Gabriela Fiorentino
PORTFOLIO
12
40
PLEASANTVILLE, NY
PELHAM, NY
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
163 WOLF’S LANE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
54 MONTAUK, NY MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
76
96
BROOKLYN, NY
NEW YORK, NY
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
112 SAN FRANCISCO, CA THESIS: INTO THE FOG
138 CARMEL, NY RESIDENTIAL RENOVATION
158 NEW YORK, NY KELLY BELLO STORE
168
188
BRONX, NY
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
FULL S.T.E.A.M
206 AMMAN, JORDAN NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
228
240
MALIBU, CA
VARIOUS LOCATIONS
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
HAND DRAWINGS
248 WEBSITE THE DREAM DOER
Project Type: Multi-Family Size: ±7,600sf Retail; ±102,600sf Residential Location: 70 Memorial Plaza – Pleasantville, NY Architectural Firm: Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC Roles and Responsibilities: DD, CD, Lobby Design Consultants: Civil Engineer: Hudson Engineering & Consulting, PC Landscape Architect: IQ Landscape Architects, PC Structural Engineer: Cuono Engineering, PLLC MEP Engineer: MGEngineering, DPC Traffic Engineer: AKRF, Inc. Elevator Consultant: IROS Elevator Design Services LLC
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA PLEASANTVILLE, NY
BUILDING DESIGN
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
This development includes a 4 story, ±110,300gsf building containing 82 apartments and street-level retail facing Memorial Plaza. Below the building, there will be a 3 level parking garage. The development also includes a pedestrian walkway that connects Memorial Plaza to Cooley Street and a 7,481gsf landscaped courtyard.
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 15
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
BUILDING DESIGN
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 17
THE FLOOR PLANS
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
WALL LEGEND
Parking Level: 03
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
WALL LEGEND
Parking Level: 02
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
WALL LEGEND
Parking Level: 02
NORTH
Level: 01 ARCH 19
NORTH
Level: 02
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
NORTH
Level: 03
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
NORTH
Level: 04
NORTH
Level: Roof/Penthouse
ARCH 21
ENLARGED FLOOR PLANS
NORTH
WALL LEGEND
GENERAL NOTES
Level: 01 (Lobby Area)
WALL LEGEND
GENERAL NOTES
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
NORTH
Level: 01
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
NORTH
GENERAL NOTES
RCP Level: 01 (Lobby Area)
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
RCP Level: 01
ARCH 23
WALL LEGEND
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
Level: 02
WALL LEGEND
GENERAL NOTES
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
NORTH
Level: 02
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
RCP Level: 02
GENERAL NOTES
NORTH
RCP Level: 02 ARCH 25
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
SECTIONS
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 27
LOBBY DESIGN
The lobby was design to captivate the essence of the overall design driving the building facade and materials. The reception is composed of a custom desk that mimics the central spine of the building and its relationship to the rest of the components, and a custom brick privacy screen.
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
The bricks are assembled to create a dynamic interaction with the person moving through the space by playing with different levels of privacy. As you move through the lobby the screen conceals or reveals multiple aspects of the space.
Brick Screen Assembly Diagram PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 29
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 31
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
CENTRAL STAIR DESIGN
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 33
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 35
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
LOBBY INTERIOR ELEVATION
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 37
70 MEMORIAL PLAZA
LOBBY INTERIOR ELEVATION
PLEASANTVILLE , NY
ARCH 39
Project Type: Multi-Family Project Phase: Design Development Size: ±1,400sf Retail; ±34,272sf Residential Location: 163 Wolf’s Lane – Pelham, NY Architectural Firm: Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC Roles and Responsibilities: DD Consultants: Civil Engineers: Catizone Engineering, PC Landscape Architect: IQ Landscape Architects, PC Owner: Concrete Ventures
163 WOLF’S LANE PELHAM, NY
BUILDING DESIGN
163 WOLF’S LANE
This new 54,309sf mixed-use development is to include 1,400sf ground floor retail, 28 apartments on floors 2-5, and parking on the ground and basement levels with a car elevator.
PELHAM , NY
ARCH 43
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
1
Basement Plan SCALE
1/8"=1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
Basement Plan
N2
163
3°1
4'4
3"E
92
WOLFS LANE
.22
VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
'
Owner
7"W
CONCRETE VENTURES
5'1
1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
16
0.4
6'
N6
6°4
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer
95.71' S84°22 '32"E
KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
STOP S06°29'42"E Rev.
WS
O
163 WOLF’S LANE
139.54'
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
WOLFS LANE
1
1st Floor Plan SCALE
1/8" = 1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
1st Floor Plan PELHAM , NY
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates 38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
1
2nd & 3rd Floor Plan SCALE
1/8"=1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
2nd and 3rd Floor Plan
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
1
4th Floor Plan SCALE
1/8"=1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
4th Floor Plan
ARCH 45
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
1
Penthouse Floor Plan SCALE
1/8"=1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
Penthouse Plan
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates 38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
NORTH
163 WOLF’S LANE
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
1
Roof Plan SCALE
1/8"=1'-0"
.
