+44 7778300498 chauyeejang@gmail.com
EXHIBITIONS & VOLUNTEER EXPERIENCE SEP 2023
Bpro Show at Bartlett School of Architecture, Graduation Show
JUL 2022- AUG 2022
Guangzhou Time Museum:River Pulses, Border Flows, Documentation Exhibition
DEC 2021
2021 Guangzhou Design Week, Video Installation
SEP 2017- SEP 2018
Member of Lvtu Public Service Organization
Helping primary schools set up school reading rooms, including seeking sponsors and planning the building process
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE JUN 2021- JAN 2022 Architectural History & Research Institute of South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China
Architectural Assistant Urban Planner
•Renovation Project Of Abandoned Railway Participation in research, planning, node design, seminars; •Historical Village Planning Revision Participation in field study, planning, analysis graph;
CHLOE ZHANG
•Survey Of Historical Villages In Foshan Participation in fieldwork, compilation of results, and seminars; •Guangzhou Industrial Heritage Research Participation in field study, sorting data, seminars.
+44 7778300498 chauyeejang@gmail.com London / Hong Kong
DEC 2020- FEB 2021 JUN 2020- SEP2020
https://www.linkedin.com/in/chloezhang97
Atelier cnS, Guangzhou, China
Architectural Intern
•Urban Area Renewal Bid Project (Second Prize) Participation in analysis mapping and layout; •Huizhou Street Renovation Project Participation in architectural design, modelling, portfolio; •Guangzhou Enning Road Renovation Project Participation in architectural design, modelling, construction drawing; •Theatre Renovation Project Participation in architectural design, modelling, analytical drawing, rendering.
OCT 2018-DEC 2020
The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, UK
Master of Architecture, Urban Design | Research Cluster 14: Machine Learning Urbanism SEP 2016- JUN 2021
South China Agriculture University, China
Bachelor of Engineering (5-year degree programme), Architecture| GPA:88.8/100 (top 10)
•Designed and constructed of an ecological toilet for the department hall.
COMPETITION & AWARDS JUL 2019
The 12th National Advanced Mapping Modeling Competition
First Prize
In charge of modeling in Revit
SKILLS Rhinoceros Grasshopper AutoCAD QGIS Revit
Architectural Intern
•Tea Garden Planning Project Participation in conceptual design, architectural design, modelling, rendering and layout;
EDUCATION SEP 2022- SEP2023
Xiaojin Chen Studio, Guangzhou, China
Photoshop Illustrator Indesign After Effect Premiere Pro
Vray Lumion Enscape Unreal Engine Microsoft Office
Language:
SEP 2019
English(Fluent) Chinese(Native) Cantonese(Native)
SEP 2018
Second Prize
Tianhua Bamboo Design and Construction Competition
Honorable Mention
In charge of regenerating for a Saikwan Mansion
In charge of form design, computer modeling, physical model DEC 2019-DEC 2020
INTERESTS
The 6th Yingjiang Cup Architecture Design Competition
Innovation and Entrepreneurship Competition of Guangdong In charge of Research, Thesis
Climbing
Ultimate Frisbee
Photography
Wood Work
JUN 2021
Hiking
Cycling
Bakery
Traveling
2019, 2020
Graduated Program Individual work
SCAU 2nd Prize Scholarship
Bronze Medal Second Place
CONTENT
01. Food-topia
01
02. 1934 Paper mill
07
03. THE PROMENADE
13
04. STEPPING UP
18
05. BRIDGE ON THE HILL
24
06. THE RED CABIN
27
PROFESSIONAL WORKS
30
Urban Design Master Degree Graduate Work, London
Renewal Design of Industrial Heritage Graduate Work, Guangzhou
Art Museum Design Core Studio Work, Guangzhou
Collective Housing Complex Design Core Studio Work, Guangzhou
New Dyeing Workshop Design Competition Project, Guizhou
Cover Story About ten years ago, my friend took me to the location pictured. It was the city centre of Guangzhou, Zhujiang New Town. Unlike today's modern city, the city was still in the process of replacing the old with the new. There was a strong contrast in the cityscape, with high-rise buildings and urban villages. This was very shocking to me at that time and planted the seed of becoming an architect and urban designer. Because I wanted to be part of building our homes and creating a better living environment for people.
