Dominika Linowska
architect.
Dominika Linowska. 2014 e: dominika@linowska.com w: www.linowska.com
Contents Responsive Suburbia incremental housing. thesis project
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Office in Eastern Docklands office. civic / public functions
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Reboot / Rescale housing. high density. restoration
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Nodular Growth housing. mid-rise. medium density
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Atelier Factory rehabilitation. existing building
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5m Bookstore urban infill. small scale
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Hand-drawn graphite, contĂŠ drawings / sketches
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Archiprix 2014 nominee
Responsive Suburbia: dwelling and working in IJBurg Type of project: housing, thesis, individual Location: IJBurg, Amsterdam Supervisors: Nelson Mota (main) www.nelsonmota.com Ype Cuperus (secondary) Duration of project: 10 months Date of completion: June 26, 2013 (MSc.Arch) Responsive Suburbia is a project of 72 units, addressing housing in suburban areas such as IJBurg. Two dwelling types are distributed around the site forming clusters of live and work units. Apartments consist of free-standing, row, and semi-detached typologies, depending on their orientation. The capacity of these units to grow incrementally (‘responsive housing’) is a key feature of this project. Responsive Suburbia proposes an approach to the design of collective spaces, blurring the boundaries between public and private. The façade materialization corresponds with this notion as well as the idea of balancing individual expression with the community’s identity. The project has an activity strip located between the waterside and residential edge, consisting of landscape and recreational functions serving as a lively catalyst for the neighbourhood. Responsive Suburbia could be appropriated as a positive example for living collectively, and a healthy model for designing blank development sites such as IJBurg.
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office
office
storage
garbage/ recycling
pergolas
play ground
picnic area
dance studio
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1 Existing situation; vastness, open waters on Steigereiland North 2 Design proposal. View of main street; facade and human scale analysis.
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3x3 grid
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streets define blocks
Responsive Suburbia
min FSI = 1
2
dwelling type A
dwelling type B
max FSI = 1.5
P
P
Responsive Suburbia
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3 x 3m construction grid
cross-lam. timber wall panels
cross lam. timber floor panels
elements are prefab. with openings
extentions in own material
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3 View of collective courtyard and the IJ river. A white render coat is used for the courtyard-facing facades acing as a canvas for additions, 4 Zoning diagram explaining incremental growth concept. House A grows outwards in one direction. House B can extend upwards by 1 storey. The dotted lines illustrate the maximum possible volume to extend for each dwelling which has been predetermined according to sun paths, circulation, privacy. 5 Extension matrix for dwelling types A and B. An array of programmatic and functional possibilities.
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6 Looking down from roof terrace of House B onto the public activity strip with integrated landscaping and pavilions following the grid.
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Responsive Suburbia
bedroom + living room
spa / salon
restaurant / cafe
photography studio
local lunch diner
dining room
bedrooms for 2 kids
master bedroom + study
2 extra bedrooms
basic unit: roof terrace
additional home office
dentist
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6
Responsive Suburbia
9
10
9m2
3000
Responsive Suburbia
3000
6000
20m2
12.5m2
18m2
4500 WM
1500 4.5m2
11m2
8m2
8m2
20m2
3m2
6000
1500
12.5m2
12.5m2
25m2
25m2
18m2
18m2
14m2
14m2
WM
WM
4.5m2
4.5m2
9000
9000
13m2
13m2
11m2
11m2
8m2
8m2
LIVE LIVE
LIVE WORK
3.5m2
25m2
9000
3000 20m2
2m2
1
22m2
WM
2m2
3m2
37m2
3.5m2
3.5m2
22m2
22m2
WM
WM
2m2
8m2
8m2
3m2
3m2
6000
x
9m2
9m2
3m2
3m2
A 38
House A. includes an internal permeable divider
3000
2300
3000
2
3
4
x
33 9m2
9m2
B
LIVE 3.5m2
3000 20m2
3000
6000
3000 20m2
6000
22m2
3.5m2
22m2
WORK
WM
WM
2m2
2m2
House B allows for a physical separation within the unit
3000 12.5m2
3000
25m2
12.5m2
25m2
5
14m2
18m2
14m2
2300 3m2
3m2 4500
WM
37m2
9000
1500
4.5m2
37m2
9000
13m2
11m2
13m2
8m2
8m2
8m2
3000
4.5m2
3m2
1500
6000
3m2
1500
6000
3000
1 House A. interior axonometric, ‘permeable wall’ as vertical divider between dwelling and working. 2 Typical construction + materiality of House A 3m2
1500
6000
3000
8m2
8m2
3 Section through House A 3000
11m2
4 Diagrams of possible expansions for House A 5 House B. interior axonometric, study of materiality and spatial qualities 4.5m2
WM
9000
37m2
1500
6 Section through House B
3m2
4500
2300
18m2
7 Diagram of second storey additions for House B
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12.5m2
Responsive Suburbia
25m2
7
11
1
2 5mm white render coat, Fermacell HC reinforcing mesh, light plaster render, 125mm Fermacell HD Building Board , 140mm Ecobatt insulation with ECOSE timber battens every 578mm 900mm KLH 3-layer panel finish coat (white wax)
1 1:50 model (triplex wood, card, MDF) Front facade (street-facing) lined with black slate shingles.
