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Children’s products are normally designed with only a single use in mind, yet children are creative and often use them in unintended ways. This is the inspration for the “flip n slip” play system: a multi-functional furniture which can be configured in many different ways. It is at once a rocking chair or lounger, which can be flipped over and used as a slide, or on its side as a table. The flip n slip promotes creative play in a way that is safe and fun.P e ll S t. Ln.
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PORTFOLIO Dov Feinmesser
Vierthalergasse 10/3, A-1120, Vienna, Austria
+43-660-504-9822
Intern Architect ssg architecture, Toronto, Canada October 2011 – January 2011
International Competitions Placed 1st in the 2011 Dimension™ Extreme Redesign competition, Art and Architecture Category Placed 1st in the 2009 CitiesAlive International Green Roof Infrastructure Congress Student Design Challenge competition
Software Proficiency Well versed in: Mac and PC Software AutoCAD (2006-2010) Rhino 4.0 (+Plug-ins) + V-Ray Sketchup + V-Ray and Artlantis Adobe Acrobat Pro Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign MS Office Suite MS Project Proficient in: e-Quest v.3.64 Podium for Sketchup
dov.feinmesser@gmail.com
Work Experience Junior Designer Coop Himmelb(l)au, Vienna, Austria March 2012 – Present
Designed, developed, drafted and laid out small areas and details for large landscape project in China. Assisted in the implementation of Revit standards for the office.
Intern Architect DLG International, Shanghai June 2010-September 2010
Assisted in modeling existing building Yan Jia Lake Wetland Proposal on York University Campus in Revit based on old hand drawn plans and Part of conceptual design team elevations for future refurbishment Prepared diagrams and 2D imagery and code compliant design by office. for proposal Facilitated cooperation with landscape architecture firm 3D modelling Shazhou Brocade Proposal (shortlisted) Part of conceptual and design development team 3D modelling Visualization Intern KPMB Architects, Toronto February 2011-April 2011
Working on large scale, multi-story bank headquarters incorporating multiple programs located in Baku, Azerbaijan. Modified and reviewed plan, elevation, section and detail drawings for said project. Detailed and laid out for tender documentation package building details and unique furniture details. Extracted and developed details from conceptual 3D model for unique furniture components. Modified and modeled building envelope in Rhino and prepared for 3D printing. Assembled presentation scale model through use of 3D printing and laser Yonge Street Planning Framework Project cutting equipment.
Creation of framework document graphics for presentation to city council Built physical model for presentation 3D modelling and rendering
Education & Credentials Bachelor of Architectural Science with Honors, Department of Architectural Science, Ryerson University,Toronto, June 2011 LEED AP ® - BD+C, GBCI, December 2009
0.1 Flexible Living Mixed-Use Residences
DOWN UP
0.2 Cultura Condominiums on a Main Street 0.3 VersaTile Bridge Biomemtic Steel Bridge 0.4 Cirque de Soleil in Las Vegas Training and Exhibition Facility 0.5 Cliffside Village CitiesAlive Green Roof Congress Winning Competition Entry 0.6 The Hybridge Stitch International Competition Entry 0.7 Flip & Slip Dimension Extreme Redesign Winning Competition Entry 0.8 Yan Jia Lake Wetland Proposal Urban Design DLG International 0.9 Shazhou Brocade Proposal Urban Design - Shortlisted DLG International 1.0 Central Bank of Azerbaijan Baku, Republic of Azerbaijan 2008-2014 COOP HIMMELB(L)AU
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Flexible Living the third place
Year: 2008 Location: Queen St. East, Toronto, Ontario Program: Mixed-use residential & rock-climbing cafe
In The Great Good Place, Ray Oldenburg defines the “Third Places” as the anchors of community life through their stimulation of interaction. Situated in the heart of a rapidly developing community, this project seeks to integrate residences with a new “Third Place” for the community. The long and narrow lot was the impetus for the design layout, the “Third Place” and the main entrance into the residence complex facing the major artery of the community, the commercial strip, while the residences themselves face a quiet side street. As the community is currently attracting young couples, the idea of flexibility is a response to an effort to foster long term residency of the occupants, by making it possible for them to adjust their living conditions to their evolving family development. This idea manifests in a “plug & play” system of units for the residence which are then also flexible in their internal layout through to the use of retractable partitions rather then walls.
