Eliana Weiner Portfolio 2020

Page 1

E L I A N A W E I N E R Master of Architecture University of Pennsylvania, Weitzman School of Design, 2020 elianaw@design.upenn.edu



T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S ACADEMIC WORK 01 ROOSEVELT ISLAND ART SCHOOL: “PEOPLE AS STUFF” ARCH 602, Daniel Markiewicz

02 TENTCITY: PLATFORMS OF PRIVACY ARCH 601, Scott Erdy

03 EASTPARKSIDE AID COOPERATIVE (EPAC) ARCH 502, Eduardo Rega

04 PAVILION: SURFACE x EDGE ARCH 501, Ben Krone

05 ARCHIVE: ARCHIVE x LIBRARY ARCH 501, Ben Krone

06 CUIDAD DE MADRID: MADRID NUEVO NORTE ARCH 701, Thom Mayne

07 PARIS: SUMMER ABROAD ARCH 782, Annette Fierro

PROFESSIONAL WORK 01 EDUCATION: K-12 PREP SCHOOL STUDIOS Architecture

02 WORKPLACE: LAW FIRM STUDIOS Architecture

03 MIXED USE: COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL Bohlin Cywinski Jackso



PEOPLE AS STUFF ART SCHOOL, ROOSEVELT ISLAND M.ARCH Design Studio 602 UPENN Spring 2019 CRITIC Daniel Markiewicz PARTNER Alexa Sternberger

In order to understand any island, one must deal with the issue of boundaries. Is the edge defined by what is enclosed, isolated, or by what is beyond, exposed? Is an island defined by that which it is composed of or by that which sustains it? The same could be said of the human body. People will define their own boundaries when given a solid object. People are the carvers of stuff; they erode the rigidity of a system and break down the predetermined parameters of program. It is the user who activates and deploys the space, not the architecture itself. The character of the space is thus generated by the actions of the people. These carved out spaces are further articulated by the materiality and textures of the building. Using the various stones on both the exterior and interior of the building, the rocks begin to create a continuos relationship between outside and inside, blurring the line between the edge condition of the building and that of the art space.

ARCH602 | 5


COLLAGE | EDGE CONDITION

COLLAGE | PEOPLE AS STUFF

COLLAGE | INFRASTRUCTURE AS STUFF

COLLAGE | SITE CONDITION

6 | ART SCHOOL


PROCESS STUDY MODEL MATERIALS | FOAM, PLASTER ARCH602 | 7


Exhibition

Lobby Internal Stair

Admin.

Main Entry

GROUND LEVEL FLOOR PLAN

LEVEL 2

8 | ART SCHOOL

LEVEL 3

LEVEL 4


Innovation Lab

Cafe

Theater

LEVEL 6

LEVEL 7

LEVEL 8

ARCH602 | 9


PHYSICAL CHUNK MODEL | 1/4”=1’ MATERIALS | FOAM, ROCKITE, PLASTER, ACRYLIC, AGGREGATE

10 | ART SCHOOL


ARCH602 | 11


L8 GALLERY ROOF ACCESS

L7 EXHIBITION PHOTO. & VIDEO

L6 FLEX SPACE

PRODUCTION SPACES

L5 ARTS

PAINTING, JEWLERY & SCULPTURE

L4 FLEX SPACE

DANCE & MOVEMENT

L3 MUSIC

THEATER & CLASSROMS

L2 CAFE & ADMIN.