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Print Date: 03-05-20
Roof Plan PELHAM , NY
Sheet #:
Penthouse Terrace
Typical Apartment Kitchen
ARCH 47
163 WOLF’S LANE
PELHAM , NY
ARCH 49
INTERIOR ELEVATIONS
Elevation at Kitchen Type K3
10
8
Plan at Kitchen Type K3 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
SCALE
7
Unit 5B
1/2" = 1'-0"
163 WOLF’S LANE
1/2" = 1'-0"
SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
1/2"
6
Unit 5A
E
S
Similar at units 5C
Typical Elevation at Back of Kitchen Islands SCALE
Elevation
Elevation at Kitchen Type K2 SCALE
Similar at units 5C
4
9
Unit 5B
Unit 2A Similar at back of all kitchen islands
3
Elevation at Kitchen Type K1 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
2
Unit 2A Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2B, 3B, 4B, 2C, 3C, 4C, 2D, 3D, 4D, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2F, 3F, 4F, 2G, 3G, 4G, 2H, 3H, 4H
PELHAM , NY
Elevation SCALE
1/2" =
163
WOLFS LANE VILLAGE OF PELHAM NEW YORK
Owner CONCRETE VENTURES 1009 West Boston Post Road Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave, Pleasantville, NY 10570
Landscape Architect
Type K3
9
Unit 5B
Elevation at Kitchen Type K3 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
IQ Landscape Architects PC 31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th Floor White Plains, NY 10601
Unit 5B
Civil Engineer Catizone Engineering, P.C. One West Avenue, Suite 219 Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer KEYSTONE STRUCTURAL GROUP, INC 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associates
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instruments of service and are protected by copyright. These designs and drawings may not be reproduced or copied without written permission from Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC.
SCHEMATIC SET NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION Key Plan:
n Type K2
6
Unit 5A
Elevation at Kitchen Type K2 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Similar at units 5C
Unit 5A
Plan at Kitchen Type K2
5
SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Similar at units 5C
Unit 5A
8'
0
16'
Similar at units 5C
NORTH
Rev.
Date
Description
Sheet Title:
pe K1 Unit 2A
A, 4A, 2B, 3B, 4B, 2C, 4D, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2F, 3F, 2H, 3H, 4H
2
Elevation at Kitchen Type K1 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Unit 2A Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2B, 3B, 4B, 2C, 3C, 4C, 2D, 3D, 4D, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2F, 3F, 4F, 2G, 3G, 4G, 2H, 3H, 4H
1
Plan at Kitchen Type K1 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Unit 2A Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2B, 3B, 4B, 2C, 3C, 4C, 2D, 3D, 4D, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2F, 3F, 4F, 2G, 3G, 4G, 2H, 3H, 4H
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Sheet #:
Print Date: 03-05-20
ARCH 51
24'
11
Elevation at Bathroom Type B3 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Plan at Bathro
10
Unit 2A
SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2D, 3D, 4D
8
Plan at Bathroom Type B2 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
7
Unit 2C
Elevation at Bathroom Type B1 SCALE
163 WOLF’S LANE
Similar at units 3C, 4C, 2F, 3F, 2G, 3G, 5B
4
Typical Elevation at 30 x 60 Shower SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
All Units
S
1/2" = 1'-0"
6
Unit 2B
Elevation at Bath SCALE
Similar at units 3B, 4B, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2H, 3H, 4H
3
Plan at Typical 30 x 60 Shower SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
All Units
2
1/2" = 1'-0"
Simil 3H, 4
Elevation at Lobby Powder Room SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
PELHAM , NY
Lobby
16
WOLFS
VILLAGE O NEW Y Owner
CONCRETE VENT
1009 West Boston Post R Mamaroneck, NY 10543
Architect
23 Washington Ave,
at Bathroom Type B3 1'-0"
Plan at Bathroom Type B3
10
Unit 2A
SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2D, 3D, 4D
Unit 2A
9
Landscape Architec
Elevation at Bathroom Type B2 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Similar at units 3A, 4A, 2D, 3D, 4D
IQ Landscape Archi
Unit 2C
31 Mamaroneck Ave., 7th White Plains, NY 10601
Similar at units 3C, 4C, 2F, 3F, 2G, 3G, 5B
Civil Engineer
Catizone Engineer
Similar at One West Avenue, Suite 3H, 4H Larchmont, NY 10538
Structural Engineer
KEYSTONE STRUCT 711 Davis Street Scranton, PA 18505
MEP Engineer
Smith Miller Associa
38 N Main Street Pittston, PA 18640
These drawings are instrum protected by copyright. Th may not be reproduced or permission from Gallin Be
SCHEMA NOT CONSTR Key Plan:
Bathroom Type B1
6
Unit 2B
Elevation at Bathroom Type B1 SCALE
Similar at units 3B, 4B, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2H, 3H, 4H
1/2" = 1'-0"
Unit 2B
5
Plan at Bathroom Type B1 SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
0
Unit 2B Similar at units 3B, 4B, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2H, 3H, 4H
Similar at units 3B, 4B, 2E, 3E, 4E, 2H, 3H, 4H
NORTH
TYPICAL ADA CONVERSION NOTES FOR ALL ACCESSIBLE BATHROOM TYPES: 1.