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residential core lobby residential core lounge “third place� rock climbing facility permanent unit superstructure unit tie-in service shafts bicycle and handicap parking
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LOW EXAPNSION POLYURETHANE FILLED STEEL PARAPET CAP STEEL DECKING WITH CAST ON SITE CONCRETE COVER 150 mm CONCRETE SHEAR WALL 200 mm VAPOR BARRIER GALVANIZED STEEL CAPPED CORNERS RIDGID XPS 100 mm POSTTENTIONED BOLT CONNECTION STEEL MESH AND WEATHERING COATING 15 mm METAL FLASHING WITH INTERMITTENT WEEP HOLES AND LOW EXPANSION POLYURETHANE FOAM UNDERNEATH
USER CONTROLED SHADING SYSTEM FOR OPTIMAL SOLAR EXPOSURE
LOE E-COATED DOUBLE GLAZED ARGON FILLED FLOOR TO CEILING GLAZING STEEL T-SHAPE STRUCTURAL SUPPORT FOR PRECAST FLOOR SLAB ASSEMBLY STEEL SUPPORT STRUCTURE, WWF 500 WITH XPS RIDGID INSULATION 75mm PRECAST CONCRETE ASSEMBLEY STRUCTURAL CONCRETE WHYTH 100 mm RIDGID XPS 70 mm STEEL STUDS 200mm OC DRAINAGE PLANE 15 mm TREATED HARDWOOD PANELS 25 mm
The removable living units are designed to be assembled on site from smaller individual precast and preassembled components, allowing for ease of transportation as well as ease of reuse or re-purposing.
LOW EXPANSION POLYURETHANE FOAM AT CONNECTION OF PANNELS
The units’ design is such that they are independently insulated from the superstructure to insure minimal codependency.
POSTTENTIONED BOLT ATTACHED TO SITE CAST STEEL FRAME IN SHEAR WALL INDUSTRAIL GRADE RUBBER SEALANT AROUND DOOR FRAME CONNECTION SITECAST CONCRETE FOOTING WEEP HOLE FOR DRAINAGE
conceptual detail - wall section 0.14
Cultura luxury adapted
Year: 2009 Location: Bloor St. West, Toronto, Ontario Program: Mized Use condominium
This condominium design was driven primarily by two contextual factors; location and climate, as well as the constraints of a narrow, north-south axis lot. The dense and prestigious location on a high traffic retail street called for an upscale mid-size condominium with retail at street level. However, given the narrow lot’s axis, the north side of the building would get little light while on the south side, views would compete with heat gain for determining the area of glazing. In order to address these issues, each facade of the building is treated as an organism within a context and not just the building as a whole. The outcome is a leaning south facade, to maximize views while minimizing solar exposure of the interiors. An angled east facade that allows daylight to penetrate into the north side of the building and create a view corridor to the south and a north facade that is shielded from the worst of the winter winds.
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The design utilizes a unique envelope solution for each face of the building. Each unique facade is informed by the three primary factors of the design: climate, views and visual context. Form is derived from a response to both the climate and economy of the context, which also help define the formal and material qualities of each facade.