Ecological Toilet Construction Construction Project, Guangzhou
01.Food-topia Urban Design London, UK Graduate Project Instructor: Roberto Bottazzi, Tasos Varoudis Eirini Tsouknida, Vasileios Papalexopoulos, Margarita Chaskopoulou Team Work, 09/2022-09/2023
Food-topia is a community-based urban design project with a theoretical background derived from the European Union's EIT Food programme, focusing on the three segments of food production, distribution and consumption. This project focuses on enhancing supply chain management systems to tackle food desert issues by seeking to bridge the accessibility gap and improve urban health and well-being for affected communities through precision agriculture. Furthermore, the project is proposed to dwell and develop throughout London according to the city's needs. In the implementation, Food-Topia's urban design strategies can be employed to shape new urban forms capable of adapting to changes resulting in collecting, analysing, and simulating data to produce iterations that can be adapted to the city's needs. Based on the data analytics that is overlapped, data is remapped to make iterations based on each supply chain classification integrating with the city's network to raise food desert issues. Restructuring the urban fabric process influences political, social, and historical aspects. In this case, access to food supply varies in London, from needing more retail outlets leading to household insecurities.
1
Food deserts exist in our cities
CONCEPT GENERATION
E-food Desert Index
-TOPIA [1] In classical Greek rhetoric, topos, pl. topoi, (from Ancient Greek: τόπος "place", elliptical for Ancient Greek: τόπος κοινός tópos koinós, 'common place'). [2] In mathematics, a topos (/ˈtɒpɒs/) is a category that behaves like the category of sheaves of sets on a topological space (or more generally: on a site). Topoi behave much like the category of sets and possess a notion of localization.
FOOD-TOPIA Where the food lies, which forms a community as place-maker which is located and connected throughout the city. These spaces are designed to address issues of food deserts and improve people's well-being.
2
Understanding food and London from data
Selecting sites by utilising machine learning
DATA CORRELATION KMEANS CLUSTERS
Looking through the food supply chain, it goes from seed to the table through three processes: production, distribution, and consumption. In analysing data for food distribution, we intend to focus on the factories and storages where foods are processed and stored as well as the areas with more options for transportation. Population as a social factor in the area is also studied to analyse in influencing food deserts. A n i n s p e c t t h ro u g h d ata i n fo o d consumption is studied to find out about areas that provides food to consumers, including supermarket, food retails, and correlating it with social impacts on health and income deprivation.
PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS PCA 0 LOW
The data is clustered to visualize their correlation by placing the data in a three-dimensional scale in the city. The elevated areas shown on the map are areas that has a high intensity of food deserts.
DATA OVERLAPPING
KMEANS AND PRINCIPAL COMPONENT ANALYSIS STACK 0
HIGH
PCA 1 LOW
Cluster 0
Cluster 1
Cluster 2
HIGH
Cluster 3
According to the K-means cluster heatmap, the clusters selected will be I and II, coloured green and purple on the map. Site is choosen based on the areas with more severe food deserts. At the same time, these areas can be associated with low incomes, high crime rates and other negative social factors.
SITE 2 HAMMERSMITH
DATA DISTRIBUTION
SITE SELECTION
The factors choosen that might affect food accessibility and food desert are choosen as datasets. The data will be divided by geographical, natural, and social factors. To visualize the correlation of the data in the London, we joint the selected data and created a preliminary correlation analysis.
The distribution of these two clusters were combined to select the two sites with different properties. Site one is located near Rotherhithe with many public spaces. While site two is located in Hammersmith, with more residential areas. These two sites have different characteristics to be analysed.