PROVIDE BASE CABINETS THAT CAN BE REMOVED WITHOUT REMOVAL OR REPLACEMENT OF LAVATORY AND COUNTERTOP. FLOOR AND WALL FINISHES TO EXTEND UNDER AND BEHIND CABINETS.
2.
WALL REINFORCEMENT TO BE PROVIDED FOR FUTURE INSTALLATION OF GRAB BARS BEHIND AND ADJACENT TO TOILETS, BATHTUBS AND SHOWERS AS PER ANSI A117.1-2009 SECTIONS 604.5 AND 607.4.
3.
0 Shower All Units
2
Elevation at Lobby Powder Room SCALE
1/2" = 1'-0"
Lobby
1
1/2" = 1'-0"
Date
WALL REINFORCEMENT TO BE PROVIDED FOR FUTURE SEAT IN ACCESSIBLE SHOWERS AS PER ANSI A117.1-2009 SECTION 610.3.
Plan at Lobby Powder Room SCALE
Rev.
Sheet Title:
Lobby
Project #:
1717
Drawn:
AKS
Checked:
RLB
Print Date: 03-05-20
ARCH 53
Sh
Project Type: Institutional Size: 9,000 sf Location: Montauk Library – Montauk, NY Architectural Firm: Gallin Beeler Design Studio, PLLC Roles and Responsibilities: DD, CD Consultants: Structural Engineer: The DiSalvo Engineering Group MEP Engineer: Kohler Ronan, LLC Civil Engineer: Long Island Engineering & Architecture Lighting Engineer: Lightcraft Group
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION MONTAUK, NY
BUILDING DESIGN
This project will create 5,000sf of new area by filling in portions of the existing interior double-height space, adding a second level above the existing bay window, moving one of the exit stairs to an addition on the north end of the building and creating a significant addition and new entry on the east side of the building.
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
The renovation and expansion will include a larger children’s library, a new enclosed teen room, reorganized administrative area, and a 1,600sf addition that will house a new local history and fisherman’s center on the library’s main level. The upper level will include a cafe service counter and the existing south porch will be turned into an ocean overlook terrace. There are several green features that this project is also looking to incorporate including Green Roofs, Solar Panels, and Vertical Axis Wind Turbines.
MONTAUK , NY
ARCH 57
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
MONTAUK , NY
ARCH 59
SITE DESIGN
Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
PROJECT NOR T H
MONTAUK , NY
FFE 71.90
71.30
TC 71.66 BC 71.16
TF 67.50
TF 68.50
TC 70.24 BC 69.74
TC 71.25 BC 70.75
HP 70.90 TC 71.25 BC 70.75
TF 68.55
TC 68.25 BC 67.75
TF 68.70
TC 71.95 BC 71.45
TC 69.25 TF 68.75
67.80
67.97
LP 67.75
67.97
LEGEND 68.50
69.15
68.50
69.15
ARCH 61
EXTERIOR TERRACE DESIGN
There are three exterior terraces that compose the renovation and expansion of the library: a children’s terrace at the main level; an ocean view terrace; and a green roof terrace.
Montau Librar Expansio Renovat
The DiSalvo Engineering Gro
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & A
Lightcraft Group
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
RDA Landscape Architecture
PROJECT NORTH
Children’s Terrace Elevation MONTAUK , NY
Green Roof Terrace
Ocean view Terrace
ARCH 63
INTERIOR DESIGN
Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
J
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
LEGEND CEILING GENERAL NOTES
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
Lower Level RCP
MONTAUK , NY
Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
LEGEND CEILING GENERAL NOTES
Main Level RCP Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
LEGEND CEILING GENERAL NOTES
Upper Level RCP ARCH 65
Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
GENERAL NOTES
LEGEND
Lower Level Plan Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
GENERAL NOTES
LEGEND
Main Level Plan MONTAUK , NY
Children’s Library
Local History Center
ARCH 67
Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
GENERAL NOTES
LEGEND
Lower Level Plan Montauk Library Expansion & Renovation
The DiSalvo Engineering Group
Kohler Ronan LLC
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
Long Island Engineering & Architecture
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Architecture, PC
PROJECT NORTH
GENERAL NOTES
LEGEND
Main Level Plan MONTAUK , NY
Upper Level Library
Upper Level Bay Area
ARCH 69
ELEVATIONS
E
The
Koh
Lon
Ligh
RDA
LEGEND
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
P
MONTAUK , NY
Mon Lib Expan Reno
The DiSalvo Enginee
Kohler Ronan LLC
Long Island Enginee
Lightcraft Group
RDA Landscape Arc
PROJECT NOR T H
LEGEND
ARCH 71
Mo L Expa Ren
DETAILS
The DiSalvo En
Kohler Ronan L
Long Island En
Lightcraft Grou
RDA Landscape
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
PROJECT NORTH
MONTAUK , NY
ARCH 73
MONTAUK LIBRARY RENOVATION & EXPANSION
MONTAUK , NY
E
The
Kohl
Long
Ligh
RDA
P N
ARCH 75
Project Type: Colleges & Universities - Student Work Educational Institution: Pratt Institute Partner: Reneé Cohen Location: 81 Grand Avenue – Brooklyn, NY
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY BROOKLYN, NY
BUILDING DESIGN
The building’s design is a careful and calculated balance between privacy and community. It provides Pratt’s students with a healthy environment to study and learn. Each unit includes a private balconies that increases their appeal and provides shading to help manage solar gain.