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angled curtain wall reducing solar gain while maximizing views to the south highly insulated precast units abutting adjacent property and inner core operable multihued double stage curtain wall for high visibility and playful outward expression to northern low-rise neighbours punched window concrete with stone panelling and operable LITRICON shutters for southeast facing thermal mass
structural diagram showing diverse cladding systems 0.23
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service and fire escape core public bar/bistro bar/bistro direct access elevator bar/bistro street facing terrace meeting/social/event space communal kitchen resident gym gym change rooms resident terrace
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STEEL ANGLES BOLTED TO WALL AND MULLION INSULATION BETWEEN "Z" GIRT AND PANEL FASTENING SYSTEM
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detail - operable LITRICON速 panel at curtain wall jumb
DOUBLE GLAZED IGU GAPS IN PAVERS FOR DRAINAGE DOUBLE SEALED FLASHING OVER IGU AND MULLION SPECIALIZED MULLION BASE DOUBLE SILICON CAULKING SEAL STEEL CONTAINMENT BOX GALVANIZED STEEL FLASHING DRAINAGE GUTTER STONE PAVERS GRAVEL SEPERATOR
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PROTECTIVE COATING 75mm RIGID INSULATION
STEEL GRATE OVER HEATING COIL SCREWED TO SLAB 300mm O/C CONTINUOUS AIR BARRIER OVERLAPS AND RUNS BEHIND CONTAINMENT BOX AND INSULATION HOT WATER COIL BASE HEATER ATTACHED TO SLAB 600mm O/C 200mm CAST-IN-PLACE CONCRETE SLAB CONTAINMENT BOX BOLTED TO SLAB
In order to create a unique and prestigious ambience in the interior spaces of the condominium units, LITRICON panels are utilised in place of blinds or shades, allowing the occupants to control the level of light entering the spaces while also helping to maintain a continuity of thermal mass at the critical junctures of openings in the facade. At grade, the drainage system has been moved below street level to create a near seamless transition from sidewalk to retail interior through the glazing, blurring the line between interior and exterior spaces and connecting the building to street life.
detail - curtain wall at grade 0.25
exterior from corner of Bloor and Avenue 0.26
interior of lobby 0.27
VersaTile Bridge biomimetic steel bridge
Year: 2010 Location: Toronto, Ontario Program: Pedestrian bridge
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Drawing on the concept of biomimcry, the VersaTile bridge utilizes the high tensile strength and flexibility of steel cables to suspend a spine of modular floating steel units. Columnar cacti are weakest at the junction of branches with the central stem. In order to strengthen the connection at these points, the tightly packed vertical cells are interspersed with areas of woven cells that grant strength and rigidity to the overall structure. The human musculature system works in tandem with the skeleton to allow both to be self supporting. Together, these systems lend their structural qualities to the modular bridge, a composition of ridged modular, light weight units. These units are attached in series to form a spine for the bridge’s suspension system: twisted, tensioned steel cables. In conjunction, the twist in the cables and the spine formed by the units lend the bridge rigidity. The system eliminates the need for additional support by utilizing the tension created through twisting to counteract the natural tendency of the cables to slump.
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Cirque for de Soleil training and exhibition facility
Year: 2011 Location: Las Vegas Program: Training and exhibition facility for Cirque de Soleil
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This design for a training and entertainment facility for Cirque de Soleil on a barren lot south of the Vegas Strip is an exercise in subtlety and spectacle. Simultaneously embodying the visual extravagance of the Las Vegas Strip and Cirque’s varied performances. But also the complex, intricate yet expansive system, of minute details that facilitate said extravagance. Building on this duality, the design is composed of a structure housing the diverse programmatic demands of the facility and a secondary external structure that provides the facility’s face to the Strip and the often harsh climate of the surrounding desert. Unlike the concept of the “decorated shed”, wherein the exterior structure is superficially overlaid on the interior structure however, these two structures are intimately related, their forms and functions derived from their interaction and the harsh desert environment that surrounds them. Thus they manifest a relationship of subtlety and spectacle.
The formal qualities of the design are derived from a series of steps that serve to maximize views both internally and externally while creating an open and inviting space that also responds to the prevailing climate. The diagram shows the seven steps taken with both the interior and exterior structures in conjunction to arrive at the final formal resolution of the design. changes views daylight daylight ventilation
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entry courtyard lobby ticket office design studio caffeteria outdoor seating area kitchen service ramp change rooms gym triage central training facility indoor/outdoor pool offices classrooms with operable partition 16. ramp to performance venue above cafeteria
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The final form and penalization of the exterior shell is derived in response to site context and climate, shrinking and increasing in transparency to allow maximal daylight penetration from the north while stretching and increasing in opacity (the hued panels) to shield from direct sunlight and increase spectacle in the most prominent faces of the design to the south, west and east.
