2020 Jiho Choi Portfolio

Page 1

Jiho

Choi


E D U C AT I O N

Masters of Urban Design Georgia Institute of Technology 3.24/4.0 GPA

Bachelor of Architecture University of Florida SKILLS

Revit Rhinoceros AutoCAD SketchUp Lumion3D MS Office V-Ray Render Maxwell Render InDesign Illustrator Photoshop Hand Render Mural Painting English Korean

WOR K E XPER IENCE

Graphic Designer/Muralist | Georgia Tech Atlanta, GA, USA | May ‘18 - Aug ‘19 Conceptualized & painted mural designs for dorms at Georgia Tech Customized & Implemented merchandise for 300+ students Designed logos and web banners for GT : OIE website

Graduate Research Assistant | Georgia Tech Atlanta, GA, USA | Aug ‘17 - Aug ‘18 Catalogued research for Case Studies in Retrofitting Surburbia by Ellen Dunham-Jones Published report for SMARTECH-GT: improvement proposals to Downtown ATL Facilitated class and coordinated others’ work into cohesive reports Compiled database for retrofitted suburban projects

Glass Glazing Drafter | Eastern Corp. Norcross, GA, USA | Dec ‘16 - July ‘17 Handled CAD detail drafting, estimation, bidding, & financials of curtain walls Facilitated glass subcontractor work from conceptualization to installation BIM modeled curtain wall for 50000+ sq.ft. product showroom Gained experience on-site installing glass glazing & panels

Architectural Designer | TSW Design

Atlanta, GA, USA | Sept ‘15 - Aug ‘16

Coordinated community meetings for input into university & park masterplans Presented designwork to clients and fostered client relationships Constructed a 16-townhome project from Revit design to CDs. Assembled works for Urban Design Commission & City Hall

N OTA B L E

O R G A N I Z AT I O N I N V O LV E M E N T

Georgia Tech

Founding Board Member | Pillyr Foundation Tactical Urbanism Non-Profit | ‘15 - Current Constructed art & transit installations for lower-income communities Campaigned for the inclusion of urbanist policies for city of Atlanta Strategized tactical urbanism projects involving 80+ members Orchestrated designs for innovative playground installations Founding Board & Creative Lead | Resurgence Soccer Supporters’ Group | 16’ - Current Conceptualized for banners & choreography displays for crowds of 74,000 fans Coordinated with the Atlanta United Football Club to rig & install displays Customized & implemented merchandise for 900+ members Designed branding for beer cans, trailers, & products Executive Project Manager | National Organization of Minority Architect Students Led a team of 15 students as the team for University of Florida to The 2014 NOMA Student Design Competition Presenter | Congress of New Urbanism Atlanta - CNU-Savannah ‘18 Member | National Solar Decathlon Competition UF Team Co-founder | Students for New Urbanism at UF Member | Atlanta Bicycle Coalition Player | UF Rugby Football Club

Graduate Research Assistantship & Full Academic Scholarship

Smartech - Georgia Tech

Published studio report proposing improvements to downtown Atlanta

Congress of New Urbanism CNU Savannah 26 Presented sea-level rise flood-mitigation proposals

Major League Soccer

Recognized as a Tifo Designer for Atlanta United Football Club

Pillyr Foundation

Rewarded city grants for tactical urbanist, art, playscape installations

NOMA Competition Achieved top 15 nationally


World-Shine School & Orphanage Rwentobo, Rushenyi, Uganda 1-6

MS Urban Design

ULI Hines Competition Toronto, ON, Canada 11-16

MS Urban Design

Broad St Performing Arts Center Charleston, SC, USA 19-22

Undergrad Design 4 & 5

Infilling NYU Superblocks New York University, NYC, NY, USA 25-26

29-32

Undergrad Design 7

MS Urban Design

MS Urban Design

17-18

Barbara G. Laurie Competition Philadelphia, PA, USA National Organization of Minority Architects 23-24

Resurgence Tifo & Design Atlanta, GA, USA Atlanta United FC

Yanmar EVO Center Acworth, GA, USA

GT Office of International Education

Eastern Corporation

TSW Design

7-10

Broadwalk Shared Street South Downtown, Atlanta, GA

GT OIE Branding & Murals Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA, USA