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
Based on Pratt’s creative majors and environment, the recreational areas, located in the lobby and top floor, are made to enhance their education. The recreational areas include a lounge/work area, gallery space, outdoor space and cafeteria.
BROOKLYN, NY
ARCH 79
FACADE SYSTEM
The project’s facade is composed to maximize the views and light within the apartments to decrease the use of electricity during the day. Sustainable strategies includes a highly insulated and airtight building envelope, low-energy Prefabricated concrete components, of natural cross-ventilation and lighting, and heat recovery from exhaust air, wastewater and showers.
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
The building entrance is accessed through a ramp, next to the sidewalk, that leads to the lobby located below the street level. There you will find a lounge area with two atriums. The elevators are located in the center, next to the mailboxes. The gallery and cafeteria are located half-floor up, at street level, which leads to the outdoor spaces.
BROOKLYN, NY
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
THE LOBBY
BROOKLYN, NY
ARCH 83
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
THE PUBLIC AREAS
BROOKLYN, NY
ARCH 85
THE FLOOR PLANS
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
The building floor plans is made up by three twobedroom luxury unit configurations ; two single and a duplex unit create the building layout. The floor layout is consistent except for two floors, one located at the setback, which includes an exterior lounge terrace and the floors above that.
BROOKLYN, NY
Level: 00 // Basement
Level: 02 & 04
Level: 06
Level: 08
Level: 01 // Lobby
Level: 03 & 05
Level: 07 // Rooftop Lounge
Level: 09 // Roof
ARCH 87
THE UNITS
The unit arrangement of a typical floor is mainly configured so that each have access to an exterior area. The units comprise of a kitchen, bedroom, bathroom and a small living room area so the students would want to go to the larger communal areas.
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
Unit 01 // Duplex
BROOKLYN, NY
Duplex Kitchen
Duplex Living Room
ARCH 89
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
Unit 02
Unit 03
BROOKLYN, NY
Unit 02 & 03 Kitchen
Unit 02 & 03 Living Room
ARCH 91
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
DETAILS
BROOKLYN, NY
Unit Bedroom
Unit Bathroom
ARCH 93
PRATT INSTITUTE’S STUDENT DORMITORY
BROOKLYN, NY
ARCH 95
Project Type: Colleges & Universities - Student Work Educational Institution: Pratt Institute Partner: Yara Kawar Location: 3579 Harlem River Drive – New York, NY // Next to Inwood Park
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE NEW YORK, NY
THE BUILDING DESIGN
The project’s approach was largely inspired by the concept of water and its manipulation, in terms of speed and form. We focused on applying the concept to create a balance of efficiency, recreation and innovation. As a result, the building has an interconnected circulation and preforms to optimize the path of the boats to the water as well as develop the student’s physical and mental fitness.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
The main entrance is through the bottom of the building , where one can access the waterfront as well. The interior circulation is based on a circular pattern, which surround the central core. The training gym and locker rooms are next to the boat sheds on the first floor. While the second floor is composed of the multi-purpose area, classrooms and the administration.
NEW YORK, NY
ARCH 99
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
SECTIONS
NEW YORK, NY
North West Section
North East Section ARCH 101
THE FLOOR PLANS The building is composed of four major structural walls that support an habitable ceiling that connects across the site leading into Inwood park. The ramps in the roof change in steepness according to the pace we people to walk through the building. Shallow paths allowed moments of rest and enjoyment of the view. Whereas the ‘keep moving’ spaces are defined by stairs and narrow paths.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
Structural Plan
First Floor Plan
Ground Floor Plan
NEW YORK, NY
Second Floor Plan
Third Floor Plan
Roof Plan ARCH 103
THE STRUCTURE
The structural weight is distributed by the use of trusses within the wall, keeping the porosity of the building. The boat shed is composed of trusses and columns. The ramps structure is composed of a series of steel beams and girders.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
The building circulation plays on the speed as well as the person’s views as they walk through it. The ramps braids into the interior spaces, located in between the boatsheds, but in some areas people are only able to peek inside the building. There are times when you can see the conditioned interior spaces while still being outside.
NEW YORK, NY
ARCH 105
THE CIRCULATION
The building circulation plays on the speed as well as the person’s views as they walk through it. The ramps braids into the interior spaces, located in between the boatsheds, but in some areas people are only able to peek inside the building. There are times when you can see the conditioned interior spaces while still being outside.
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
The varsity boats are located on one side and the community boats on another. In order to enhance the efficiency of getting the boats to the water, the Varsity boat shed is position at and optimal angle, giving them a direct and effortlessly traveled path. Whereas the community boats, though still efficient, they have a less direct path to the water, since this shed is less frequented. This path they would have to turn the boats towards the water, but without difficulty.