Gaulhofer triple glazed tilt and slide wooden window
2 The ‘back’ facade (private entrance via internal courtyards) is treated with a white render coat. The who sides were chosen to have a neutral palette in order for the additions to take place in a more free manner, incorporating unique facades ranging from wood cladding, shingles, brick veneer, concrete panels, vinyl siding, aluminum, etc.
75mm cast in-situ polished concrete floor incorporating under floor heating and cooling, waterproof membrane, 100mm rigid insulation, 300mm concrete slab
3 1:20 (not to scale on page) section through dwelling type B. Investigation on cross-laminated timber panel construction as well as cladding, details, connections.
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Responsive Suburbia
triple-glazed wood-frame facade
wooden decking on top of soffit drainage layer: gravel polymer bitumen seal 140mm Ecobatt insulation (pressure-resistant) moisture barrier: bitumen aluminum 125mm KLH floor / roof panel
triple-glazed wood-frame operable window
white steel stair
6mm Marley Eternit black fibre cement slate cladding (500mm x 250mm) fixed with treated sw battens and counterbattens, 140mm Knaufinsulation Ecobatt with ECOSE, timber battens every 578mm 900mm KLH 3-layer cross-lam.timber panel
internal single glazing
triple-glazing facade
wooden canopy and sun shading
solid wooden door (street entrance) CLT partition wall
stone pavers above 1.5% slope (drainage layer)
3 Responsive Suburbia
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Office in Eastern Docklands Type of project: office/civic building, individual Location: Amsterdam centre, Piet Heinkade. Supervisor: Engbert van der Zaag www.mir.nl Duration of project: 8 weeks Date of completion: June 2012 (MSc.Arch) The design project is an office building for a yet-unknown user and is located between the Oostelijke Handelskade and the IJ. The client is a large project developer that wants an efficient and easily rentable building, meaning that the design has to be suitable for one large-scale tenant and several small-scale tenants. One storey has to have ideally rentable dimensions; separation walls must able to be placed at intervals of 1,8 m (standard grid of 1,8 m for office spaces used); installation facilities should be easily accessible and maintenance requirements must be kept to a minimum with respect to the façade in particular. Every office space has to have an operable window as well as light and sun protection. These spaces must also accommodate flexible workplace installations. The following types of office spaces are required: single-occupancy rooms, 2-person rooms, 4-person rooms, quiet workstations, open-plan offices, and a variety of informal consultation rooms. The building has to be as energy efficient as possible. The client contemplates climate façades and concrete-core activation. The challenge primarily lies in designing something interesting within these “generic” parameters. 14
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massing restrictions
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cut outs for busses + courtyards
circulation
Office in Eastern Docklands
offices on top + commercial below
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waste
bike storage (144)
mech.
mech.
resto diner
bar
cafe
books/print /post kiosk convenience + food
kiosk kiosk
LEVEL +2
mech.
hallway lockers mech.
storage
storage
storage + lockers
storage
LEVEL +1
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2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
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13
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waste
bike storage (144)
mech.
mech.
resto diner
bar
cafe
books/print /post kiosk convenience + food
kiosk kiosk
LEVEL 0
mech.
hallway lockers mech.
storage
storage
storage
storage + lockers
LEVEL -1 and -2
Office in Eastern Docklands
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1
3
2 3
2
1 5
4 LOW VEGETATION GROWING MEDIUM FIBER & DRAINAGE LAYER WATERPROOF MEMBRANE INSULATION LAYER
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CONCRETE TOPPING
FIREPROOFING
DETAIL A 1:5 1. Continuous aluminum angle 2. Terra cotta fastening middle zinc clip 3. Terra cotta tile (150.5 x 288mm) 4. Operable internal sun shading device 5. Terra cotta fastening bottom clip
DETAIL E 1:5 1. Spray fireproofing 2. Metal studs 3. Pivot/turn window 4. Jamb detail
1: 20 TYPICAL O
AIR SPACE ECOTHERM INSULATION CERAMIC TILE CLIP HARDWOOD BASEBOARD
2 3 1
CROSS-VENT. OPENINGS
WHITE-PAINTED SUSPENDED WOOD ACOUSTIC PANELS ARTEMIDE速 'Algoritmo' LIGHT STAND-ALONE SUSPENSION FLUO DIFFUSER-DUAL EMISSION DIRECT + INDIRECT + DIMMABLE
A
SUSPENDED TUBE LIGHT 1800
DETAIL C 1:5 1. Steel profile 2. Wooden window frame and sill 3. Block
SPACE FOR MECHANICAL VENTILATION WIFI CABLES
2815
3037,05
3215
1800 x 1800 WOODEN WINDOW FRAME DOUBLE GLAZED WINDOW INTEGRATED WITH FIXED & OUTWARD-SWINGING
DESK LAMPS FOR OPTIONAL EXTRA DIRECT LIGHTING
C 13MM GYPSUM BOARD
340
LIGHT GAUGE STEEL FRAMING 50MM ECOTHERM速 INSULATION
B WATERPROOFING MEMBRANE 13MM GYPSUM SUBSTRATE
RADIANT HEATING / COOLING BUBBLE DECK速 AIR POCKET STEEL REINFORCEMENT SITECAST CONC.