SITE 1 ROTHERHITHE
3
In-site data extraction and analysis
Algorithm-driven urban design
SITE DATA ANALYTICS
NETWORK GENERATION
we analysed the site’s typology of foodincorporated places, pedestrian volume, sunlight, visibility analysis, and social media trends on a micro scale. The datasets are overlapped to be evaluated and examined to identify areas that immensely influence the supply chain systems.
Firstly, the network's plan is started by analyzing the city network. Road connectivity has helped to decide access entry points of the food port from the roads. Using the wool algorithm, we proceeded to generate a large number of curves and find suitable paths and optimize the network on the site.
BETWEENNESS CENTRALITY
VIA WOOL ALGORITHM
CONSUMPTION
DISTRIBUTION
PRODUCTION
STEP1
STEP2
The starting and end points of the path
Definition of curve centroids
STEP3 Random curve generation
STEP4
STEP5
STEP6
Wool algorithms to generate networks
Optimization of some curves
Simplify and rebuild the curve
VOLUME GENERATION VIA PIX2PIX SOCIAL MEDIA
GPS
The "building height" data within the site is predicted by stacking the data from the train plots. By combining the data with geographic information, the site plot is discovered to have a linear height difference within the plot, and values greater than the median height are extracted from the 3D view for visualisation, a predicted machine learning data is used to determine the building height of the food port within the food system.
VISIBILITY GRAPH ANALYSIS
INPUT
OUTPUT
SUNLIGHT 4
Algorithm-driven urban design
Seeking wider solutions to food problems
FUNCTION DEFINITION
VIA EVOLUTIONARY ALGORITHM a
i
i
i=1 i
g (x,y,t) = VGA(x,y,t)
a = 449 i w (t)= 1, 2, 3
a = 78 i w (t)= 1, 2
a = 139 i w (t)= 1, 2, 3, 4
Our project vision is expected to grow across cities in the digital transition in agriculture to support better policy and planning design and address imbalances in food chains and agricultural markets. This could improve accessibility and
affordability to nutritious food through local markets or food cooperatives partnering with local farmers, and supporting agrarian practices in the city.
In order to use evolution algorithm to calculate the optimal solution for the functional distribution in the site, in this section we combine the new buildings with the existing ones to calculate the data for VGA. The formula is used to calculate our functionally optimal solution.
A cluster of each supply chain function is analysed to produce iterations with an evolutionary algorithm. Each supply chain function, production, distribution, and consumption, is individually analysed by calculating the weighted average of the visibility sunlight analysis to generate and choose suitable iterations that are most efficient in strengthening the supply chain system.
DISTRIBUTION
In food distribution, retailers could control their inventory of the nearby warehouses for stocking in storage. While for food consumption, people can view nearby supermarkets and scan QR codes to get specific food information and consumers could browse online supermarkets and track packages.
CONSUMPTION
The software is divided into three sections: production, distribution and consumption. Each aimed for people with different demands. For food production, users can select modules that could be grown nearby, seek for suitable fruits and vegetables to be planted and use the robot to check the growth status.
PRODUCTION
UX DESIGN
5
Food-topia at Different Times UNREAL ENGINE / PHOTOSHOP
PHYSICAL MODEL
6
02. 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.
7
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
Lack of Cultural Facilities
Set Up Cultural Complexes
Poor Accessibility
Adding Connections
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 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
History of Paper mill
Extension
Extension
Removal
Concern 1: How to keep the memories of local people while creating new experiences?
In its 87-year history, the Guangzhou Paper Mill has grown in size, and most of the surrounding residents were employees back 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?
8
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: Points, lines and surfaces are used to set up the landscape to suit the different qualities of the site, which is long and narrow in the north and open in the south.
Layer 2: The open roof structure is used to limit the temporary event space, where bazaars, pop-up events, etc. can be held.
Layer 3: Use the corridor to connect the north and south parcels to alleviate the problem of being divided by urban roads, and at the same time, respond to the surrounding environment as a landscape corridor. Adding to the interest of the tour, people can appreciate the industrial buildings from different heights.
