CHRISTOPHER A. HAACK
PORTFOLIO SPRING 2017
Christopher A. Haack Jr. chaack@tulane.edu 760.716.9979
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Table of Contents
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Collected Work New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute
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Re : Generation
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New Orleans Tanzakademie
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Sculpture & Model Work
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New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute Spring 2017 - Eskew+Dumez+Ripple
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A SCHOOL FOR THE CITY The New Orleans Culinary & Hospitality Institute is the result of several of New Orleans most prominent chefs and restaurateurs coming together to provide a space for classic New Orleans cooking to be taught and preserved for future generations. The project is an assemblage of three separate historical buildings unified into a idiosyncratic whole. EDR’s task was to transform this existing structure into a world-class culinary school which featured not only the requisite teaching kitchens, but also three distinct restaurant spaces where students can gain real-life experience in with paying customers in a more controlled environment. In addition to the culinary school, the Tulane School of Business is an additional tenant which required the custom build-out of a state of the art business education facility dedicated to the expanding world of international finance
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WALL SECTION AT INFILL WALL 1/2" = 1'-0"
RE:GENERATION REMEDIATION AS A CATALYST FOR REGENERATIVE HARBOR DEVELOPMENT Spring - 2016
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THE PROBLEM OF POLLUTION
WHAT IS PHYTOREMEDIATION?
Within the San Diego Bay, like many working harbors, is plagued by issues of environmental degradation and pollution as a result of industrial and military activity that has taken place from the 19th to the 21st centuries. Considering the projected growth of San Diego coupled with the impending issues associated with global climate change, a solution is necessary to not only stop said environmental degradation, but to actively work against it. Currently there is a $175 million project underway, financed by both private and public means which is dredging 120,00 cubic tons of heavily contaminated soil from the bayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s heavily polluted southern industrial area. This thesis proposes a way to utilize that soil in a productive capacity through the science of Phytoremediation
Phytoremediation is the process of using plants to extract hazardous contaminats from a polluted site. Harsh chemicals are absorded by the plants and either broken down and neutralized, or stored within the body of the plant itself. The current plan for the dreged soil seeks to bury it as contaminated waste ,however, this thesis proposes to remediate the contaminated soil through phytoremediation in a public and visible way on the bay itself as an educational project.
Contamination within the bay
Site context and detail
Dredging location within the San Diego Bay
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Phytoremediation float diagram
Facility Plan
The facility is placed on the current site of the Tuna Harbor Park, however, the site has been decomposed into a a long linear strip containing the facility, and a series of phytoremediation floats which are arrayed according to need in the bay due north of where the facility lies.
View from floats towards the facility
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Standard configuration
View from the breezeway Low density configuration
Storm defensive configuration
Program Diagram
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Section A
Plans
View from a dance studio
Section B
Section C
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Wall Detail Axon
Front Elevation
Facade Detail Section
Facade Detail Elevation
Back Elevation
Sculpture & Model Work
Untitled 03 - Front 3/4 View
Untitled 03 - Back 3/4 View
Untitled 03 was a study in making a synthetic work based on two opposing patterns of grain and texture. The project was carved from a solid plaster block, cut 14 on a band saw to achieve striated bands and carved on the facing edge to appear like tree bark. The column is situated on a hammered steel base. The Elroy House model was a precedent study of the eponymous project by architect John Lautner. Project was completed with Aubrey Keady-Molanphy.
Elrod House - Northwest View
Elrod House - Interior Walls
Elrod House - West View
Elrod House - North View
CONTACT: CHAACK@TULANE.EDU 760.716.9979