Siwen Fang
Master of Landscape Architecture The University of Texas at Austin Selected Works
CONTENT
1.
BRAIDING THE STRANDS The Plan of Chuviscar RIver Corridor, Chihuahua, Mexico 2014 Fall
2.
PROCESS PARK An Urban Cemetary 2014 Spring
3.
VANAKKAM
4.
INNOVATION HUB - MIDTOWN ATLANTA
The Design-Built Studio 2015 Spring
2016 ULI Hines Competition 2016 Spring
5.
UNDERGRADUATE WORK
6.
PROFESSIONAL WORKS
7.
OTHER WORKS
01 Braiding the Strands - The Plan of Chuviscar River Landscape Architecture Advanced Studio Instructor: Gabriel Diaz Montemayor Collaborator : Lauren Ko, Kristine Street Location: Chihuahua, Mexico August - December, 2014
Design Thought This project seeks to transform the Chuviscar River for the betterment of the City of Chihuahua and Aldama by creating significant opportunity for meaningful interaction between people and the environment-- paying close attention to the ephemeral qualities of the site. Creating a greater connection between communities and the river and at the same time restoring ecology, enhancing public health, and creating enjoyable public spaces for locals, neighboring communities and tourists. The design proposes a linear braiding of three strands: mobility, ecology, and culture to create a strong symbiotic relationship between the surrounding communities and the river. Each strand is defined by multiple threads that are unravelled throughout the corridor. The braids of the river create islands and edges where landscapes and parks slide past each other. Visitors move from one area to another-- fluidly interacting with each other and with nature.
Existing Condition Pollution Source Analysis Chuviscar River: Current Conditions Chuviscar River: Current Current Conditions Chuviscar River: Conditions
River: Current ditions Flooding 2013) DroughtConditions Urban pressures Flooding (July (July 2013)(July Drought Urban pressures Flooding 2013) Drought Urban pressures Source: Pulitzer Center - http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/mexico-drought-
Source: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-07/20/c_132558214_4.htm
climate-change-chihuahua-farmers-harvest-water-conagua Source: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-07/20/c_132558214_4.htm Source: Pulitzer Center - http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/mexico-droughtSource: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-07/20/c_132558214_4.htm Source: Pulitzer Center - http://pulitzercenter.org/reporting/mexico-droughtclimate-change-chihuahua-farmers-harvest-water-conagua climate-change-chihuahua-farmers-harvest-water-conagua
Drought
Flooding
Source: Flickr - https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3157/2814472709_563acb8526.jpg
Source: Flickr - https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3157/2814472709_563acb8526.jpg Source: Flickr - https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3157/2814472709_563acb8526.jpg
A - Urban Runoff + Agriculture + Extraction
mexico-drought-
Source: http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/photo/2013-07/20/c_132558214_4.htm
Extraction
Source: Flickr - https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3157/2814472709_563acb8526.jpg
Source: Flickr - https://c2.staticflickr.com/4/3157/2814472709_563acb8526.jpg
Source: Google Maps Street View - http://www.maps.google.com Urban pressuresSource: Flickr - https://www.flickr.com/photos/gabodiazm/4270793318/in/set-72157623075207909 Riparian Forest Source: Google Maps Street View - http://www.maps.google.com
(JulyForest 2013) Urban pressures Desert Oasis Riparian UrbanFlooding pressures Riparian Forest Desert Oasis Oasis Riparian Forest Desert Chihuahua experiences periods of drought leading to soil erosion and dust storms. Seasonal rains sometimes lead to devastating Source: Flickr - https://www.flickr.com/photos/gabodiazm/4270793318/in/set-72157623075207909 Source: Flickr - https://www.flickr.com/photos/gabodiazm/4270793318/in/set-72157623075207909
Source: Google Maps Street View - http://www.maps.google.com
Water