NEW YORK, NY
ARCH 107
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
THE PROGRAM
Boatshed & Gym
NEW YORK, NY
Main Area
Boatshed, Deck & Main Area
ARCH 109
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY’S BOATHOUSE
NEW YORK, NY
ARCH 111
Project Type: Architecture & Urban Design - Student Work (THESIS) Educational Institution: Pratt Institute Partner: Yara Kawar Location: San Francisco, CA - Various Locations Award: Distinguished Thesis Project Nomination
THESIS: INTO THE FOG SAN FRANCISCO, CA
THE BUILDING DESIGN
We exist within the environment, we are engulfed by it, we are the environment. It affects us and we affect it. The hyperobject, an entity which blends time and space, imposes an “asymmetrical confrontation” between the people and the hyperobject that can frustrate the assumption of humans implied power over nature through the built world. This confrontation, raises the question of coexistence.
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
Can architecture be meaningfully enmeshed in a hyperobject—in this case, fog— in order to renegotiate the relationship between the built world and its ecological context? We reimagine the association with fog, we localize it within its vast system, bridging a communication between the people, fog and space. Fog dwells in many forms, creating different layers of legibility within the occupied terrain. As the terrain is modified the fog inhabits and moves differently around it. Fog induces a somber emotion and fear, giving power to our primal instincts as we are weakened by our dependability on sight, connotations reinforced by the media. Its grandeur is misunderstood.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
Has power to change people’s perspective and experience of an ordinary place. In San Francisco, the presence of fog, as a hyperobject, has a destabilizing effect on the citizens, forcing them to recognize it as part of the character or essence of the city. What they have yet to do is to understand how to inhabit the fog and its different volumes. The notion of the hyperobject is beginning to “infiltrated human social and philosophical space.”
ARCH & UD 115
THE PROPOSAL
Our proposal is to create a bridge of communication between the people and the fog through architecture. Fog then becomes a type of building material, reshaping our usual understanding of the “typical” building materials. We choreograph movement through the space for the ability to experience different experiences of fog, whether it relates to density, the sectional difference, or even the physical levels of interaction. The whole journey becomes a balance between scripted and unscripted choreography. The meandering paths begin to offer tranquil resting spots, through niches embedded within the site. The three varying space sizes begin to allow for specific amounts of people within each pathway or in the breathing spaces. These ranges of design opportunities slow down movement they allow for the constant reveal and concealing of our surroundings.
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
The alliance of existing and built fog carves a path for play within the architecture. It heightens the dialogue between the built world and the environment by the play of scales that act together at a vast system. Achieving a small scale of constructed fog, gives way to the initial crossover as it re-introduces fog to the built world, frustrating their preconceptions of fog as an everyday impairing nuisance and culturally feared hyperobject.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
The scripted distribution of fog in the city exploits on fog’s ability constantly change the spaces though obscuring and revealing. Fog surges through controlled apertures that serve as a marker of when fog becomes an object that morphs the existing space, giving a sense of privacy and directionality. Fog begins to take serve as a temporary architectural material forming implied enclosures, up to the point when it fails as an object, dematerializing the structure allowing for light to act as a guide.
ARCH & UD 117
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
SITE ANALYSIS
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 119
SITE SELECTION
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
We have identified a constellation of spaces between places formed by the grid matrix that results from the nine different grids that compose San Francisco and the overlapping moments of the street hierarchy. This constellation of sites brings forth an implied connective tissue that transforms the experience of each space according to its location. Fog veils over San Francisco at different densities. It arrives from the West slowly dematerializing the city as it makes its way to the East side of the city, but it rarely approaches it. We emphasize this contrast by creating an ambiguity between the role of our architecture and fog as one transitions through the constellations of interventions.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 121
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
THE RESEARCH EXPERIMENTS: FOG MATERIALIZATION
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 123
FOG STRIP SECTIONS
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
The West side is empowered by the morphing avalanche of fog that drapes over it, allowing the architecture to act as an agent to move through the fog. The circulatory path is altered to achieve different levels of occupancy within the fog, letting it conceal the paths and city grid relative to your position in time and space.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 125
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
FOG STRIP // BOULEVARD
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 127
BUILT FOG: RESIDUAL SPACES INTERVENTION
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
The eastern side of San Francisco is less affected by fog giving architecture the opportunity to distribute and manipulate the morphology, pressure and directionality at which fog begins to engulf the residual spaces, allowing it to then follow its own path. Fog inhabits the area and erases the outside world of the city and limits the view of the surrounding pillars, revealing it at certain times. The paths create a narrative of experiential space. The residual spaces within the city are activated by the built fog enhancing the multiple qualities of fog and magnifying its scale throughout the city. The scripted system of fog sheds light to the grandeur of the fog as an hyperobject. The existing fog and built fog are choreographed to magnify the grandeur of the hyperobject. The urban fog system is activated by the increasing moments of flux when the locals and tourist are filling the street.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 129
BUILT FOG: MARKET ST. AND BUSH ST.