3215
FLUSH WINDOW INTEGRATED WITH FIXED & OUTWARD-SWINGING
D
WOODEN TONGUE & GROOVE FLOORING CONCRETE TOPPING SHEAR REINFORCEMENT
6160
DECORATIVE GRAVEL MOISTURE MEMBRANE / BITUMEN HEAVY DUTY OUTDOOR INSULATION
DETAIL D 1:5
PRECAST CONC. ELEMENT FOR SUNKEN GARDEN
2
1914,67
2570
1
1:20 TYPICAL F
1 1 to 20 section through facade explaining structure, 3 4 materialisation, climate of office spaces 2 Entering through the garden tunnels in between office volumes 3 Ground floor, main entrance: double height, glass block material 4 Double height office spaces on levels 1.5 / 2
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1:20 VERTICAL SECTION
Office in Eastern Docklands
DETAIL B 1:5 1. Extruded aluminum angle for metal stud wall 2. Light gauge steel U-track 3. Smooth concrete subfloor topping 4. Wooden baseboard detail
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3
4
Office in Eastern Docklands
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Reboot / Rescale Type of project: mass housing, refurbishment collaborated with Paul Mulder + Suzanna Weeda Location: Amsterdam South, Bijlmer district Supervisors: Olv Klijn www.fabrications.nl Caro van de Venne www.barcodearchitects.com Duration of project: 16 weeks Date of completion: January 2012 (MSc.Arch) The studio project deals with a quintessential relic of post-war housing in the Netherlands: the Bijlmerflat Kleiburg. Students were called to develop new strategies that reach farther then renovation of what is already there, or consolidation from a purely cultural vantage point. By making use of the existing building, new possibilities for this mastodon will be extensively explored. Refurbishing the existing apartment block by means of keeping the structural walls was essential. Dwellings are evenly partitioned off every 5m. New typologies for starters, students, young families as well as studios were implemented. The restoration of facade materials was also taken into consideration, transforming the grey and brutalist character into a more appealing, updated and brighter tone. The existing Kleijburg block is closed off and unapproachable. The main issue is that the existing building of 500 dwellings has a lifeless plinth. By raising the block and making the ground floor more permeable, more activity is generated and the housing complex becomes automatically safer. 20
Reboot / Rescale
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1 Main issue: human scale is lacking in the Bijlmer; it’s simply too big! ‘rescaling’ the area by neighbourhood allotment is a solution to the problem. 2 Fragment model (1:100), facade study of apartments 2 3 Opening up the podium floor by raising building; main concept for enhancing activity on ground floor 4 Ground floor plan of the renewed Klejburg block 5 Typical 3-bedroom maisonette dwelling, level 10+11 6 Interior view of maisonette 7 Interior of bedroom (maisonette type dwelling)
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Reboot / Rescale
3
4
Reboot / Rescale
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5
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7
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Reboot / Rescale
2 m2
9 m2
22 m2 9 m2
14 m2
14 m2
18.5 m2
18.5 m2 3.5 m2
2 m2
9 m2
22 m2 9 m2
Reboot / Rescale 14 m2
14 m2
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Prize for Excellence! 2nd Place
Nodular Growth Type of project: housing, individual. Location: China Town, Ottawa Supervisor: Jay Lim www.258researchdesign.com Duration of project: 14 weeks Date of completion: December 2010 (B.Arch) Medium density Housing Project located on a constrained corner site in Ottawa’s Somerset Heights (770 Somerset Street West). Includes 40 units, parking, commercial space. Nodular Gowth is a new type of urban growth; a micro city within a neighbourhood. Units among the complex reflect the proportions of the surrounding vernacular housing type: one to two storey, clad in brick. Units are stacked vertically and horizontally to achieve the density of an apartment building. The gaps between the units allow for extensions or ‘rooms to grow’. These additional spaces incorporate a multitude of usages, such as: a den, guest room, library, winter garden. 40% of the units are equipped with these extensions. Having interconnected streets and nodes transforms an ordinary apartment building into a stacked micro neighbourhood within the macro city scale. A market hall at grade will serve as a shop for local goods and will additionally cater to various events, exhibitions.