9
N 0
20
40
60
80
100
9
OFFICE
SHOPS
RESTAURANT
MARKET
OFFICE
BAR
GALLERY
VIEWPOINTS
ACTIVITY
RESTAURANT
VIEWPOINTS
PARK
PARKING
10
A
coal bunker paper Mill Museum
1st FLOOR
EXHIBITION
Area B is currently the largest and most complete building This area is therefore suitable for a museum-type proEXHIBITION remaining in the Paper Mill, with huge internal space and no ject, where the original industrial buildings are adapted load-bearing structure in the middle, characteristics that deto suit new functions. The site also has a strong industritermine its great potential for renovation. al feel to the coal conveyor, which can be be used as an 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
11
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
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 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.
14
A
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)
15
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
16
The museum's main exhibition space was arranged around a spiralling ramp. People B
A
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 17
04. 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.
18
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
With the difficulties of finding a job upon graduation, and After graduation I would the expensive and inaccessible like to live near the school, nature of renting an apartment, so that I could start my we needed a place where we business with my school- could transition to. mate conveniently.
19
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.
20
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. 21
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)
22
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
23
05.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.
24
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. 25
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.
VIEW OF THE FIRST COURTYARD
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C E 1
A
VIEW OF THE SECOND COURTYARD 2
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D
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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.
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SECTIONS MODEL
1.Entrance hall 2.Chess room 3.Social space 4.Reading pavilion 5.Dinning hall 6.Shared kitchen
AXONOMETRIC 7.Gym 8.Theater 9.Children playground 10.Office DRAWING A.Picking indigo B.Making dyes C.Processing cloth D.Drawing pattern E.Airing F.Dyeing G.Dewaxing
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06. 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. 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.
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A practice Theoretically, village life can form an ideal energy cycle system, we hope to build an entity model to test the scientificity and feasibility of the system with practice.
1. Laying of roofs.
5. Installation of toilet.
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2
2. Erection of steel structures.
6. Installation of bamboo.
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3. Polished recycled brick from old buildings.
7. Electrical wiring
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4. Study the arrangement of the bricks.
8. Installation of bamboo.
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DETAIL DRAWING
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PROFESSIONAL WORK
PROFESSIONAL WORK
RENOVATION OF JINSHENG THEATRE
GUANGGANG RAILWAY RENEWAL PLANNING
Participate in Architectural Design/Plan/Layout Professional Work at Atelier cnS, Guangzhou,China
Participate in Research/Planning/Node Design/Layout/Seminars Professional Work at Architectural History & Research Institute of SCUT, Guangzhou, China 10/2021-01/2022
07/2020-08/2020
K4+700
鱼塘乡村景观段
K4+500 K4
葵蓬花街 K3+700
茶滘桃湾
K3
K2+600
花地河绿道公园段
芳村健身运动段
K2+200
K1+800
K1+400
东漖工业站重点段
K0+900
K0+500
轨道公园段
The Jinsheng Theatre, one of the buildings in Guangzhou’s Yongqingfang neighbourhood urban renewal project. The historic theatre and its additional annexes were renovated and renewed to reorganise the functions and add vertical parking to meet the needs of the neighbourhood.
K0
The planning and design of the Guanggang Railway is part of a project to protect and utilise Guangzhou’s industrial heritage. Through the overall planning and business planning of the abandoned railway, we hope to activate its utilisation value and improve the surrounding situation. This project provides a reference value for the revitalisation and utilisation of Guangzhou’s industrial heritage.