Chihuahuaexperiences experiences periods ofcity’s drought leading tosoil erosionand and duststorms. storms. Seasonal rains sometimes lead todevastating devastating floods. The growth makes itsoil challenging todust balance the Seasonal needs of its urban population with the health of its ecosystem. Chihuahua periods of drought leading to erosion rains sometimes lead to floods.The Thecity’s city’sgrowth growthmakes makesititchallenging challengingto tobalance balancethe theneeds needsof ofits itsurban urbanpopulation populationwith withthe thehealth healthof ofits itsecosystem. ecosystem. floods. The revitalization of the Chuviscar corridor can address all of these issues. Increased vegetative cover will prevent soil erosion by Therevitalization revitalizationof ofthe the Chuviscar corridor canaddress address allof ofthese these issues.plantings Increasedalong vegetative coverwill will prevent soilerosion erosion bywill also provide natural keeping thecorridor soil moisture levels higher. Expanding the corridor andprevent reinforcing the banks The Chuviscar can all issues. Increased vegetative cover soil by keepingthe thesoil soilmoisture moisture levels higher.Expanding Expandingplantings plantings along thecorridor corridor andreinforcing reinforcing the banks willalso alsoprovide providenatural natural flood protection. Preserving the natural qualities of the Chuviscar corridorthe will also alleviate pressures from the channelized portion keeping levels higher. along the and banks will floodprotection. protection.Preserving Preservingthe the naturalqualities qualitiesof ofthe theChuviscar Chuviscarcorridor corridorwill alsoalleviate alleviatepressures pressures fromthe thechannelized channelizedportion portion Band - Mining+Agriculture+Extraction flood also from the Chuviscar awill jewel for the city region to celebrate . of the rivernatural and ultimately make makethe theChuviscar Chuviscaraajewel jewelfor forthe thecity cityand andregion regionto tocelebrate celebrate. . ofthe theriver riverand andultimately ultimatelymake of
Pollution
70793318/in/set-72157623075207909 http://www.maps.google.com
Oasis
Mining Extraction
Desert Oasis
Source: Google Maps Street View - http://www.maps.google.com
Desert Oasis
Major River Flow
s of drought leading to soil erosion and dust storms. Seasonal rains sometimes lead to devastating rains sometimes leadthe to devastating sonal it challenging to balance needs of its urban population with the health of its ecosystem. on with the health of its ecosystem.
car corridor can address all of these issues. Increased vegetative cover will prevent soil erosion by will prevent soil erosion bycorridor and reinforcing the banks will also provide natural setative higher.cover Expanding plantings along the banks will also provide natural eforcing naturalthe qualities of the Chuviscar corridor will also alleviate pressures from the channelized portion iate pressures from the channelized portion ke the Chuviscar a jewel for the city and region to celebrate. n to celebrate.
Extraction Landfills
C - Heavy Industry+Extraction + Landfill
Extraction Landfills River Basins
Wells
River Flow Major Tributary Flow
Water Treatment
Floodplain Urban Footprint Site Boundary Parque Nacional Cumbres de Majalca Agriculture & Maintained Land
D - Maquiladora+Sewage+Meat Processing +Urban Runoff
Density stands for Vulnerability (The denser, the higher risk) Main tributary Main water flow
Vulnerability Analysis Thumnail 1 - Tributary Water Volume
Thumnail 2 - Urban Density
Thumnail 3 - Erosion Vulnerability
Water Volume Small Erosion Risk High risk High Density Large
Low Density
Low risk
Activity Typology Study
Playground
Skate Park
Botanic Garden
Amphitheater
Events Space
Farmer’s Market
Jogging Trail
Bio Detention
Water Cleaning
Sewage Plants
Dams
Sports Field
Riverfront Park
Wetland
Grove
Pedestrian bridge
Pollution Control Plant Selection
Controlled Extraction
Mining & Gravel Extraction (As, Cr, Pb, U) Gamble Oak Sweet Gum
Black Willow Sunflower Long Bracht Eastern Soft Rush Spiderwort Gamagrass
Reduced Flood Pressure
Protected Agriculture
Urban & Industrial (As, CB, Fe, Pb, PCB) Laurel-leaved Golden Ryegrass Willow Weeping Willow
Tall Fescue Brake Fern Sideoats Grama
Highland Bentgrass
Phytoremediation:agriculture (As, CB, N, P) Big Bluestem Soft Rush Prairie Red Fescue Popular American Cotton wood Cord Grass Vetch
Tributary Typology & Strategy Water carried by the tributary A. Concrete channelized (urban)
Changes to the tributary No changes
B. Concrete with stairs on the B. Concrete with stairs on the B. Concrete with stairs on the edge (urban & suburban) edge (urban & suburban) edge (urban & suburban)
Gabion
Vegetation
Tributary intersect the river Widened channel Spillway teeth
URBAN
SUBURBAN
Vegetation
River course & Strategy 5. Detention
Based on the water volume and the space needed, there are two types of detention. The first one is inserted in a place where people can engage and recreat. For the second one, the water moves more directly to the river through three levels of area.