Parkside Row Houses Norcross, GA, USA 34

Cascade Spring Greens Cascade Rd, Atlanta, GA, USA

27-28

33-34

Pillyr Foundation Projects Colony South, Atlanta, GA, USA Pillyr Organization

35-36


1

MS Urban Design

World-Shine School & Orphanage

Rwentobo, Rushenyi, Uganda

The World-Shine Foundation School & Orphanage in Western Uganda, sits between the base of the foothills and a small river valley. As the school expands, they requested a master plan for 20 years into the future adding more classrooms and dormitories. The site is currently disturbed by poor drainage, flooding during the rainy season, and a lack of cohesive planning for facilities. During the rainy season, large amounts of water from the foothills leads to soil erosion. Individual drainage features are added to existing buildings to protect foundations and allow mud free pedestrian access. Water is directed into meandering ditches to slow the water and drainage ponds. We employ a series of intentional design strategies to create a cohesive master plan adding numerous classrooms, a visitors center, church, and 240 beds benefitting the school and the community.


2

This led us to utilize a series of landscaped groves, art walks, and sports facilities to provide children with areas to explore and express themselves while addressing the water circulation issues.

Art walls helps to help slow down and move the water, and to express creativity through art.

This site’s uneven hilly slope can be carved for flat surfaces to play on for shaded sports.

Move earth to make hills and berms to slow down the flow of water and create green space.

Water is directed into meandering ditches and drainage ponds. They filter in the central feature, a cistern designed to hold a 1 cm per hour rainfall. The cistern also includes overflow features in the event the design capacity is exceeded.


3

Classroom + Flexspace

Private Courtyard

Flexible Class Space

Hierarchy of Spaces “Public Commons”

Campus Commons

Pathways

Landscape hills & berms between paths

Plant Trees in Campus Commons


Modular Dormitory

Module Assembly

Insular Facing Front Porch

Communal Private Courtyard

4

Village Block

All of these features are used to create a cohesive masterplan evoking village life of all ages centered around a town center in order to encourage creativity, activity, and community. Open Courtyard for Private Alley Movement

Village : Communal Public Spaces & Alleyways


5

Treehouse Play & Rest Zones

Art Walls & Green Surfaces

Bioswales & Water Drainage


6

Administration & School Hall

Playscape Structure

“Village” Dormitories


7

MS Urban Design

Cascade Springs Greens

Cascade Rd, Atlanta, GA The westside of Atlanta is primarily singlefamily housing. This large plot of land is a chance to create a community that can be dense and offer plenty of new and diverse experiences for the Cascade Westside. The goal is to provide diverse housing options in the area by offering up density as a means of adding diverse lifestyles to the area. By offering up the choice to live differently from a typical suburb, this community will provide us a variety of housing options from then Suburban living to secluded Forest retreats. Environmental concerns are a huge priority in the area, as it impacts every single aspect of the design and layout of the neighborhood. The slope informs the street Network and the resulting density and community. It creates the public spaces and the private spaces. The topography and terrain is been used as a means to filtrate water into the Abundant forests that were saved by choosing to build densely. The water drains into the bases naturally into the forest that were preserved in the community so that water runoff is less of a factor and to be ecologically friendly. Cohesion with the natural environment is high priority as the Abundant trails and pads that Traverse the landscape offers both Urban and secluded residence an opportunity to partake in the beauty of the area.


8


Water movement & drainage

9

TOWN CENTER GREENS SPORTS FIELDS Flat zones & Movement arteries

COMMUNITY GARDENS

PICNIC AREA

Topographic Street Network

AMPHITHEATER

Townhome Density

Town Center & Greens

Townhome & Courtyard Homes

Nature Park

Walking Trails & Cottages


10

Preserved Natural Areas

Cottage Court Community & Courtyard Homes

Town Center Greens & Homes


TRANSIT & CULTURE FLOWS OUTWARD

LEVERAGING LOCALITY

DISPERSED CULTURAL ECONOMY

QUEEN STREET EAST km

Destination for international food & culture

EAST HARBOUR FLOWS OUT-

WEST DON LANDS

WARD

10 million SF office 50,000 jobs

growing arts community

ONTARIO ARTS COUNCIL

1m

STITCHYARDS

DEVELOPMENT

ART CITY ST. JAMES TOWN

-3 .2

STITCH YARDS

NEIGHBORHOOD BARRIERS

2m ile rad ius

11

ile

d ra

ius

m 6k - 1.