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
The interventions are illuminated with low-beam light that guides the user through the fog, the light takes on its identity within the fog. Light becomes the fog. A vagueness comes over everything. There becomes an interplay, a question of control between all the variables at play, whether it becomes the light, the people, the fog or the architecture. All this can either raise curiosity or drive us back to somber fog effect that is usually represented when thinking of fog. As we take it down to human scale, we choreograph its effects through architecture on the people that inhibiting it. As we begin to produce fog we begin to play with the notion of a hyperobject, controlling the time and space where it distributes upon. However only for a certain amount of time. Fog as a scientific entity, is elusive and ethereal, defying our attempts at easy prediction.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 131
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
BUILT FOG: MARKET ST. AND BUSH ST.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 133
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
BUILT FOG: MARKET ST. AND KEARNY ST.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 135
THESIS: INTO THE FOG
BUILT FOG: YACHT RD, AND MARINA BLVD.
SAN FRANCISCO, CA
ARCH & UD 137
Project Type: Residential Renovation Project Size: 800 sq.ft. Location: Carmel, NY Design Firm: Gabriela Fiorentino Designs
RESIDENTIAL RENOVATION Carmel, NY
RENOVATION
CARMEL , NY
ARCH 141
THE DESIGN
This house is a foreclosed multi-family that was purchased by a couple, who intend to live in one of the units, to be renovated, on the right. The interior of this unit contains elements of a Tudor style; exposed wood beam structure in the ceiling, a stone fireplace with a wooden mantel and the asymmetrical spaces that resulted from the additions of the kitchen and dormer. Due to its many years under foreclosure and era it was built, this unit of the multi-family lacked specific contemporary spatial needs and functionality. The renovation design accentuates the coziness of the house brought by the existing Tudor elements and combine it with some modern textures in the kitchen and bathroom that will complement the living room area. We applied wainscot paneling around the living room leading up the stairs to the second floor to enhance the existing warmth of the place, and colored it gray to accent the dark wood colors of the room visually.
Half-Bath
RENOVATION
The plan of the renovation visually centralizes and brings forth the hearth around the main gathering space. The new kitchen’s layout allows for more storage space and accommodates the cooking and dining necessities of modern society. The location of the stove and refrigerator are hidden from the living room view, this way the messy involvement of the cooking process is not in immediate sight while entertaining guests.
CARMEL , NY
W/D area
Kitchen Entrance
SECOND FLOOR
Electrical Closet
Bathroom
FIRST FLOOR
Living Room
Bedroom ARCH 143
RENOVATION FIRST FLOOR PLAN
EXISTING PLAN 24 - 10 1
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CARMEL , NY
PROPOSED PLAN 24 - 10 1
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ARCH 145
KITCHEN DESIGN 10 - 2 2 -0
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CARMEL , NY
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RENOVATION
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Fiber Glass Insulation Wood Floor Tile/Stone KITC EN WEST ELEVATION 1 Floor A103 Sheathing
1 -
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N ORIENTATION KITC EN NORT 1 A103 GABRIELA FIORENTINO
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SCALE 1/4’’=1’-0’’
KITC EN EAST ELEVATION
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ARCH 147
1 -0
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RENOVATION
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KITC EN EAST ELEVATION
CARMEL , NY
13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION MATERIAL KEYS Fiber Glass Insulation Wood Floor Tile/Stone Floor Sheathing Finish Stud
N ORIENTATION GABRIELA FIORENTINO
REVISIONS: DATE
TYPE
CONSULTANT:
KITCHEN DETAILS 0
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ARCH SCALE 1/4’’=1’-0’’
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BATHROOM
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TOILET DETAIL
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CARMEL , NY
EAD DETA
13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION 0 -
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MATERIAL KEYS Fiber Glass Insulation Wood Floor
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BAT ROOM SINK DETAIL Tile/Stone Floor
1 - 8 5/1 Sheathing
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The bathroom combines the wood 4 - marble tiles1to - create a synergy with between 0the historical Reand essed the Sho er modern. The bathroom spaces Shel es allow for concealed storage cabinet to blend with the walls thoroughly. BAT ROOM DUAL-FLUS 2
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ARCH 151
Re essed Mirror/
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13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION 13 STUYVESANT ROAD
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BAT ROOM SINK DETAIL
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Wood Floor Tile/Stone Floor
BAT ROOM SINK DETAIL
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CONSULTANT: CONSULTANT:
BATHROOM DETAILS 2 -
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Fiber Glass Insulation
