyeing workshop connects people's activity space in the middle. So that different people can perceive the traditional dyeing process during activities. 20


POLISH FABRIS

DYEING

Put the painted AIRING wax pieces in the After soaking the indigo dyeing vat. dye, you need to Generally, each a drying rack to DEWAING piece needs to be use dry the dyed cloth. Fabrics were boiled soaked for five or six days. by boiling water and rinsed in cold water.

Traditionally, a grinding stone is used to grind cloth by manpower.

DRAWING PATTERNS

MAKING DYES Lonicera edulis is extracted and processed from bluegrass plants.

WEAVING The cloth used in local batik is selfwoven linen and cotton.

Place the white cloth on the wooden board, put the beeswax in the metal pot, heat it to melt the wax, and then use a copper knife to dip the wax to paint.

PICKING INDIGO Polygonum is suitable for temperate or subtropical regions. The climate in Guizhou is very suitable for the growth of Polygonum.

VIE W OF T H E FIRST C OU RT YA RD

B

C E 1

A

2

VIE W OF T H E SE C OND C OU RT YA RD 6 F

D

5 4

10

3

G 7

9

The sections are cut along the direction of contour change, which represents the building changed with the terrain.The building tries to blend in with the natural landscape. Open verandah with continuous roof like a local shelter bridge. Under the continuous roof, scenes of the daily activities of the inhabitants are played out.

8

SECTIONS MODEL

AXONOMETRIC DRAWING

1.Entrance hall 2.Chess room 3.Social space 4.Reading pavilion 5.Dinning hall 6.Shared kitchen 7.Gym 8.Theater 9.Children playground 10.Office A.Picking indigo B.Making dyes C.Processing cloth D.Drawing pattern E.Airing F.Dyeing G.Dewaxing 21


05. THE RED CABIN Ecological Toilet Construction Guangzhou, China Construction Project Instructor: Xiaojin Chen Group Work, 12/2019-06/2020 (research 30%, drawing 50%, modelling 30%, construction 20%)

A large number of people in less developed areas still lack the most basic sanitation facilities. The construction of flush toilets not only requires connection to the municipal network, but subsequent use can lead to a waste of water and the huge costs associated with sewage disposal.

Why do we build it? Theoretically, village life can form an ideal energy cycle system, so we hope to build an entity model to test the scientificity and feasibility of the system with practice.

To find a solution to this problem, we built this restroom within the school to explore a new form of restroom through practice. The project takes into account the complete cycle of excreta collection, treatment and use, and selects the appropriate ecological toilet technology: water-free biological treatment and fertiliser type technology. We hoped to promote the result of our project to broader rural areas as a fully functioning toilet system, as a newly updated urban technology. The designing process from construction to usage and production is a valuable early-stage experience of exploration and practical construction, which led me to realize that the study of architecture alone can be limited for solving urgent social issues; rather, it is more productive to branch out to other disciplines that may improve and enhance the research within our own field.

22


A

Construction process

Erection of steel structures.

Laying of roofs.

Installation of toilet.

A

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

0

1

2

3

4

5

Polished recycled brick from old Study the arrangement of the bricks. buildings.

Installation of bamboo.

23


The bathroom materials are mainly recycled materials, including recycled brick, wood and bamboo, and we pursue the concept of everything is useful. Through the use of different materials, the shadows and light change from moment to moment.

DETAIL DRAWING 24


/Other Works/

/Other Works/ I wanted to use these pages to show who am I, but I realised that I am diverse and that none of this content would show the complete me.

SCHOOL LIBRARY DESIGN

1

Group Work (concept 50%, drawing 60%, modelling 70%)

3

2

In Guangzhou,China 11/2018-12/2018 The building is divided into two main bodies, north and south, with an open terrace in the middle giving students and teachers a semi-outdoor place to communicate and allowing those who do not enter the building to enjoy the view of the lake to the east. The ASRS storage system is used to save space for book sto ra ge a n d to a l l ow m o re s p a c e fo r communication and reading.

1: doing different things with my hands

Wood Work

Wood Furniture

Binding Booklet

Decoration

2: exploring the Diversity of the world 3: observing things from Different Perspectives

BAMBOO PAVILION Design and Construction Group Work (concept 50%, drawing 40%, modelling 50%)

In Guangzhou,China 09/2018-10/2018

Urban High Density

Nature High Density

The site for the competition was located on the lake side of the park and we were inspired by the reeds on the shore. The design of the structure takes the form of a reed, responding to its surroundings and providing a shelter for visitors.

25


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