L1 MAIN ENTRY

CAFE, EXHIBITION & INNOVATION LAB

LL THEATER & EXHIBITION

RENDERED CHUNK MODEL | PROGRAM SECTION

12 | ART SCHOOL


INTERIOR RENDER | FLEX SPACE

ARCH602 | 13


INTERIOR DRYWALL PARTITION WALL WATERPROOFING MINERAL WOOL INSULATION STONE PANELS AT 3’X5’ EMBEDDED IN PRECAST CONCRETE

CONNECTION OF PRIMARY STRUCTURE TO SECONDARY STRUCTURAL FRAME

SIXTH FLOOR

FINISHED FLOOR

EL: +78’-0" ANCHOR JOINT FROM SECONDARY STEEL TRUSS STRUCTURE TO PRECAST CONCRETE PANEL

MOVEMENT TRACK TENSION ROD SYSTEM STEEL TIES HOLDING ACOUSTIC PANELS

COMPRESSIBLE OPEN GAP

FIFTH FLOOR CONCRETE FLOORING

EL: +63’-0"

METAL DECKING I-BEAM BOLTED TO ACT CEILING

FLOOR TO CEILING GLASS CURTAIN WALL SYSTEM

INTERIOR STONE FLOOR AND CEILING CONDITION FOURTH FLOOR EL: +48’-0"

EXHAUST FAN FROM THEATER METAL GRATE FILTRATION GROUND WATER COLLECTION

STONE INFILL/ GROUND CONDITION

TENSION ROD SYSTEM STEEL TIES HOLDING ACOUSTIC PANELS

MECH SPACE SUSPENDED ON STEEL RODS

WALL BACKING FOR ATTACHMENT

FOUNDATION WALL

ACOUSTIC PANELS

WATERPROOFING RIGID INSULATION INTERIOR DRYWALL ACOUSTIC PANEL PERMEABLE CONCRETE PAVERS

BELOW GROUND EL: -30’-0"

DETAILED WALL SECTION FACADE PANEL SYSTEM 14 | ART SCHOOL


PHYSICAL MODEL SCALE 1/4” = 1’



SECTION | LOOKING NORTH ARCH602 | 17



T E N T C I T Y PLATFORMS OF PRIVACY M.ARCH Design Studio 601 UPENN Fall 2018 CRITIC Scott Erdy

At the onset of the studio, each student was asked to create a comfort station, a space that addresses various issues within the culture of tent-cities. For me, this took the form of a mother’s room. Providing resources and safety for new mothers; celebrating the process of breastfeeding rather than concealing it. From this concept of privacy and community, of protection and elevation, I began to further explore these ideas through the transitional housing project. By thinking of the housing project as another means of security, the architecture itself begins to act as a safe haven both to those who live within the structure and to those below it. The building creates spaces for interconnection between the residents and tent-dwellers, bringing them together at various levels throughout the stack. The transitional housing project addresses both the needs of the residents as well as those of the greater tent-city community.

ARCH601| 19


GROUND LEVEL / ENTRY PUBLIC SERVICES

SYSTEMS DIAGRAM STACKED PLUMBING & WATER SOURCE HEAT PUMP

VIEWS DIAGRAM VIEWS TOWARDS CENTER CITY (DOWNTOWN)

20 | TENT CITY

EXISTING CONTEXT PUBLIC AMENITIES

CIRCULATION DIAGRAM

PRIMARY / VERTICAL CIRCULATION SECONDARY / NEIGHBORHOOD CIRCULATION

EXTERIOR SHELL

FULL BUILDING WITH MESH SHELL FACADE

LOADING & STORAGE MAIN ENTRANCE/LOBBY COMMUNITY ROOFTOP TENTCITY CAMP AREA

DINING, MPR & KITCHEN HEALTH & DENTAL LEGAL AID ADMINISTRATION



PLAN

22 | TENT CITY

N.


18’-0”

16’-0”

22’-0”

15’-6”

BEDROOM BATHROOM MASTER BEDROOM

BEDROOM KITCHEN / LIVING

BATHROOM

SINGLE OCCUPANT UNIT

FAMILY OCCUPANT UNIT

250 SF EACH, 88 UNITS TOTAL

400 SF EACH, 10 UNITS TOTAL

KITCHEN / LIVING

ARCH601 | 23


SOUTH SECTION THROUGH BUILDING & CIRCULATION

WEST ELEVATION VIEW FROM STREET


ARCH601 | 25



EAST PARKS IDE AID CO-OPERATIVE

M.ARCH Design Studio 502 UPENN Spring 2018 CRITIC Eduardo Rega TEAM Ian Lai & Rebecca Sibinga