RIVERSIDE BIA

MaRS DISCOVERY DISTRICT

NEIGHBORHOOD MENDING THE EDIBLE STORY

SOUTH RIVERDALE NEIGHBOURHOOD (CENSUS AREA) VS. CITY OF TORONTO

STITCH YARDS

% POPULATION CHANGE (2011-16)

MS Urban Design

SRN:

ULI Hines Competition

+8.7%

City: +4.5%

YOUNG CENTER FOR THE

PERFORMING ARTS

% CHANGE IN VISIBLE MINORITY POPULATION (2001-16) SRNCA: -4% City: +14.7%

Toronto, ON, Canada STITCHYARDS

% OF WORKING AGE POPULATION (2016 CENSUS) SRNCA: 54%

TORONTO BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTRE

City: 45% FOOD ARTS ENTERPRISE TRANSIT CONNECTIONS


VIEW NU AVE E

12

ET TRE IS S LEW

12

10

E VENU RN A

22

E

EAST

9

3

18

N ILTO HAM

RO MUN

15

20

19

EET STR

EET STR

8

16 14

11

30

N DO

4

27

5

17

R

VE

RI

21

23 2 7

28

26 29

N

TH

EY

:P IEW

AY KW

R PA

NV

IO CT SE

6

PU

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R ST RL

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AB EF

1

LEGEND FOOD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

ASSEMBLY FOOD STALL COLLECTIVE FRESH HARVEST FARMERS MARKET HERITAGE KITCHEN INCUBATOR MELTING POT FOOD HALL PANTA RHEI BREWERY PARKSIDE MARKET + GROCERY SUSUR LEE CULINARY SCHOOL

24

ENTERPRISE 17 CITIZEN SUPPLY RETAIL COLLECTIVE 18 MAKER SPACE COLLECTIVE 19 MINORITY-OWNED BUSINESS COWORKING SPACE 20 PROSPERITY TORONTO BUSINESS OFFICE

13

21 START UP TORONTO SPACE 22 TORONTO PUBLIC LIBRARY SMALL BUSINESS BRANCH 23 UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO ADULT LEARNING CENTER 24 YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS ACADEMY

ARTS 8 9

COMMUNITY HERITAGE THEATER CULTURAL ARTS LIVE-WORK STUDIOS

25 TRANSIT HUB 26 RETAIL PROMENADE

10 EASTSIDE POCKET PARK

27 PARK PROMENADE

MUNRO ARTS GALLERY 12 RIVERSIDE YOUTH ARTS CENTER + PLAZA 13 STATIONSIDE CRAFT MARKET 14 TERMINAL EAST CONCERT HALL

28 OLD EASTERN AVENUE BRIDGE

11

15 THE BACKYARD AMPITHEATER 16 THE YARD ART PLAZA

29 STITCHYARDS PARK 30 CENTRAL PLAZA

300

N 150 45

90

FEET 600 METERS 180

25


13

THREADS WITHIN THE FABRIC PEOPLE

PASSION

PRODUCTION

PROFIT

FOOD

Grandma Yao was encouraged by her grandson to share her cooking They have moved into STITCHYARDS to join the HERITAGE KITCHEN INCUBATOR and setting up a stall at the ASSEMBLY HALL FOOD COLLECTIVE to share Grandma Yao’s food.

Newer Strategic partnerships with community - focused organizations like FOODSHARE will provide Grandma Yao with business skills & community support. STITCHYARDS will build a sustainable community of small business owners focused on sharing their culture.

The HERITAGE KITCHEN INCUBATOR is where Yao will hone her skills as a chef. The INCUBATOR is a shared commercial kitchen that offers professional guidance from experienced staff, and creates community among food entrepreneurs.

STITCHYARDS also provides spaces for food entrepreneurs. Businesses can adapt at the FOOD TRUCK FESTIVAL and FRESH HARVEST FARMERS MARKET to brick and mortar spaces at the ASSEMBLY FOOD STALL COLLECTIVE and MELTING POT FOOD HALL.

ARTS

Jeffrey Rimon began sculpting as a hobby and needed a space to cultivate his growing skill. He decided to rent an affordable live work studio in STITCHYARDS, near STATIONSIDE CRAFT MARKET and his favorite art supply shops on Queen Street.

Partnering with the STEPS INITIATIVE through what the organization refers to as “Public Space ARTivism”, STITCHYARDS incorporates public art funding and programs to promote community engagement and empower local artists like Jeffrey.