facility interior structural system
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facility exterior shell structural system
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multichromatic ploycrabonate panels lightweight spider connections lightweight doublecurved spandral system round section steel structural frame double glazed windows with casing double sided translucent polycarbonate panel system with lightweight steel framing 150mm concrete slab on steel deck interior partitions (drywall and steel framing)
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exploded facade assembly diagram 0.45
exterior - entering the facilityfrom below grade 0.46
exterior - projecting events onto the interior of the shell 0.47
Cliffside Village reinvisioning the strip mall
Competition Entry Awarded 1st Prize Team: Dov Feinmesser, Aaron Hendershott, Katrina Mitt, Tommy Tso Year: 2009 Location: Toronto, Ontario Program: A new urban concept for the North American strip-mall typology key - green wall assembly 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
green house (alternatives: tables, trellis’) regional & seasonal trees, vegetables and herbs. weather-treated woodframed planters steel rod felt-hanging bars felt substrate with seedum panels tensioned steel cables maintained original brick façade new glass entrance vestibule & wood trellis retrofit extensive green roof system 0.5
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Several recently published sources claim that by 2030 sixty percent or more of the world’s population will be living in cities, a percentage not likely to be any smaller in North America. As the cities expand, some of the sprawl that was suburbia will inevitably by subsumed by the city. Few locations in suburban sprawl are as symbolic of the Modern theme of separation of uses as the strip mall, once seen as essential for the car driven economy it is often a gray space, devoid of vibrant community life or green space. The strip mall is nevertheless often an essential community focal point. It is a local source of services and in an area of suburban sprawl it also often serves as the only point of constant interaction, however brief, between residents. This competition entry envisions a post carbon strip mall, consisting of mixed uses, expanses of greenery, public spaces and urban agriculture initiatives with a pedestrian and bicycle friendly environment. A renewal, and not a replacement, that reduces carbon emissions, greenhouse gases and promotes an active and vibrant life style.
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bird’s-eye view of proposed design
* model and screenshot on this page courtesy of Aaron Hendershott 0.51
The Hybridge Stitch creating connections through art
Competition Entry Team: Dov Feinmesser Year: 2010 Location: New York, New York Program: A parasitic art centre superimposed onto and into an existing heritage bridge
Linking two diverse New York communities, High Bridge and Washington Heights, the ‘Hybridge Stitch’ utilizes a series of sharpangled galleries to couple the Bronx with Manhattan. Creating an interfabric reinforcement, the jagged form of the stitch-inspired gallery on the Harlem Bridge visually contrasts the linar form of the Modern aqueduct but symbolically intertwines the urban fabrics on either side of the Harlem River, linking their respective diversities. Local arts groups will have a venue to showcase their fortes while embracing their differences, in a unique opportunity that will allow artists to evolve in newfound directions. The stitch presents the opportunity to exhibit and experience art in an environment outside traditional gallery walls. Encouraging an already established cultural infrastructure into forward thinking, the ‘Hybridge Stitch’ creates a canvas for exhibiting, interpreting, and celebrating art on a monumental scale indoors and out.
bird’s-eye view of the repurposed bridge and attached art centre 0.6
section through the repurposed bridge and art path above 0.61
operates as a:
way that is safe and fun.
Designed for children 6 and under.