Exploring healthcare through the lens of Planned Parenthood and Home Care Associates (HCA) as precedents for healthcare intervention within East Parkside, illustrated that while medical care and health education are desperately sparse in the greater Philadelphia area, implementing institutionalized care in East Parkside would burden the community. Situating an agent that can extend these organizations’ reach while also addressing community needs becomes a necessity. East Parkside Aid Co-Op (EPAC) provides vital services in subtle ways: networks of nodes that offer the basis for provision of healthcare, food security, and the development of a community organization empowered to further these community efforts and seek partnerships with others. EPAC is not meant to take on the roles of either HCA or Planned Parenthood, but to work as a coordinating actor, helping these organizations to provide services through a localized hub from which HCA, Planned Parenthood, or other health providing actors could deploy services and offer a sense of community.

ARCH502 | 27


EPAC PHASE 01 (2020): FORMATION Phase 1 of the project, year 2020, focuses on the initial formation of EPAC. In the current political and socio-economic climate, East Parkside is vulnerable to speculation and development by external forces; gentrification awaits only the influx of community improvements for developers to begin snapping up land and pushing out long term locals. In turning to the models of existing organizations within Philadelphia, like Home Care Associates and Planned Parenthood, the East Parkside Aid Co-op begins to partner with these and other organizations for support, resources, and small donations. The rest of the funding is brought in from donations and grants, allowing EPAC to get their feet off of the ground. FINANCE PARTNERSHIPS COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

INTERVENTION SITE O1 CHARTER SCHOOL TRIANGLE

DISPERSED PROGRAM MEDICAL/ADMIN/EDUCATION/LEISURE (INTERMIXED & SCHOOL SITE)

EPAC PHASE 02

INTERVENTION SITE O2 ADJACENT VACANT LOTS

COLLOCATED PROGRAM MEDICAL/ADMIN (INTERMIXED), EDUCATION/LEISURE (SCHOOL SITE)

EPAC PHASE 03

28 | EPAC


HOME CARE ASSOCIATES (HCA) ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE

PLANNED PARENTHOOD ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE Education & Training

Medical Procedures, Consultations

Internal Services Clinical Research/ Studies Education & Training

Planned Parenthood Services

External Services Medical Procedures

Board of Directors PPFA*

Board of Directors Action Fund

National Level

Operational Structure

Business

Operational Structure

Local Level (Philly)

Training Partnership (PHI, CHCA & PACA)

62,664 family visits

89% of patients are women

Home Care Service

Trainee Admission

62% of patients are 18-34 years old

CareTaking Skills

Soft Skills (4 P’S)

Pull Back

Board of Senior Directors (8) Health Mngmt PPSP* (4) Surgical Team Centers

+45,000 PPSP Patients 12% of patients, Hispanic

Process Present ParaOptions phrase

House Chores

Medical Assistance

Researchers & Educators

HEALTHCARE MAP GREATER PHILADELPHIA AREA

Employees & Clinicians

47% of patients, African American

3% are Asian

3,243 young people used Community Education Programs

1,450 students visited health resource centers

38% of patients, Caucasian



A

A

SECTION A SECTION LOOKING THRU SITE ARCH502 | 31


32


P A V I L I O N

SURFACE x EDGE M.ARCH Design Studio 501 UPENN Fall 2017 CRITIC Ben Krone TEAM Chanho Noh, Siyi Wang & Xiaotong Jang

Our pavilion creates a sense of space by using only a single implied line. Working with the concept of weaving, we aggregated lines to create a single surface, in turn forming the space as a whole. The original components focused on the curvature and detail that tied each artifact to their respective containers. In keeping with that theme of curvature and connectivity, through a series of iterations and studies, we worked to use these lines to form our pavilion. Our pavilion is in direct reaction to the confines of the Cairo grid, creating a relationship between surface and edge. The structure is not intended to suspend the lines or curves, but rather the curves influence the shape and behavior of the pavilion itself. The sum of the parts is equal to the whole - the surface and edge components under tension reacts to the boundary, rendering equilibrium.