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PROFESSIONAL WORK
PUBLICATION
BID PROJECT:QINGPING VILLAGE RENEWAL
RELOCATION OF TRADITIONAL GRAIN SILOS
Participate in Preliminary Research/Design Guidelines/Analytic Diagram Professional Work at Atelier cnS, Guangzhou,China
Participate in Research/Recording/Drawings/Layout Workshop at Mume Design, Guizhou,China
06/2020-07/2020
01/2022-05/2022
造纸工坊 ——
四周安装压楼枋,收住楼板四边、压实, 视觉上如墙根踢脚线 墙板按标记找到位置,左右以榫槽衔接, 最后一块要从上部打入,嵌进槽口 异形板根据标记易于找到对应位置,嵌于 两根瓜柱之间,其上部边界与屋顶坡度对 应。
肆 【装异形板】
围板镶嵌槽口与构造工法与楼板同,但数量远远超出,
the face of the wall, relying only on the sloping frame, the
square on the melon pillar, the ridge pillar, the sloping
the over-shoulder square to support a complete eave, the
在寨内覃师傅的介绍下,才明白,退进去的上半个
to the middle of the opening. This practice is for the
ingenious way to see the flexibility of the use of pierced
面再立横向排扇,仅仅依靠坡架、落地柱框架和过
height needs? I can not understand, the lower part of the
巧思玲珑,十分有趣,见识了穿斗木结构建筑的灵
the paper-making process is also unknown. It was only
料泡池一言不发,造纸工艺如何也不得而知。后来
same surface is then matched with numbers to find
左四”则为前门左起第四块竖板。围板繁多,绝无两块相同
upper" mark is for the right-hand side of the rear section of
此也必须依靠领导移筑的大师傅良好的记性,在脑海中清楚
the "back right" marked column can be located accurately.
的板或两个等同的位置,标记无法找一个统一基准原则,因
伍 【形成仓体】
围合形成仓体,留出入门
and back, left and right, upper and middle and lower"
数字找定位。比如“后右横上”,标记的是右侧排扇后段横放
在穿枋之上的围板,找“后右”标记的柱就能准确定位,而“前
每一块板的形状和它恰当的位置。
The inlaid groove and construction method of
the hoarding is the same as that of the floor slab, but
the number is far greater and the position is more complicated, so each hoarding is well marked when it
On closer inspection, it turns out to be a group of square alone form a doorframe-shaped shelf, the kilim
shelf through the square but a separate cooker, moved lower part of the paper operating space of a certain
there was no need to set up another horizontal fan on frame of the floor pillar and the eaves gourd picked out by
same on the left and right. This is a very interesting and wooden structures.
corresponding large material bubble pool not a word, how
later, with the introduction of Master Qin in the fortress,
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is dismantled in the hoarding, with "head and tail, front
位置繁复,因此每一块围板在禾仓拆解时,都做好标记,以 “头尾、前后左右、上中下”组词做记,同一面上的板再配以
that it became clear that the upper half of the sloping frame of the receding fan gave way to the eaves, so that
disassembled rows of fans - the floor pillars and kilim
间的某种高度需要?百思不得其解,下部对应的大
向开间中部挪移。这一做法是为了下部造纸操作空
活变用。
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The pavilions of a group of paper-making workshops
in the Yao Gu Buyi village are particularly interesting.
子、千斤枋上瓜柱、脊柱、穿枋的坡架则却另起炉灶,
排扇——落地柱与千金枋单单组成一个门框形的架
间枋挑出的檐瓜,即可撑起一片完整披檐,左右相同。
叁 【装墙板】
【 装围板 】
N
尧古寨
尧古布依族寨内,一组造纸坊的小亭子格外有
意思,远看平平无奇。近看后竟然为一组组拆分的
排扇坡架,让出了披檐的距离,因此不需要在山墙
贰 【放压楼枋】
【 铺地板 】
楼板从两端往中间平铺,最后一块先以木 块嵌入,等待整体变形误差消除再安装
装 // 围板 43
壹 【铺楼板】
铺地板
围
grouping words to make a note, and the board on the positioning. For example, the "back right horizontal
the fan that is placed horizontally on top of the square, so The fourth vertical panel. There are so many panels that
there are never two identical panels or two equivalent
positions, and it is impossible to find a unified benchmark
1 2
3 4
5
for the markings, so it is also necessary to rely on the good
1 堆放在场地边的围板
the building, to be clear in their minds about the shape of
3 掌墨师正在把围板敲进卡槽内
memory of the master builders who lead the shifting of each panel and its proper position.