CULTURAL ARTS LIVE-WORK STUDIOS provide affordable spaces for artists and makers. The collaborative environments now offer creative communities. Jeffrey enjoys the openstudio environment where he can learn from his neighbors.

The STATIONSIDE CRAFT MARKET and MUNRO ARTS GALLERY provide accessible spaces for artists. STITCHYARDS is home to formal and informal performing arts venues including TERMINAL EAST CONCERT HALL and THE BACKYARD AMPHITHEATER.

ENTERPRISE

Marco Grenier came to Toronto to advocate for better biking in cities across Canada. Marco plans to develop an app that collects bike commuting data at STITCHYARDS and grow his vision of building multicultural communities around biking.

Marco finds support and community through new organizations including STARTUP HERE TORONTO and CIVIC TECH. It offers capital funding, and business education, while CIVIC TECH provides a community of civic-minded tech workers.

The MAKER SPACE COLLECTIVE brings together technology and the arts in a low-barrier collaborative environment. COWORKING SPACE allows entrepreneurs like Marco to scale their office spaces as business evolves.

Events like the THE YARD IDEAS FAIR bring innovation. Through this aspect of STITCHYARDS, Marco vvhzztis testing his app with fellow entrepreneurs at the CITIZEN SUPPLY RETAIL COLLECTIVE this month.


PHASE 1: THREAD TO TRANSIT 8% 7%

33% % OF PHASE SQUARE FOOTAGE

20%

11%

21%

CLASS A OFFICE LOFT OFFICE FLEX/INDUSTRIAL CONDO APARTMENT RETAIL HOTEL STRUCTURED PARKING

AFFORDABLE UNITS:

23%

10%

% OF PHASE 1% SQUARE FOOTAGE 34% 22%

CLASS A OFFICE LOFT OFFICE FLEX/INDUSTRIAL CONDO APARTMENT RETAIL HOTEL STRUCTURED PARKING

11% 24%

7%

% OF PHASE 1% SQUARE FOOTAGE

28% 22%

CLASS A OFFICE LOFT OFFICE FLEX/INDUSTRIAL CONDO APARTMENT RETAIL HOTEL STRUCTURED PARKING

SALE 777 TOTAL UNITS REQUIRED AFFORDABLE: 10%: 78 UNITS

0 SF 221, 260 SF 8,869 SF 210,585 SF 325,730 SF 90,801 SF 0 SF 94,230 SF

STITCHYARDS AFFORDABLE: 14%: 108 UNITS

RENTAL: 1,179 TOTAL UNITS REQUIRED AFFORDABLE: 10%: 118 UNITS

STITCHYARDS AFFORDABLE:

0 SF 438,324 SF 26,060 SF 406,800 SF 515,075 SF 119,092 SF 116,210 SF 190,890 SF

15%: 177 UNITS

CONSTRUCTED WETLAND

75.2m TYPICAL WATER LEVEL

GARAGE FLOODWATER COLLECTORS

BIOSWALE

80.5m FLOOD PROTECTION LEVEL

MUNRO STREET

DON VALLEY PKWY

CORKTOWN COMMONS CONSTRUCTED BERM

CONSTRUCTED WETLAND

DON RIVER OLD EASTERN AVENUE BRIDGE

REMEDIATING WETLANDS

BIOSWALE

80

CONSTRUCTED BERM STRUCTURED PARKING TO STORMWATER RETENTION

24 FEET

40

4,754,211 SF

C$2,134,304,518

PHASE 3: COMPLETE THE FABRIC 7%

14

TOTAL DEVELOPMENT COST:

PHASE 2: TIE THE CONNECTIONS 10%

TOTAL SF DEVELOPED:

STITCHYARDS

652,915 SF 415,128 SF 0 SF 213,360 SF 403,815 SF 133,408 SF 0 SF 171,659 SF

160

12

48

METERS

186455


15


16


17

MS Urban Design

Broadwalk Shared Street

South Downtown, Atlanta, GA Atlanta is a city of great streets, or it could have been. Renewed interest in South Downtown and the city center provides the city an opportunity to revisit and re-imagine its aging infrastructure. The long term Broadwalk addresses the needs of Broad St by removing the curbs and existing hardscape by through the application of green infrastructures preserving the unique characters of the Broad street. Broad Street will now play a fundamental role as a central axis for the much of the upcoming development of the neighborhood.