ARCH501 | 33


34 | PAVILION

PROCESS PHOTOS

INSTALLATION PHOTOS

FINAL INSTALLATION

FINAL INSTALLATION & REVIEW


STEP 1: ORIGIN EXTRACTED CURVATURE FROM THE ORIGINAL ARTIFACTS& CONTAINERS

STEP 2: LINE BEHAVIOR CURVES CHANGE MATERIAL PROPERTIES UPON CONTACT WITH THE BOUNDING BOX

STEP 3: PART TO WHOLE AGGREGATION OF SURFACES & EDGES, CREATING A RELATIONSHIP OF TENSION & COMPRESSION

STEP 4: CONTINUITY SERIES OF EDGES ALTERNATING BETWEEN PEX & METAL IN ONE CONTINUOUS CURVE

STEP 5: EQUILIBRIUM & COMPRESSION THE RESULT OF DIRECTIONAL FORCES THAT ARE CREATED BY THE SURFACE & EDGE IS TRANSFERED DOWN

ARCH501 | 35


DETAIL PHOTOS

FINAL CONSTRUCTION

DETAIL PHOTOS

DETAIL BASE PHOTOS

MATERIALS STRING, PVC PIPES, COPPER TUBES, CONCRETE CAST FOOTINGS 36 | PAVILION


PAVILION ELEVATION

PAVILION RENDER ARCH501 | 37


SECTION A LOOKING EAST 38 | ARCHIVE


A R C H I V E

ARCHIVE x LIBRARY M.ARCH Design Studio 501 UPENN Fall 2017 CRITIC Ben Krone

In the discussion of “archive� it is important to not solely focus on its common use of storage, it is a space with a more dynamic definition. It is about the process of archiving; of transferring objects from storage to staging, from restoration to documentation, from one user to another. It is at these moments of interaction, of intersection, that this project looks to explore. Using the concept of the continuous line from the pavilion project, I began to illustrate the relationship between library and archive as a continuous thread; one space is needed for the other to exist. Without an archive, a place to house and transfer material, a library cannot continue to function over time. And vise versa. Thus, this design for an archive embodies the concept of the continuous line. As the curves begin to overtake the library courtyard, interact with one another and intersect with the ground, spaces are created and a dichotomy between archive and library is formed.

ARCH501 | 39


PROCESS MODEL TOP VIEW

FINAL MODEL TOP VIEW

PROCESS MODEL ENTRY VIEW

FINAL MODEL ENTRY VIEW

MATERIALS PROCESS MODEL | PAPER, CARDBOARD FINAL MODEL | 3D PRINT, MYLAR, MDF 40 | ARCHIVE


PLAN

N.

ARCH501 | 41


42 | ARCHIVE


A

B

B

N.

A

SECTION B LOOKING SOUTH ARCH501 | 43



CUADRIENAL DE MADRID: Madrid

Nuevo Norte

M.ARCH Design Studio 701 UPENN Fall 2019 CRITIC Thom Mayne TEAM John Dunn, Kaiyi Cao

Increasing strain on the existing business and Gothic quarters of the city of Madrid cause: a relocation of commercial districts, an increase in residential density, and requires transportation capable of serving two distinct nodes of the city that are otherwise isolated from one another. The development of a second node calls for the creation of Retiro Norte, a large public park, which acts as the staging site for the Madrid Cuadrienal. The introduction of an exposition of architectural pavilions and transportation exhibits invites tourism, builds up existing communities, and puts Madrid in an exclusive class of international cities such as Milan and Venice

ARCH701 | 45


03 CONNECTIONS & TRANSPORTATION

02 BUILDINGS & UPPER GREEN

01 GROUND, ROADS & LOWER GREEN

PROPOSED MASTERPLAN 19.72 M SQM 46 | MNN


AERIAL LOOKING SOUTH ARCH701 | 47


1.69 M SQM (09%) EXPO PAVILION

SECTION LOOKING SOUTH 48 | MNN

3.38 M SQM (17%) COMMERCIAL & RETAIL


1.57 M SQM (09%) RESIDENTIAL

2.33 M SQM (12%) TRANSPORTATION

ARCH701 | 49


RESIDENTIAL 428,601 SQM AFFORDABLE HOUSING 134,761 SQM (9% OF HOUSING)