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ATRIUM HOUSING COMMERCIAL
SOMERSET STREET WEST
The site: prominent corner, which used to be a parking lot
Typical street front facade
Street front with altered program
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7 6
5
4
8 1
1 3
3 2 SECTION B-B
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1
2 SECTION A-A 1 2 3 4
Market / Exhibition Hall Underground Parking (21 lots) Mechanical / Electrical Atrium, main circulation
5 6 7 8
Co-op meeting room Public Garden Roof terrace Residential Units
2
LEV
EL
1
LEVEL 1
3
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1 Somerset Street West looking toward Booth Street. 2 First concept sketch of infill 3 Initial 1:200 concept model
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4 West entrance to building from Lebreton Street. Market hall beneath housing shown 5 Axonometric of dwellings type A, B, and C (with grey nodes / extensions added)
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Nodular Growth
6 Roof terrace is open to residents, providing a place to meet neighbours, entertain, or enjoy a sunny day. Northfacing view onto LeBreton Flats – a future housing development site. 7 Materiality of facade: white brick and wooden accents 8 Rendering of maisonette 9 Unit B, bedroom within one of the extentions
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Atelier Factory Type of project: rehabilitation, individual Location: Victoria Islands, Ottawa Supervisor: John Cook Duration of project: 8 weeks Date of completion: March 2011 (B.Arch) Rehabilitation of historic building. Propose a new use for the heritage-designated Carbide Mill (1899) located on Victoria Island, Ottawa. Considering a programme which explores evolving cultural conditions. Many historical layers are revealed beneath the grey limestone walls of the edifice. Past uses include: a mill factory, storage/depot, a warehouse, a machine shop and a hostel/residence. The Carbide Mill suffered numerous explosions and fires, all of which add to the constant reassembly of structural parts. Recently, various outdoor events have been held at the ruins. The 23 x 84 m open-plan provides a very adaptable and flexible space for a variety of programs, such as the proposed art factory. A rectangular volume ‘inserted’ within the ruins, adresses the new use to the building. The steel and glass rectangular volume provides a new entrance, a redefined circulation and a gallery space within. Atelier Factory is an artisan community with studios, courtyards, galleries, meeting areas, cafeterias, and viewing platforms onto the surrounding environment. The four storey section of the existing structure houses artist’s studios and an auditorium as well as an archive library on the top floor. 32
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1 Volume inserted into existing mass. A new program. 2 An existing portion of the 7.5m tall stone wall is roofed, with exposed steel beams spaced evenly at 3m. This is an appropriate area for a temporary gallery exhibition. Atelier Factory maintains the industrial sensibility of the existing structure. 3 Outdoor courtyard within the existing walls of the Carbide Mill 4 Rectangular inserted gallery volume with steel and mesh finish
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5 Section through added volume and existing building 6 Example of how Atelier Factory works as a rehabilitation project within a heritage building
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3
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Atelier Factory 2
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Atelier Factory
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Atelier Factory
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5m Bookstore Type of project: infill. commercial/public, individual Location: Glebe, Ottawa Supervisor: Federica Goffi Duration of project: 6 weeks Date of completion: April 2009 (B.Arch) Small-scale urban-block infill to fit within a 5m wide cavity situated along Bank Street, in the heart of Old Ottawa South, also known as The Glebe. A space intended for story telling and story selling. Linear circulation through the building is contrasted by the vertical movement of the moveable book display through the two floors. A new entrance at back is created by extending and glazing the second level with white glass; a ‘floating light box’. An exterior lift structurally supports the overhang. The ground floor is mainly used for selling merchandise, and is also equipped with sliding panels for displaying posters, publications, other works. Upstairs is a 6m high space which slightly slopes to the back, enhancing the gallery space while forming an auditorium for guest lecturers, story telling for children and exhibitions.
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1 Bank and Fourth Street, Ottawa. Approaching the Bookstore. 2 Entrance. View to back entrance and stair leading to upper level (exhibition space) 3 Section hand-drawn at 1:50 4 Location of 5m cavity, public access via two routes
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5 m Bookstore
exhibition area / auditorium exhibition area
office
storage
w/c
w/c
mech.
k Ban eet Str 4
5 m Bookstore
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1 Sketch for B.Arch 2nd year one-week stair project 2 Hand-made scale model, for Altius Architecture Inc
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3 Physical model of thesis Responsive Suburbia 1:200. 4 Perspective of flooded Farnsworth House, graphite 5 Physical study model 1:50, of facade and structure (CLTs) Responsive Suburbia 6 Interior of 1:50 physical model of Responsive Suburbia
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Hand-made
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