Commuters

Tourists Transients

The current conditions of Broad Street are that of obsolete and vacant lots and walls that function as dead streets. We classified the users of South downtown and of Broad Street to be defined as tourists, commuters and transients. The short-term solution will use the existing infrastructure and add movable non-permanent temporary kiosks to offer business and activity along Broad Street. As the long-term transition begins, the blank dead walls of the Federal Building will be occupied by more permanent retail and activity spaces while the main street will be paved over with brick to create a permanent shared street space. This permanent space will then stop allowing automobiles to enter the space allowing for more permanent installations. With cars prohibited from the space, the street may be turned into a shared street allowing for the inclusion of more furniture and seating for the twosided retail to occur along Broad Street.

More pe cars from After retail,


ermanent installations and street furniture will be added to the street prohibiting m the space, allowing for the inclusion of two-sided retail to occur along Broad St. bioswale redevelopment allow the finishing touches of a complete shared street.

18


19

Undergrad - Design 6

Broad St Performing Arts Center

Charleston, South Carolina

The Charleston insertion project would build performing arts center featuring a dance school, dance studios, a large blackbox theater, and a café taking the floor space of 3 typical “Charleston” houses. The building mimics the “Charleston” house featuring an unembellished front façade so that the access to the public realm is diminished, focusing on the side porch that flanks into a “private” courtyard for the occupants. The occupant must meander into a grand lobby that explodes in size: a public forum accented by a light column stretching from the roof and the use of parametric design that allows variations of the accessibility of light. This parametric design is used throughout the building, creating a language in the use of light as a permeable medium. Ramps run around the building connecting each of the dance studios, wrapping around the black performing theater splattering the itinerary with light wells and open air cuts around the building. Most of the arts center is open air allowing plenty of experiences of lights and air.


20

The “Charleston” house

Mezzanine from the second floor overlooking the cafe

Mass mimics the “Charleston”

Perforations for light

Circulation follows light & shape


21 6 10 6 3

1

4

7

2

4

8

9

1. Lobby 2. Coat Check 3. Ticket Booth 4. Locker Rooms 5. Cafe 6. Restrooms 7. Security 8. Maintenance 9. Theater Administration 10. School Entrance

5

Dance Studios

Blackbox Theater

Administration

Cafe


22

Public foyer entrance illuminated by a light well leading to the ticket office and box office


23

National Organization of Minority Architects

Barbara G. Laurie Student Competition Divine Lorraine Hotel, Philadelphia, PA

For the National Organization of Minority Architect Students organization, I had the opportunity to lead a group of 15 peers and underclassmen to enter in the NOMAS National Competition which focused to promote historic preservation and sustainability. While most of these images were not crafted by my hands, they were created under my direction and supervision. We were tasked with renovating the historic dilapidated Divine Lorraine Hotel & to create a addition to the hotel focusing on community and sustainability. The hotel and the new addition would serve as a dormitory for disadvantaged children; the new annex addition would serve as an arts center for the children in the hotel. It was important to create a modern addition ; it took cues from the rhythms of hotel to create its forms.


24

Sections & Diagrams finalized by underclassmen


25

MS Urban Design

Broadwalk Shared Street

South Downtown, Atlanta, GA New York University’s campus holds a series of modernist towers that dominate the landscape and its neighborhood, Greenwich Village. In this partner project, we were tasked attempting to integrate the NYU campus better to its surrounding urban context. Interplay between the ground and below ground space became a crucial element of spatial organization within the project. The two blocks were all residential dorms but our program called for the two blocks to serve different roles for the university. The program of the North Block called for an academic space to accommodate NYU’s ever growing student body. Properties of light, air, and atmosphere were toggled between each level in the North block to maximize the feeling of academic openness and inclusion. It features two large oculi that allowed the lower underground floors to receive light and air. They played with the landscape creating occupiable shifts in ground. Spaces in the South Block were split between a school for performing arts, faculty and undergraduate housing, and public space. Open inviting lawns engaged directly with the site’s edge to draw visitors in, pushing and pulling the landscape up and down in response to the existing towers. These two blocks were encouraged to interact with each other by way of a pedestrian bridge connecting them together and integrating with the rest of the neighborhood by thematically moving the ground with the occupant.


North Block Overview 26


27

Resurgence is a soccer supporters’ group for Major League Soccer’s Atlanta United Football Club. As a founder of Resurgence, the focus was to build a passionate fan base always jumping, chanting, and singing for Atlanta United. Tifo, the Italian word, has come to mean giant displays of banners, choreography, & pyrotechnics. As the lead creative of the board, we designed the branding, products, and tifos. All works here were designed by Jiho Choi as well as several tifos not pictured here.