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2
3
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1 造纸作坊测绘剖面图
2 前围板近照
2 造纸作坊测绘立面图 3 造纸作坊测绘平面图
4 师傅安装后侧过间枋上的围板
4 村落环境与造纸作坊
5 铺装地板
x e
尧古寨内其他禾仓
A
斧子
Modou
墨斗
墨斗是黔东南掌墨师必备的工具。绑着墨线的铁钉固定在木料上,掌墨
这把斧子是工匠师傅爱使用的工具之一,既可以用于组装围板等木构件,也
师可以拉动墨斗调整墨线的方向和长度画出想要的墨线。此外,墨盒里的木
可以制作木楔等小木块加固榫卯。
制画笔可以用于标记。标错的墨迹可以用斧子削除。
This axe was one of the tools favoured by the local carpenter, both for
Modou is an essential tool for Zhang Mo Shi ( the architects in
assembling wooden components such as boards and for making small wooden
southeastern Guizhou, China ). It works through an inking string tied with
blocks such as wedges to reinforce mortises and tenons.
a nail that can fix to woods, and Zhang Mo Shi can pull Modou to adjust
the direction and length of inking string to draw the desired inking line. In addition, the wooden paintbrush in the inkwell can be used for marking.
寨子里自有许多小禾仓,虽比不过移筑的百年老禾仓
Wrongly marked ink marks can be removed with an axe.
形制高级,体量也小得可爱,但结构简练、仓体完整,并以 竖向斜枋承檩省略瓜柱,见其技艺。麻雀虽小、五脏俱全。
并以四根落地柱向中间稍斜,不同于柱身收分,是为限定一 个上小下大的斗形仓体,如一个可以收束的口袋,将粮食装
得满满当当,鼓起肚子也不会撑破。是营造构思中理性的智 慧——以极少极简的用材造出扎实好用的禾仓,一百年,不 55
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许倒。
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There are many small granary in the cottage, although they are not as advanced as the century-old barns that
have been moved and built, and their size is lovely, the structure is simple and complete, and the vertical sloping square bears the purlins and omits the melon pillars, which shows their skill. Although the sparrow is small, it is
complete. The four floor pillars slope slightly towards the middle, unlike the pillar body, in order to define a small
top and large bottom bucket-shaped silo body, like a pocket that can be closed and filled to the brim with food, without bursting even when it bulges. This is the rational wisdom of the building's conception - the use of minimal and simple materials to create a solid and useful barn that will not fall down for a hundred years.
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1 村内小禾仓测绘平面图手稿
2 村内小禾仓测绘正立面图手稿 3 村内小禾仓测绘测立面图手稿
4 村民在取下禾仓门拿里面的物品
城市设计导则
Original Street Elevation Collage
街道空间
Urban Design Guidelines 图例
名称
布局
功能与形式要求 •
中心路 •
野趣 街道
文化 商业 街
一般 内部 街巷
地块内 主要街 道及滨 水街道
• 结合滨水空间和带状绿 地设置的慢行道; • 以人行功能为主,宜布 置软质海绵设施、水景、 小型交流或展示空间等, 营造丰富的空间感受; • 无绿地一侧宜为骑楼建 筑,建议保持建筑的连 续性,业态以文化展示、 咖啡厅等公共交流性性 功能为主。在不影响交 通疏散的情况下允许设 置局部的外摆区
长街、 横街
• 仅限人行,古墟中心的 商业街; • 两侧宜为骑楼建筑,建 议保持建筑的连续性, 业态以商业位置,原则 上不建议设置外摆区域
串联建 筑组团 和公共 空间的 一般街 巷
图示
以交通功能为主,同 时也是片区主要的景 观大道; 街道两侧宜设置海绵 景观带,将清平河、 桥头村内水体等与新 桥河串联; 所选植物宜以亚热带 本地植物为主,并注 意绿化的多样性和层 次感;
• 以慢行功能为主,谨慎 植入停留空间和城市家 具,保证通行能力 • 鼓励通过立面改造、灰 空间植入、立体绿化等 手法活化街巷空间
茂兰镇周围散落着许多美丽的村寨,工作坊第四天,下
the town of Mawlam. On the fourth day of the workshop,
完好的大屋架安然挺立,在一片狼藉草木中显得高傲孤寂。
explore the surrounding villages. There is an old cottage
有两个老房子给人印象深刻,一个龙骨泥墙包裹的木
屋,在山坡上依势随形,底层以垒石堡坎围合后部山体形成 32
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There are many beautiful villages scattered around