Wood Floor
0' - 1/2" 0' - 1/2" 0' - 1/2" 0' - 1/2" 0' - 8.5" 0' - 7.5" 0' - 7" 0' - 8.5" 0' - 7.5" 0' - 7"
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BATHROOM DETAILS
CARMEL , NY Interior
3 A103 3 A103
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SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’ LINEN CLOSET ELEVATION SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’
1' - 9"
13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION 13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION
Opened 90º Opened 90º
0' - 1.437"
LINEN CLOSET ELEVATION 3 A103 SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’ LINEN CLOSET ELEVATION 3 A103 SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’ ETAIL (TECTUS 640 3D)
0' - 7.5" 0' 0' -4' 1"- -7"3"
Fiber Glass Insulation
Fiber Glass Insulation Wood Floor
Interior
Wood Floor
Interior
DA
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Tile/Stone Floor Sheathing Sheathing Finish
Exterior
CON
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Finish Stud 0' - 1.260" 0' - 1.260" Stud 0' - 1.260" 0' - 1.260" 0' - 0.650"
Exterior
EX FIR EX FIR 0 0
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SC LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL ELEVATION SC LINEN CLOSET ELEVATION 3 SCALE @ 4’’=1’-0’’ LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL LINEN CLOSET ELEVATION A103 3ELEVATION SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’ N A103 SCALE @ 4’’=1’-0’’ SCALE @ 1/2’’=1’-0’’ N ORIENTATION
3 A103 3 A103
ETAIL (TECTUS 640 3D) SHOWER RECESSED NICHE 3 SHOWER RECESSED NICHE A103 3 SCALE @ 1’’=1’-0’’ A103 SCALE @ 1’’=1’-0’’ pened 90º
ORIENTATION GABRIELA FIORENTINO GABRIELA FIORENTINO
REVISIONS:
Interior
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Interior Interior
DATE
Opened 90º Opened 90º TYPE
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3 A103
LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL ELEVATION 3 A103 SCALE @ 4’’=1’-0’’ LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL ELEVATION
SCALE @ 4’’=1’-0’’ LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL (TECTUS 640 3D) 3 LINEN CLOSET HINGE DETAIL (TECTUS 640 3D) A103 3 SCALE @ 7’’=1’-0’’ A103 SCALE @ 7’’=1’-0’’
0' - 1.260"
Interior Interior CONSULTANT:
CONSULTANT:
0' - 0.157"
0' - 1.260" 0' - 1.260" Exterior Exterior
0' - 0.157"
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1' - 9" 1' - 9" REV REV
Tile/Stone Floor
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0' - 1" 0' - 1/2" 0' - 1/2" 1'0'--0"7.5"1' - 0"0' -1'7"- 0" 1' - 0" 0' - 8.5" 0' - 1/2" 0' - 1/2"
38"
0' - 0' 0.157" - 0.157" 0' - 0' 1.260" - 1.260"
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Interior
1' - 0" 1' - 0" 1' - 0" 1' - 0"
Adjustable Height Shelves Adjustable MATERIAL KEYS 0' - 3" 0' - 3" Height Shelves MATERIAL KEYS
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ARCH 153
RENOVATION SECOND FLOOR PLAN
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CARMEL , NY
PROPOSED PLAN Bathroom plumbing wall
24' - 10"
17' - 3 1/4"
3' - 2" First floor wall to the new bathroom for plumbing
6' - 9"
6' - 11" 2' - 8"
1' - 4"
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6 A104
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NEW: SECOND FLOOR PLAN
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ARCH 155
WASHER AND DRYER AREA
RENOVATION
This space was design to accommodate W/D machines and provide extra storage space for bathroom supply, linen, and towels. The W/D machines are located at the bottom cabinet, it has doors, and it is elevated from the floor to mitigate the noise and vibrations onto the floor below.
CARMEL , NY
8" 1' - 5"
6' - 7"
2"
13 STUYVESANT ROAD RENOVATION 0 -
3' - 5"
2 -
1 -0
1 -5
2 -
MATERIAL KEYS
Fiber Glass Insulation Wood Floor
2 A10
BAT ROOM SINK DETAIL 6' - 2"
Tile/Stone Floor
1 - 8 5/1 Sheathing
1 - 1 /8 6 A104
WASHER AND DRYER CABINET DETAIL
Finish Stud
0
1
2
13 STUYVESANT R RENOVATION
4
5/8
8"
2 -
N 1' - 5"
1/1
Tile/Stone Fl
6' - 7"
2"
0 -15
REVISIONS: DATE
Sheathing Finish
3' - 5"
0 - 2 /1
BAT ROOM S OWER SCALE 1’’=1’-0’’
Wood Floor
GABRIELA FIORENTINO
0 - 4 /1 2 A10
Fiber Glass
ORIENTATION
3' - 5"
6' - 7"
MATERIAL KEYS
0 -
8"
ose
1' - 5" 2"
SCALE 1/2’’=1’-0’’
2 - 1/1
-4
5’-0 0 in
0 - 2 /4
0
0 -
WASHER A
6 A104
TYPE
Stud
EAD DETAIL
1 -
6' - 2"
N
CONSULTANT:
ORIENTATION
AIL
2
1/2’’=1’-0’’
2 -
6 A104
4
WASHER AND DRYER CABINET DETAIL
BATHROOM DETAILS
0
1 0
2 1
2
4
SCALE 1/2’’=1’-0’’ SCALE 1/2’’=1’-0’’
A501
4
GABRIELA FIORENTIN
8
REVISIONS: DATE
TYPE
ARCH 157
Project Type: Commercial Project Size: 250 sq.ft. Location: New York, NY Design Firm: Gabriela Fiorentino Designs
KELLY BELLO STORE New York, NY
COMMERCIAL
NEW YORK , NY
ARCH 161
INTERIOR DESIGN
COMMERCIAL
Kelly Bello Designs is an up and coming jewelry store, focused on sophistication and simplicity, two words that drove the design of the store. We conveyed a sense of elegance in such a compact space through the use of textures, fabric, and depth in the walls. The use of soft velvet padded wall panels was one of the ways to enhance the sense of soft touch. Also the use of marble wallpaper to bring out the pinks of the room. Mirrors were placed in three distinctive spaces to visually expand the space and continue the play between the fabric and the wall textures. These allowed the visitor to have a glimpse of the soft padded walls before entering. To accommodate the use of an office and jewelry customization area we used a gray velvet curtain to act as a movable wall to separate the office space from the main store.