28


29

GT Office of International Education

GT OIE Branding & Murals

Georgia Tech, Atlanta, GA

After my year of working as a Graduate Research Assistant, I was invited to work in the Office of International Education as their in-house graphic designer. The great opportunity to foray into graphic design allowed me to build my skillset into multiple other facets of design. For OIE, a logo set was designed as well as murals for dorms in the new sector of international student program housing. I built the logo systems of OIE’s rebranding, designing the logos for their social media, the banners for OIE’s website, flyers, and their style guide for the total rebranding of the Office of International Education. This led to painting a series of murals for OIE’s new international student program, the Global Leadership Living Learning Center. As the freshmen dorms were being updated, the chance to paint 7 columns for the office developed. The murals were a great opportunity to further expand my design skillset, all designed by Jiho Choi and finished with the help of volunteers.


30

Logos & branding designed for Georgia Tech’s Office of International Education


31

Murals painted in Georgia Tech’s Global Leadership Living Learning Community freshman dorms.


32


33

Eastern Corp

Yanmar EVO Center Showroom

Acworth, GA To have experienced architecture from the construction site at Eastern Co, a glass glazing subcontractor, was an opportunity to handle everything in glass fabrication. All the way from BIM modeling, CAD detail drafting, estimation, bidding, to site installion. The Yanmar EVO center features a curtain wall for a 50000+ sq.ft. product showroom, built in 2018.


34

TSW Design

TSW Parkside Townhomes

Norcross, GA

BASEMENT PLAN NOTES: 22' - 11 1/2"

21' - 0" 11"

19' - 2"

11"

1. ARCHITECTURAL SLAB PLAN IS FOR DIMENSIONAL CONT

1' - 11"

19' - 1 1/2"

1' - 11"

9"

21' - 5 1/2"

9"

2. PROVIDE SLEEVES IN FOOTING FOR PLUMBING AS REQU 3. LOCATE CONC. FOOTING UNDER LOAD BEARING WALLS

14' - 6 1/2"

2852 DBL

4' - 5 1/2"

4' - 5 1/2"

HUNG WDW

HUNG WDW

4 2

2856 DBL

HUNG WDW

8' - 5"

2'-6" VB

HUNG WDW

BATH

8. EXT. FACE OF CONC. WALL, EXTERIOR FACE OF WOOD S CONC. SLAB-ON-GRADE SHALL ALIGN VERTICALLY.

AND EXTERIOR SLAB POURS. PER STRUCT. DRAWINGS.

0 2

9'-0" CLG

4

13' - 6"

0 2

OPT. ELEV. 0 2

3' - 8 1/2"

0 2

9'-0" CLG

HALLWAY

0 2

5 1/2" / 1'-0"

3' - 0"

0 2

CONC. FOOTING

INFORMATION.

2. NEW DOORS NOT DIMENSIONED SHALL BE LOCATED 6" F ADJACENT WALL.

3. COORDINATE FIREPLACE DIMENSIONS WITH MANUFACTUR

13' - 8"

9'-0" CLG

6 2

4. ALL SLEEPING AREAS TO HAVE EMERGENCY EGRESS A 2856 DBL

HUNG WDW

6 2

5. ALL DOORS & CASED OPENINGS ARE 7'-0" HT. UNLESS N

6.CONTRACTOR TO COORDINATE FIREPLACE ROUGH FRAM

10" / 1'-0"

SPECIFICATIONS)

WINDOW NOTES:

1. BASIS OF DESIGN: ALL WINDOWS TO BE ROBERT BOWEN

1' - 10"

2. ALL WINDOW GLAZING SHALL BE LOW-E.

2852 DBL

5' - 11 1/2"

HUNG WDW

4' - 5"

6' - 11"

19' - 2"

WINDOWS UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE.

WINDOW MANUFACTURER. 9"

21' - 5 1/2" 11' - 4 1/2"

11"

3. MANUFACTURER'S STANDARD HARDWARE SHALL BE USE

4. COORDINATE WINDOW SIZES, DETAILS, AND ROUGH OPEN 6' - 11"

5' - 11 1/2"

HUNG WDW

7. ELEVATOR MODEL HOR HP3A 14 BY RESIDENTIAL ELEVA

1' - 10"

2856 DBL

7' - 0"

4' - 8"

HUNG WDW

2852 DBL

MANUFACTURE.