4 2
Detention Type 1
5
2
3 2 1
1. Diverter
2. Infiltration 4. Aeration waterfall Detention Type 2 3. Constructed riparian run
There will be several detention areas which deal with the water coming from the tributaries before the water enters the river.
RURAL
N
Bank Typology
A
A. Sponge (Suburban) The inland lower channel will serve as a water container during flood period. When in dry season, it will serve as a plant buffer. People Flow Water Flow
B. Detention pond (Rural) In the urban section of the Chuviscar river corridor, there will be large detention area of grassland which can serve as an open place for people to gather and also a place to hold water in rain season.
B
People Flow Water Flow
C
C. Waterscape (Urban) The terrace will take advantage of the terrian and invite people to celebrate and engage the river corridor.
People Flow Water Flow D. A flexible edge (Urban) The stairs and terrace can tolerate water and help with water infiltration. In the dry season, the stairs will be ocupied by visitors.
D
People Flow Water Flow
Scenarios
Flexible Edge
Staircase made up of recycled composite decking Terrace during dry season
Water level during rain season
Path Typology Leisure path I
Leisure path II
Gravel concrete mix Locally sourced stone Gabion bank stablization
Gravel concrete mix Rip rap bank stablization
Wetland
Bank Stablization
Retaining wall Wetland
Pedestrian path
Bank buffer Pedestrian & Bicycle
Elevated leisure path
Ephemeral path
Large cut stepping stone Mitigating agriculture runoff
Spaces allowing flow of water
Detention Pond Perspective 1
Detention Pond Perspective 2
02 Process Park
- Rhythms and Rituals
Landscape Architecture Comprehensive Studio Instructor: Jason Sowell Collaborator : Lydia Kenselaar Location: Austin, Texas January - May, 2014
Process Park, sited on a 50-acre tract of land in West Austin, explores the ways in which people and animals can better connect to natural biological rhythms and processes in life and in death. Nearly the size of Austin’s Zilker park, this hybrid cemetery-park space has been remained as a patch-corridor network. The vegetation will naturally change over time, in a shifting mosaic of ecological zones. The experience of process park is heavily tied to connection to our habitat zones: Woodland, Shrubland, Mixed oak-juniper savanna, Riparian, and Grassland. These have been identified as priority habitat conservation areas by TX parks and wildlife and we see our site as a major opportunity to aid in conserving these threatened habitat types.
Design Thought Process Park is a place to celebrate life, reconnect with natural processes, and bring community together. It re-casts the traditional cemetery as a place of active occupation reconnecting us all to the natural rhythms and rituals of life and death, creating habitats for people and animals and a place of remembrance and celebration for community. In order to connect people more deeply to the natural chemical processes that bind all living things to one another, the cemetery embraces only natural disposition methods. Breaking down the body into ash, carbon, able to be reabsorbed by the earth and turned again into life.
Why a Park Here?
Brackenridge Tract Red Bud Isle Peace Park
Lamar Beach Zilker Park Butler Park
Looking at the site in the context of other green spaces in Austin, you can see that at 150 acres, it is quite substantial. It is similar in scale to the primary park space at Zilker Park. Within a two-mile radius of city center, it’s the second-largest green space. That’s about a 10 minute bike ride, or a 15-minute bus ride, or a 5 minute car ride. It’s also very near to a long stretch of largely undeveloped shoreline along Town Lake. How a park can serve as a cemetary?