AFFORDABLE HOUSING AREA

CONNECTION TO EXISITNG FABRIC

RESIDENTIAL & MIXED USE

03% | TOTAL MASTERPLAN

565,362 SQM NORTH RESIDENTIAL 36% OF TOTAL HOUSING SQM

COMMERCIAL & RETAIL 647,028 SQM CORPORATE 769,465 SQM

08% | TOTAL MASTERPLAN

1.48 M SQM NORTH

44% OF TOTAL COMMERCIAL SQM 50 | MNN

CORPORATE OFFICES

COMMERCIAL & RETAIL


ARCH701 | 51


PROPOSED MASTERPLAN 19.72 M SQM 52 | MADRID NUEVO NORTE




PARIS:STUDY A B R O A D LA REALITE DE LA RUE M.ARCH Summer Studio 782 UPENN Summer 2018 CRITIC Annette Fierro

‘The Reality of the Street’: “This project will prompt you to reflect on the city of Paris and its photography. It will allow a filter and mechanism to process what you are learning in lectures and tours about both the city’s history and its contemporary present, and how the question of image has functioned with and against its architecture and urban form. You are asked to photograph in the streets of Paris, to use people and places to describe a key understanding of the city that you arrived at. There is implicitly within this project a challenge to the ”photographic real:” this is not a return to the heroism of street photography as much as an acknowledgment of it and challenge to it.” We used photogrametry software, photo and video to depict scenes of Parisian life, illustrating day to day elements that are not typically noticed, creating a new “reality” of the photograph. We presented our work at Area Gallery where we also used a 3D projection tool, allioscopy, to display our photographs in three dimensions, creating another layer of “reality”.

ARCH782 | 55


FULL GALLERY DISPLAY AREA GALLERY

56 | PARIS



VIEW OF STUDENT LIBRARY

VIEW OF STUDENT LOUNGE AREA AT PERIMETER 58 | STUDIOS Architecture


PROFESSIONAL PROJECT TYPE: Education - K-12 School LOCATION: New York City, NY ARCHITECTS: STUDIOS Architecture & KPF TEAM: Nicholas Batteli, David Burns, AIA, Sara Schuster, Sameer Sharif, Joshua Vizzi ROLES: FF&E selection, client interviews, place of assembly plans (PA), RFI submittals & CD. SOFTWARE: Revit, Adobe Creative Suite & Bluebeam.

AUDITORIUM PLACE OF ASSEMBLY PLANS (A-3)

CAFETERIA PLACE OF ASSEMBLY PLANS (A-3)

RENDER (ABOVE) | BUILT SPACE (BELOW)

RENDER (ABOVE) | BUILT SPACE (BELOW)


32 ATTORNEYS TOTAL ATTORNEYS 17 AT MOVE IN > 30 ATTORNEY OFFICES 19 ATTORNEYS W/ GROWTH

W. 53RD ST.

OTHER TENANT

JAN.

AVE. OF THE AMERICAS

TEL.

TEL. W.

M.

IT

COPY

ELEC.

WP / ACCT STORAGE

ELEC.

WORD PROCESSING

IT IDF IP ADMIN

SNACKS

CAFE STORAGE

GRAB & GO

REFRIGERATORS, BEVERAGES & MICROWAVES

P.

ADMIN.

P.

TRASH / RECYCLING

V.

TV

COFFEE BAR

SECRETARIES

SECRETARY

V.

D.