3' - 6"

HUNG WDW

9'-0" CLG

10" / 1'-0"

13' - 8"

8' - 3"

MASTER BEDROOM

2852 DBL

PLAN NOTES:

1. SEE DETAILS AND ENLARGED PLANS FOR ADDITIONAL D

7' - 11 1/2"

4' - 5"

W.I.C.

13' - 0"

3' - 10 1/2"

DN

5 1/2" / 1'-0"

5' - 4 1/2"

6'-0" VB

5' - 1 1/2"

45' - 0"

9'-0" CLG

0 3

5' - 5"

2X4 STUD WALL @ 16" O.C. UNLESS NOTED OTH

MASTER BATH 45' - 1"

2

45' - 1"

LAUNDRY

CONC. WALL

5 1/2" / 1'-0"

SHOWER

5 1/2" / 1'-0"

3'-8"x4'-2"

30"x69"TUB

45' - 0"

6' - 0"

3' - 7"

D.

8' - 8 1/2"

2

6

4' - 6"

9'-0" CLG

W.

PLAN LEGEND SLAB STEP

4 2

2856 DBL

CLOS.

HUNG WDW

4' - 9 1/2"

9'-0" CLG

7. BRICK VENEER SHALL BEAR DIRECTLY ON 12" CONC. W

9. CONCRETE SLAB EXPANSION JOINTS SHALL BE LOCATE

8' - 3"

BR. 2

TUB

9" 11' - 4 1/2"

22' - 11 1/2"

11"

5. ALL WOOD WINDOW MUNTINS SHALL BE "SIMULATED DIVID GRILLS ON THE EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR.

6. ALL SAFETY GLAZING SHALL MEET THE TEST REQUIREME

1201. EVIDENCE OF THE TEMPERED GLAZING MEETING THE A SHALL BE SUBMITTED TO THE LOCAL BUILDING OFFICIAL.

21' - 0"

WINDOW NOTES: BASEMENT LEVEL MAIN LEVEL

1

A2.1

LOT 9 & 12 (THIRD FLOOR PLAN) SCALE:

1/4" = 1'-0"

& STEPS AS SPEC. BY

ELEVATORS (SEE SPECIFICATIONS)

SECTIONS.

9'-0" CLG 24"x56"

5. PROVIDE SUPPORT FOR PORCH

6. ELEVATOR SHAFT DIMENSIONED FROM MODEL HOR HP3

2852 DBL

2852 DBL

ALL FOUNDATION WALLS, BEAMS & COLUMNS TO BE DES

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER TO MEET ALL LOCAL CODES

Parkside Row, Norcross | CD collaboration under Lionel Johnson 2' - 1"

11"

4' - 6"

2' - 1"

5' - 3"

6' - 0"

6' - 11"

6' - 0"

3' - 3 1/2"

6' - 11"

4.

4' - 6"

2

A2.1

LOT 9 & 12 (ROOF PLAN) SCALE:

1/4" = 1'-0"

UPPER LEVEL SUBTOTAL

546 SQ.FT. 1,549 SQ.FT. 1,332

SQ.FT.

3,427 SQ.FT

GARAGE

700 SQ.FT

FRONT PORCH

210

SIDE PORCH

160 SQ.FT.

SQ.FT


35

Pillyr Organization

Pillyr Foundation Projects

Atlanta, GA Atlanta is an incredible city, but it is an auto-centric city designed in the 20th century. The city needs more urbanism and fast. Our group of 5 architects came together to found Atlanta’s first non-profit based around tactical urbanism to advance the built environment of our communities. Based around 5 key principles to nurture vibrant public space: culture & art, access, nature, safety, & activity, we strive to better our streets. Below is our first project that took pallets and created a bike bar out of them to encourage public spaces.


As Pillyr grew and got incorporated, we finished numerous projects in collaboration with city governments, art communities, and non-profits. Our largest project to date was funded by a grant received from the city of Atlanta that worked with the department of planning’s volunteers and with Atlanta’s art murals non-profit, Living Walls, to create a designed playscape for the children of a large Latinx mobile home community. We were given the chance to design the playground complete with a play structure, swings, bike racks and murals.

Colony South Playscape

Colony South Mobile Home Park

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6choijiho@gmail.com Thank you for your consideration


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