Rituals - Wayfinding
Spatial Structure
Lines of Access
Open Spaces
Major Hubs
Closed Spaces
Roads
Pedestrian & Bicycle Circulation
Green Connections
23
22
Building Type 1. Residential Building 2. Mixed-use Building 3. Scientific Center 4. Museum 5. Commercial Building 6. Parking Garage 1
1 1 1 20
8
Outdoor Space
9 7 10
18 15
16
17 19
2 13
2
20
6 14
11
3
4
7. Meadow 8. Community Garden 9. Hike & Trail 10. Community Park 11. Educational Park 12. Urban Agriculture 13. Terrace Scattering Field 14. Garden Scattering Area 15. Woodland Scattering Area 16. Main Chapel 17. Woodland Chapel 18. Bird Blind 19. Landmark Boulders 20. Preserved Area
21 12
Existing SIte 5 5
5
21. Brackenridge Field Lab 22. UT Graduate Housing 23. Red Bud Isle
Program Diagram
User Diagram & Plant Calender Widow Veteran Child Visiting Parent Office Worker Frequency Young Couple High Neighborhood Family
Low
Neighborhood Teenager Maintenance Tourist Canopy
Cemetery
Public Park
Urban Agriculture
Green Roof
Nursery
Nature Preserve
Understory
Scattering Diagram
Herbacious
Memorial Bird Blinds Wayfinding Boulders Scattering Paths Scattering Dispersal
Generation I
JAN
FEB
M
MAR
APR
Generation II
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
Generation III
OCT
NOV
DEC
Steel Mesh 25mm x50mm
De
co
m
po s it
io n
Bones & Solubizer
position com De te as Ani m a l W
tak nt Up e trie Nu
Let both water and ashes infiltrate.
r ecta -n
a ke
s ce
nt U pt
c o v e r p ro d u
trie
nd
Nu
Gr ou
Bones & Solubizer
De co
n sitio po m
Laser-cut steel plate
Central Scattering Terrace
Memorial Pavilion
03 VANAKKAM
- The Poetics of Building
Design-built Studio Instructor: Coleman Coker Location: Bodhidharma School | Aleyendal Village, Tamil Nadu, India January - May, 2015 Project Team: Rebecca Brown, Felipe Calderon, Pearlene Cheah, Alex Dallas, Ricardo Diaz, Joel Effland, Siwen Fang, Angeliki Giannisi, Tobias Gutheil, Claire Miller, Ben Parker, Alex Warr, Henry Wen
This studio was asked to design a K-12 school for a Dalit community. The project aimed to study and question the extent to which buildings can impact people’s lives. The school was designed with local cultural and environment in mind. The school’s curriculum will teach a place-based approach meant to raise bioregional awareness and entrepreneurship.
Design Thought Largely off the grid, the school will need to use solar energy, water capture and gray water reuse. An edible permaculture landscape, composting and passive bio-climactic design strategies further help promote independence and resilience. As the design’s poetic foundation, a regenerative design philosophy is embedded throughout, not just the campus design, but in the school’s learning programs where Dalit students not only grow their own food but are also taught sustainable practices for their daily lives. As part of the field-based approach that tests the design’s poetic potential, students constructed a full-scale mockup in Austin, TX to test material, proportion and alternative technologies. Using steel in lieu of concrete, student’s tested a bamboo shade screen designed for the school’s outdoor teaching area. For the hot humid climate of Tamil Nadu, a breathable wall was also tested using recycled bottles.
Building Module Structural Diagram
Concrete Slab Concrete Column and Collar Beam System Compressed Earth Block Infill
Ferrocement Panel Roof System Bambbo Screened Trellis
Building Unit
Bamboo + Wood Frame
Building Module & Environmental Strategies Diagram Solar Section
Ventilation Section
Ventilation Plan Water Flow Section
Water Flow Plan
Landscape & Program Phasing
Module Combination Plan
Building Legend 1. Principal’s Office 2. Teachers’ Lounge 3. Library 4. Computer Lab
5. 10th Grade Classroom 6. 11th Grade Classroom 7. 12th Grade Classroom 8. Boys’ Toilet
Module Combination Section
9. Girls’ Toilet 10. Central Play Area 11. Cisterns 12. Bicycle Parking
13. Educational Gardens 14. Medicinal Gardens 15. Outdoor Teaching Areas 16. Breezeways
Module Component Diagram
Solid Walls