CASE ROOM

47 COLLABORATION SEATS PARTIAL 18 WORKSTATIONS - 22 ENCLOSED (INC. CASE ROOMS) - 04 SECRETARIES - 25 OPEN - 05 IP ADMIN W. 53RD ST. - 04 IT - 02 ACCOUNTING - 03 WORD PROCESSING

PARTNER OFFICES 05 ADMIN OFFICES 2408 ATTORNEYS AT MOVE IN 08 ASSOCIATE OFFICES - 03 PARALEGALS (P.) PERIMETER - 01 ADMIN 29-- 0105ATTORNEYS W/ GROWTH PERIMETER DOUBLE (D.)

- 01 IT

PRACTICE FLOOR (MULTI-TENANT) 1 PARTNER : 1 ATTORNEY

1 SECRETARY : 5 TIMEKEEPERS* 1 PARALEGAL : 6 ATTORNEYS 2.5 COLLABORATION SEATS : 1 ATTORNEY [RATIOS BASED ON GROWTH HEADCOUNT] BOARD ROOM

*TIMEKEEPERS INCLUDE ATTORNEYS & PARALEGALS

BREAK OUT

UPDATED PLANS - LEVEL 38

01 SD REVIEW June 13, 2016

JR.

TRAINING

CAFE

- 02 INTERIOR (JR. ASSOC.) V. 02 VACANT OFFICES (V.) - 01 PARTNER OFFICE - 01 ASSOCIATE OFFICES

ACCOUNTING P.

JR.

COFFEE

MOBILE SERVERY

RECEPTION

MOBILE SERVERY

45

BREAK OUT

JAN.

AVE. OF THE AMERICAS

COATS

TEL.

TEL. SECRETARIES

W.

MULTI PURPOSE ROOM COFFEE

FREIGHT

V.

M.

ELEC.

ELEC.

MARKETING

MRKTG / HR STORAGE

MPR STORAGE

IDF

COPY

P.

P.

P.

BREAK OUT

V.

MOTHERS ROOM

JR.

CONF. CENTER SERVICES / STOR.

JR.

V.

HR

RECRUITING

P.

SECRETARIES

V. D.

D.

PARTNER OFFICES 07 ADMIN OFFICES 431111 ATTORNEYS AT MOVE IN - 04 PARALEGALS (P.) ASSOCIATE OFFICES - 07 PERIMETER - 01 MARKETING 50- 02 ATTORNEYS W/ GROWTH PERIMETER DOUBLE (D.) - 01 HR

- 02 INTERIOR OFFICE (JR. ASSOC.) V. 05 VACANT OFFICES (V.) - 03 PARTNER OFFICES - 02 ASSOCIATE OFFICES V.

- 01 RECRUITING D.

MARKETING

DN

V. CASE ROOM

09 WORKSTATIONS - 07 SECRETARIES - 02 MARKETING W. 03 CONF. CENTER ADMIN - 02 RECEPTIONISTS - 01 CONF. SERVICE COORDINATOR

CONFERENCE 30 COLLABORATION SEATS - 26 ENCLOSED (INC. CASE ROOMS) 04 OPEN 53RD- ST.

CENTER & PRACTICE FLOOR 1 PARTNER : 1 ATTORNEY

1 SECRETARY : 4.7 TIMEKEEPERS* 1 PARALEGAL : 6.7 ATTORNEYS 1 COLLABORATION SEATS : 1 ATTORNEY [RATIOS BASED ON GROWTH HEADCOUNT]

263 CONFERENCE CENTER SEATS - 228 ENCLOSED (INC. MPR) - 35 OPEN

*TIMEKEEPERS INCLUDE ATTORNEYS & PARALEGALS

V.

UPDATED PLANS - LEVEL 42

01 SD REVIEW June 13, 2016

43 SECRETARIES

TEL.

LIBRARY / COFFEE

P.

TEL. M.

FREIGHT

SECRETARIES

W.

ELEC.

COPY

RECORDS/ LIBRARIAN

P.

RECORDS

RECORDS / LIBRARIAN

UP V.

ELEC. CASE ROOM

IDF

FACILITIES / OFFICE SERVICES COPY

P. P.

P.

P.

JR.

JR.

P.

P. SECRETARIES

SECRETARIES

V.