Flip & Slip
● slide chair rock ●● rocking lounger ● mini table flip
industrial redesign
-use play system
This project was awarded 1st Place in the rocking motion Art and Architecture category of the 2011 Dimension™ Extreme Redesign competiton. The product was born from the observation Children’s products are normally designed with only a single use in mind, yet children are creative and often use them in unintended ways. most children’s products aresystem: normally This isthat the inspration for the “flip n slip” play a multi-functional furniture which can be configured in many different ways. It is at once a rocking chair or with lounger, which can beuse flipped over and used as a slide, or on its side as a table. The flip n slip promotes creative play in a designed only a single in mind, yet way that is safe and fun. operates a:in children are creative and often useas them Designed for childrenways. 6 and under. unintended This is the inspiration for the “flip & slip” play ● slide system: a multifunctional single piece of chair furniture which can●berocking used in virtually every configuration. It is at once a rocking chair or ● lounger lounger, which can be flipped over and used easy grip handle mini table as a slide, or on its●side as a table. 125 The flip & slip promotes creative play in a way that is both safe androcking fun. motion
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system: a multi-functional furniture which can be configured in many different ways. It is at once ped over and used as a slide, or on its side as a table. The flip n slip promotes creative play in a
Year: 2011 Concept: Safe and fun multipurpose chair for young children (approx. 4-7)
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In order to make the design safe for young children, it was proposed that the product would be moulded from a single piece of recycled plastic with all edges curved to prevent cuts or punctures. This curvature would also serve to strengthen the object thereby extending its serviceable life. Dimensions were determined with young children in mind as well as ease of storage and transportation.
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Yan Jia Lake Wetland visible preservation
Work Undertaken at DLG International
Yan Jia is a rapidly developing city in a county on the eastern edge of the Anhui province. It lies on the edge of the vital Yangtze River Delta region. The purpose of this project was to develop a proposal for a wetland park, including conservation, recreation and commercial ventures on the edge of the expanding city, based around an existing body of water currently used primarily for irrigation. The firm was directly approached for the project and the final proposal included a substantial expansion of the water system, a research facility and parkland with bike and walking trails as well as an isolated high end resort in an area over 50 hectares.
Year: 2010 Project: Competition. Proposal for wetland preservation and commercialization
All images courtesy of Š DLG International 0.8
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Shazhou Brocade creating an urban flow
Work Undertaken at DLG International Year: 2010 Project: Competition. Proposal for a canal side urban development plan
This proposal was sited in the New North Development Area of Zhangjiagang City, a prosperous and economic power house on the shores of the Yangtze River roughly 150 miles north of Shanghai. The focus of this project was to construct the surrounding area of Shazhou Lake, a large body of water on site, into productive commercial, institutional and residential sectors with “water” as the theme for both formal style and features. The proposal includes a concentration of business, open commercialized pedestrian malls, cultural buildings, sports & fitness facilities, leisure & vacation services, distinctive housing and other multifunctional complexes of contemporary ecologicallysound urban development. The firm was shortlisted for this project along with six other firms. DLG’s proposal was selected among the top two, which went on to a public vote.
All images courtesy of © DLG International 0.9
riverside performance venue
vernacular inspired pedestrian mall
Shazhou Brocade, Fascinate Water City 沙洲 魅力水都
plan - proposed masterplan 0.91
Central Bank of Azerbaijan Baku, Republic of Azerbaijan 2008-2014 (expected)
Work Undertaken at CoopHimmelb(l)au Year: 2012 Location: Baku, Azerbaijan Program: Bank office space with central vault and conference centre
A striking icon along the Heydar Aliyev Avenue in Baku, the new Central Bank of Azerbaijan is a double core tower with an east-west orientation. Between the two office tower slabs rises a vertical, transparent atrium. A geometrical transformation renders the double core typology more efficient via: - Creation of differentiated office spaces in plan and diverse views. - A basis for optimizing sustainable benefits: control of solar gain, passive sun protection and natural ventilation for cooling and heating as well as daylighting. - Dynamic shaping of the atrium space between the tower slabs acting as a “Vertical City“. Numerous connecting platforms inscribed between the towers stretch functional areas across the atrium, and divide it horizontally in several sections reminiscent of urban neighbourhoods. These interchange platforms act as communication forums with informal meeting spaces and direct links between different functional areas of the two towers. The atrium also features a vertically connected hanging garden and a daylight reflecting core, bringing light and green spaces into the space.
All images courtesy of © COOP HIMMELB(L)AU 1.0
CBA building from Heydar Aliyev Ave.
© ISOCHROM.com, Vienna
CBA building from north site green
model of CBA from west
© Markus Pillhofer
© ISOCHROM.com, Vienna model of CBA from east
© Markus Pillhofer 1.1