Teaching Walls
Open Walls
Screen Walls
Outdoor and indoor relationship
Bamboo Pavilion Construction
Material: Angle Steel, Concrete, Wasted Beer Bottles, Bamboo, Steel, Gravel. Techniques Used: Electric Welding, Concrete Mixing, Concrete Pouring. Construction Process: https://vimeo.com/127756778
Section 1
Section 2
GSEducationalVersion
GSEducationalVersion
3,0" 1,5" 1,5"
3,0" 1,5" 1,5"
04 Innovation Hub - Midtown Atlanta ULI Competition Instructor: Simon Atkinson Collaborator : Yiqun Yang, Wei Xiao, Teng Li, Amruta Ponkshe Location: Atlanta, Georgia January, 2016
Design Thought Midtown today has emerged as an authentic urban community. A vibrant cosmopolitan center with a healthy mix of residences, businesses, cultural destinations, educational institutions, green space, and retail and restaurants - - all enhancing and supporting each other. Yet, Midtown remains a work in progress. Our design is guided to create a diverse neighborhood that provides a mixture of uses, affordable housing, linkages to higher education and healthcare to attract all age levels, and an inclusive local community reflecting Atlanta’s rich ethnic landscape. Launching this neighborhood into future is facilitated by the strategic leveraging of existing resources. Building upon the current momentum, The Innovation Hub connects Midtown Atlanta to a sustainable future where people, creativity, and economy are brought together to create a premier hi-tech district. These key pillars are leveraged through the availability of human capital from across Atlanta and Georgia. Intertwined within this strategy are the six themes of mobility, culture, community, education, environment, and business driving the urban design strategy within the project and foster innovative ideas propelling us towards the future and link The Innovation Hub at Midtown to Atlanta, Georgia, and the world.
Regional Analysis - Urban Sprawl Pre - 1939
1950 - 1960
2000 -2010
6%
Yearly rise in average price of square feet.
88%
Residences commute by car.
1980 - 1990
0.3% higher than national unemployment rate(5.6%,2015).
5.3% lower than natinal average(9.8% of city land area,2006).
Site Analysis
Innovation Hub
Office Typology
SINGLE MODULE - Small business
COMBINED MODULES LARGE MODULE - Established business -Growing Business (High-tech sucess)
ENTERPRISE
WORKSHOP - Manufacture and Sell
Commercial Boardwalk
Students
STUDIO
TWO BEDROOM
LIVE / WORK
Locals
PREPHASES
s
Conncetivity & Mobility
Slow Lane Green Axis Green Corridor
Street Car Bike Lane Subway
Green Connector
Field trips Paticipants Dog-lovers
One-day Visitors
Community Members
Runners
Medical Workers Empty Nesters
Young Professions
Biker Start-ups
PHASE 1
Tailgater
Events-goers
Tourists
Market Farmers
PHASE 2
PHASE 3
Student’s Backyard
POSTPHASE
INFRASTRUCTURE / LANDSCAPE 1 2 3 4
Tech Bridge Olympic Park Yellow Jacket Park Midtown Plaza 2
INNOVATION HUB Technology Village Spring Street Tower 3 Technology Village Residential Phase 2 4 Technology Village Office Phase 2 5 Varsity Expansion 6 Yellow Jacket Park Cafe 7 Market On The Green 8 Midtown Hotel 9 Shops of Midtown 10 Bank of America 11 Bank of America Community 12 Midtown Plaza Community 1 2
2
1
1
1 1 1 1 2
8
2
2
12
3 3 4 3 4
6
3
7
3
3 6
3
9
1
5
4
3
10
4
11
CIVIC 1 2 3 4
Georgia Tech Midtown Libary Media Center North Avenue Transit Station
FUTURE DEVELOPMENT 1 2 3 4
Mix-use Development 1 Mix-use Development 2 Mix-use Development 3 Mix-use Development 4
EXISTING SITE 1 Boddy Dodd Stadium at Historic Grant Field
4
2 Technology Square 3 Fox Theatre 4 Peachtree Street
O2
Mixing Soil
Midtown Hotel
Midtown Plaza Community
Bio-swale
Residential
Retention Roof Garden
O2
Library
Olympic Park
Elevated Highway Park - Yellow Jacket Park
Student Dormitary
05 Undergraduate Work - Strategic Design
Thought How can a design affect a city? One of the purposes of design is to solve problems. A designer should have an ability of observing the challanges and brings out a solution.
BETTER LIFE ?? LIVING IN A CITY FULL OF RUBBISH!