V.

V.

AVE. OF THE AMERICAS

JAN.

V.

D.

21 PARTNER OFFICES 20 ASSOCIATE OFFICES - 16 PERIMETER - 02 PERIMETER DOUBLE (D.) - 02 INTERIOR (JR. ASSOC.) V. 07 VACANT OFFICES (V.)

09 ADMIN OFFICES - 08 PARALEGALS (P.) - 01 RECORDS / LIBRARY

17 WORKSTATIONS - 13 SECRETARIES - 04 RECORDS / LIBRARY

78 COLLABORATION SEATS - 58 ENCLOSED (INC. CASE ROOMS) - 20 OPEN

MAIN PRACTICE FLOOR 1 PARTNER : 1 ATTORNEY

1 SECRETARY : 4.5 TIMEKEEPERS* 1 PARALEGAL : 6 ATTORNEYS 1.6 COLLABORATION SEATS : 1 ATTORNEY [RATIOS BASED ON GROWTH HEADCOUNT]


PROFESSIONAL PROJECT TYPE: Workplace - Law Firm. LOCATION: New York City, NY. ARCHITECTS: STUDIOS Architecture. TEAM: Todd DeGarmo, FAIA, LEED AP; Josh Rider, AIA; Lee Sewell, Zach Mulitauaopele. ROLES: Site search & building analysis; client interviews & programming; testfits & schematic design processes. SOFTWARE: Revit, Adobe Creative Suite.

COFFEE, TEA, & WATER

CONFERENCE ROOMS

CONFERENCING RENDER (ABOVE) | BUILT (BELOW)

03 CONFERENCE CENTER June 13, 2016

34

COLD BEVERAGES, ICE & SNACKS SEVERY UNITS

BREAKOUT AMENITY SPACE

03 CONFERENCE CENTER CONFERENCE CENTER & RECEPTION June 13, 2016

29

COFFEE, TEA, ICE & WATER AV ART WALL

CORRIDOR OFFICE FRONTS

01 DESIGN ELEMENTS PRACTICE

MEETING

June 13, 2016

MEETING

HIGH TOP ISLAND

FLOOR CORRIDOR RENDER (ABOVE) | BUILT (BELOW)

10

S

RD

CO

Y

AR

R IB

&

RE

L

AXON - LEVEL 41 LIBRARY & COFFEE BAR

02 PRACTICE FLOOR AMENITIES June 13, 2016

TYPICAL PRACTICE FLOOR & CAFE

20

STUDIOS Architecture | 61


02

03

01

SITE PLAN

Podium Facade Development Tasman Elevation

01 SOUTH ELEVATION - PARKING, RESIDENTIAL UNITS, RETAIL @ GROUND OUTH FACADE - B&W

N.

Podium Facade Development Calle de Sol Elevation

02 EAST ELEVATION - RESIDEN


June 18, 201

Accoy Redwo

PROJECT TYPE: Mixed Use - Retail & Residential LOCATION: Santa Clara, CA ARCHITECTS: Bohlin Cywinksi Jackson TEAM: Robert Miller, FAIA, MRAIC, LEED AP; David Miller, AIA; Kate Austin, AIA, NCARB, LEED AP; Lauren Mullane, AIA; Kevin Gerrity, RA; Gabriela Osias. ROLES: 100% SD submission team, facade and elevation development, 50% DD submisssion SOFTWARE: Revit, Enscape, Adobe Creative Suite.