雨停工,小伙伴们一起去探了周边村寨。洞英村有一破落搬
空的老寨,但木结构房屋墙倒物不塌的特性,还有许多美丽
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一个温暖舒适的石室,想象主人曾喂养的牛羊住得应该很舒
服。上部则没有一面墙是直的、没有一个屋顶转角规整得体, 反而随性所至,同环境浑然一体,修筑的山石台阶也跳跃曲 折,手法自然可爱。另外一栋房子却恰恰相反,是一老铁匠
的住宅,虽然荒废已久,但墙正屋挺,形制完备,入户门上 另有一道半身腰门,门脚开合的构件是用一对牛角制作 ( 如
the rain stopped work and the group went together to in Dong Ying village that has fallen into disrepair and been
emptied, but the wooden houses have the characteristic
of not collapsing when the walls fall down, and there are
still many beautiful intact large roof frames standing up,
Two of the older houses are impressive, a wooden
house with keeled mud walls that follow the shape of the hillside, the ground floor enclosing the back of the hill with
眺望远处山灵地远,风物怡人,想象老寨生机活泼的时候,
which I imagine would have been comfortable for the
他们应该身在美中却不言其美吧。
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looking proud and lonely in the midst of the wretched grass and trees.
下图 ),美观耐用,心灵手巧。石阶也规规整整,如果能租下
来,稍作打理,该是一栋多舒适的房屋啊。全寨在山坡上,
洞英村见闻
• 景观 大道
a bastion of stone to form a warm and cosy stone room,
cows and sheep the owner once fed. The upper part of the house has no straight walls and no corner of the roof, but
is instead spontaneous, blending in with its surroundings,
with a lovely, natural approach to the building's stone steps. The other house, on the contrary, is the residence of an old blacksmith. Although it has been abandoned for a
long time, the walls are straight and the house is in perfect shape, with a half-waisted door on the entrance door and
a pair of cow's horns used to open and close the door,
景观大道 野趣街道
which is beautiful, durable and handy. The stone steps
are also neat and tidy, and if they could be rented with a
车行主入口 人行主入口
Urban regeneration bidding project in Shenzhen, activating local cultural industries through design and preserving historical buildings and traditional features in the original village. Won second place in the bidding.
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3
4
6
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2 夯土墙与排扇结合
the distant mountains, the landscape is beautiful, and you
4 石墙与大屋架
be in the midst of beauty without saying anything about it.
6 老铁匠家用牛角制作的门脚开合构件
imagine that the old fortress is alive and well, they should
建议性中小运量线路及站点 主要交通节点
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1 全寨在山坡上,眺望远处山灵地远,风物怡人
little care, they would make a very comfortable house. The
whole fortress is on a hillside, and when you look out over
内街 小巷
3 被荒弃的民居
5 龙骨泥墙包裹的木屋,在山坡上依势随形
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A publication on the relocation of traditional grain silos in Guizhou, China, on display in an exhibition at the Times Museum, Guangzhou and Chinese Contemporary Art Museum, Chongqing. 2022
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CHLOE ZHANG +44 7778300498 chauyeejang@gmail.com London / Hong Kong https://www.linkedin.com/in/chloezhang97