Problems
Garbage distribution
The Rubbish is everywhere
city partition
Commercial District
Residential Area
Scenic Area
Strategy Sanitaion Workers directly face the rubbish and are the rubbish liquadators. Their work will have a direct impact on the city’s garbage operation. The design takes the workers as a research object. From the perspective of liquadators, the design tries to solve the problem of the city. In the past 10 years, The change of the city’s daily life garbage
3,400/1,900 = 1.7894736842
12.50/5.54 = 2.2563176895 In the past 10 years, The change of the city’s sanitation worker
Left : current situation Right: actual demand
Conclusion: Demand for sanitation worker Each area , the distribution of workers is less than the demand.
WHERE IS A PLACE OF NO RUBBISH??
SANITATION WORKERS ACCIDENT
DEATH
Design Performance Contrast & Evaluation Sensibility
Hydroskimmer
Vacuum Cleaner
Instrumentality Comfortbleness Feasibility
Airflow
Approaches
Physical Cases
Floating
Vacuum
Pressure
Hydroskimmer
Vacuum Cleaner
Advantage of the design 1. Dexerous, easy to walk around 2. Can cross benefit 3. Simple to operate
Advantage of the design 1. Have high movability 2. High efficiency 3. Simple to operate
Detail Design & Process
Future Scenario
06 Professional Work - HOK - Mixed Use Concept Design - Commercial - Master Plan Competition - Justice - Corporate Building Renovation - Construction Documentation - Shop Drawings Review - Site Furniture Selection
FARMER’S
FARMER’S MARKET
Farmer’s Mark
OUTDOOR
OUTDOOR CULTURAL EVENTS
OUTDOOR
DECEMBER 01, 2016
OUTDOOR PERFORMANCE
MARKET
ket RAL EVENTS DECEMBER 01, 2016
OUTDOOR CULTURAL EVENTS
OUTDOOR PERFORMANCE Outdoor Cultural Event
OUTDOOR PERFORMANCE
Outdoor Performance
OUTDOOR PERFORMANCE
R CULTURAL EVENTS
ALLEN PARKWAY MIX
RMANCE
ALLEN PARK
R PERFORMANCE
ALLEN PARKWAY MIXED USE _ HOUSTON, TX
ALLEN PARKWAY MIXED USE _ HOUSTON, TX
06 Professional Work - HOK - Mixed Use Concept Design - Commercial - Master Plan Competition - Justice - Corporate Building Renovation - Construction Documentation - Shop Drawings Review - Site Furniture Selection
Project
IMPERIAL MARKET 198 Kempner Street Sugar Land, TX 77478 Prepared for
The Texas Real Estate Fund Client Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contract No: 14.10075.00
Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum, L.P. 3200 Southwest Freeway, Suite 900 Houston, TX 77027 USA t +1 713 407 7700 f +1 713 407 7809
N
L100
Project
IMPERIAL MARKET 198 Kempner Street Sugar Land, TX 77478 Prepared for
The Texas Real Estate Fund Client Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contract No: 14.10075.00
Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum, L.P. 3200 Southwest Freeway, Suite 900 Houston, TX 77027 USA t +1 713 407 7700 f +1 713 407 7809
N
L801
06 Professional Work - HOK - Mixed Use Concept Design - Commercial - Master Plan Competition - Justice - Corporate Building Renovation - Construction Documentation - Shop Drawings Review - Site Furniture Selection
DN
UP
06 Professional Work - Internship - Site design development - Construction documents - Graphics & marketing documents for public sector projects
- Construction document or private parks, streetscapes & private sector projects - Irrigation Caculation - Tree Protection Caculation - Schematic Design -Shop drawings review during construction phase.
Site Design Development - Creat a natural park-like setting in a recreational center.
Duty: Made sketches for several options and put the one option into Rhino and made digital production. Time Duration: 1 week.
Perspective I - Entrance Terrace
Perspective II - Meandering Path through Wildflowers & Native Grasses
Perspective III - Rain Garden to Screen Service Area
Perspective IV - West Plaza
Site construction document of a local Animal Shelter Video Link: https://vimeo.com/175296067
Detail Construction Drawing & Landscape Detail Section
07 Other Work APP Interface Design Related Link: https://vimeo.com/218040812
07 Other Work
Pen Sketches
07 Other Work Visual Communitcation Analytique Course Work Instructor: Hope Hasbrouk
The composition used building roofs to frame the work and draw continuous attention. The intention of studying how light penetrates various transparent media is shown by elaborate rendering. Animation Link: https://vimeo.com/128115311