PACKAGE RM

ROLL UP GATE

SOUTH LOBBY

RESIDENTIAL PARKING 9'-0"

1

MP-3 Dark Flat Panel

A322

SOUTH LOADING

RAMP UP

N

8% SLOPE

15% SLOPE

P

ELEV. 5 ELEV. 4

UP

STAIR 3

WATER TANK

R

2'-6"

R.8

FIRE PUMP RM

S RESIDENTIAL GARBAGE

T

Concrete

Board Form Concrete Stone Option

Wood

Accoya Pine Redwood Option

U

-6"

4 1/2" 3'-8"

UP

26'-11"

15'-3"

30'-0"

29'-0"

13

12

30'-0"

11

Tasman East

Tasman East

ELECTRIC ROOM

15'-3"

15'-3"

A302

A321

14

10

VIGNETTE KEY PLAN

Metal Panel

1

2

PL

-6"

EMERGENCY ELEC ROOM

STAIR 5

9

30'-0" 329'-8"

8

2

A1.11

1 / A201-E1

V

W

1 / A201-F1

MP-1 MP-2 Medium Tone Textured Light with Reveal

MPOE

7

2 A311

26'-9"

A1.11

29'-0"

D N

STAIR 4

3

UP

M

M.1

A320

N

9'-0"

5'-0"

50 BIKES

1 A311

P RETAIL

8'-0"

9'-0"

REV

ISSUE

DATE

100% SCHEMATIC DESIGN

4

Podium Facade Development Porte Cochere North 100 BIKES

A320

05.31.2019

Q R 1 / A201-C1 1 / A201-E1

S T

D N

RETAIL 8'-6"

stam

U

30'-0"

6

30'-0"

A321

22'-6"

30'-0"

PROJECT SCAL

V W

1

18409

1/16" = 1'-0"

DRAWING

LEVEL 01 FLOOR PLAN OVERALL

FACADE DETAIL & COLOR SOUTH ELEVATION 25'-6"

DRAWING

TASMAN DRIVE

5

4

3

2

A201

1

Related California Bohlin Cywinski Jackson Steinberg Hart

MATERIAL STUDIES & PALETTE

June 18, 2019

FACADE PANEL ARTICULATION PORTE COCHERE Tasman East

MP-4A & 4B Formed Panel Color Varies

Relat

MP-3 Dark Flat Panel MP-2 Light with Reveal

03 PORTE COCHERE Bohlin Cywinksi Jackson | 63

ast

NTIAL UNITS, RETAIL @ GROUND

K

3

2

L

RAMP DN

RETAIL PARKING 9'-0"

Q

EQ

28'-0"

6

RESIDENTIAL COMPACTOR

A341

M

Color TBD

L

Highlight Color

RAMP UP

1 / A201-C1

EQ

400'-3"

1

A320

13'-0"

A320

COMMERCIAL COMPACTOR RESI ROLL-OFF COMPACTOR

1 / A201-A1

STORMWATER MEDIA FILTER, SCD

6'-0"

ELECTRONIC GATE W / ELECTRONIC KEY SWITCH

10'-0"

GREASE INTERCEPTOR, SCD

A324

22'-0"

UP STAIR 1

26'-3"

BFPT1.3 DW PUMP

K

ELEVATOR CONSULTANT

MICHAEL BLADES AND ASSOCIATES, LTD. 5409 RAPIDAN COURT LOTHIAN, MD 20711

J

5'-0" 6'-0"

8

9'-0"

GAS ALCOVE

A324

3

28'-0"

IRRIGATION CONTROL

TRASH/RECYCLE CONSULTANT

AMERICAN TRASH MANAGEMENT, INC. 1900 POWELL STREET SUITE 890 EMERYVILLE, CA 94608

39'-0"

10'-6"

RETAIL COMPOST

20'

PORTE COCHERE

NORTH LOADING

50 BIKE STALLS

MPOE / ERRCS / DAS

MAIN ELEC RM

EMERGENCY MAIN ELEC RM

CB ENGINEERS 449 10TH STREET SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94103

H

22'-9"

Podium Facade Development Tasman Vignette

A324

29'-0"

2

100 BIKE STALLS

RESI ROLL-OFF COMPACTOR RESIDENTIAL COMPACTOR

Related California Bohlin Cywinski Jackson Steinberg Hart

A324

FCC

11'-0"

Vision Glass Spandrel Glass

Glass

MP-4A & 4B Formed Panel Color Varies

Wood

STAFF

PROFESSIONAL


ELIANA WEINER elianaw@design.upenn.edu 914.523.3841


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