NEW YORK , NY
Online Store inventory Display Area
Upper Storage
Entrance
Seating Area Office Space Mini Fridge
ARCH 163
SPATIAL TRANSITION
COMMERCIAL
As soon as you enter the store you begin to transition through the different textures in the space. Starting with a marble wallpaper and dusty pink wall with a small mirror. Once you enter the main room you transition into soft velvet wall panels while continuing the marble pattern as a visual. On the back wall, we have the jewelry and iPad, which allows you to see the online collection that is not on display. The office is located at the opposite end of the entrance secluded with a curtain to allow for privacy.
NEW YORK , NY
ARCH 165
COMMERCIAL
THE STORE
NEW YORK , NY
ARCH 167
Project Type: Architecture & Urban Design - Student Work Educational Institution: Columbia University Partner: Kristen Reardon, Haochen Yang, Ping Yin Location: Port Morris, Bronx, NY
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST BRONX, NY
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
BRONX, NY
If Port Morris is left without a flood protection system, the community will be vulnerable to major devastation from storms. Creating a flood barrier through a natural levee along the waterfront will protect the area from rising sea level and the increased frequency of floods. For this to be successful, susceptible businesses will form together to create a collective strategy to fund the levee. The levee offers a public waterfront park that adds environmental and social value to the community.
UD 171
FLOOD RISK
FLOOD RISK Within the flood zone, there is a diverse amount of industries. There are also local businesses, such as the Port Morris Distillery and Miss Gimble’s Bakery. Industrial infrastructures with a wider market, like the NY Post and Coca Cola, are located along the edge where there is an increase in flooding risk. Currently, some informal community activities have been occurring around the area demonstrating the want to reclaim the waterfront by the community.
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
If major infrastructure is not created, the risk of flood is imminent. Over the next 35 years, the amount of properties within the flood zone is expected to increase. With flood insurance increasing at a rate of 18% annually, many will no longer be able to afford to keep their businesses. With every increase in flood insurance, the property value decreases, forcing small businesses who are unable to afford these high prices out. This leaves room for only large chain industry.
BRONX, NY
UD 173
LEVEE BOARD IMPLEMENTATION
To prevent the reliability on flood insurance, the Levee Board can be created to privately fund this levee development. The Levee board would consist of major stakeholders in the area such as Silvercup, FedEx, and NY Post and could invest large funds upfront. Any other smaller businesses could choose to invest in the creation of the corporation. If they chose to invest they would become stakeholders of the Levee Board that would collect a levee tax. If they do not invest they must pay the levee tax. As new developments come in they would pay a levee tax. Over time once the initial invest is paid off, opportunity for members of the Board to earn profit can occur. In contrast to the recent mixed use residential zoning on the west side. We Hope to preserve the manufacture district on the eastern side, while promoting new clean businesses to develop.
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
The current land use is composed of manufacturers and industrial businesses. Various storage facilities and warehouses as well as a sample of small local businesses in the area. Through the creation of the sustainable Levee park can allow possible creative programming to develops such as private and collaborative fabrication spaces. Interdisciplinary creative studios, rentable workspaces among many others The creation of the Levee would provide sustainable public spaces and preserve the industrial waterfront As a whole, we aim to create a green industrial park that can grow over time because of its flood protection system that provides a vibrant public space.
BRONX, NY
UD 175
PLAN DEVELOPMENT
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
To create an active waterfront, we proposed three major interventions: development of clean manufacturing buildings along the water, the levee park along the water to protect the area from flooding, and green infrastructure along the streetscape to create connect to the water and provide stormwater capture. The Levee Park contains accessible pathways, opportunities for recreation, and ways to clean polluted water. The streetscape includes a pedestrian only greenway, green streets as a way-finding technique, and makes use of an abandoned railway.
BRONX, NY
UD 177
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
STREETSCAPE
BRONX, NY
The levee is built to an elevation of 18 to prevent the future inundation of 100 year storm with the expected sea level rise of 2050. This protects the land and provides opportunity for a large public space. This area includes a viewing platform that encourages community gathering, a saltwater marsh to help clean polluted water, recreation space activates the historic gantries. Three large stormwater tanks are proposed below the berms to collect run-off. Green infrastructure practices are employed along St. Anne’s which could be transformed into a pedestrian. Areas through the manufacturing zone utilize bioswales along the main bus routes and walkable connection to the subway connection to create way-finding to the water. The abandoned rail below grade is also activated with drainage swales and spaces for community gathering.
UD 179
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
BRONX, NY
UD 181
SYSTEM ANALYSIS
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
The individual swales, permeable paving, and rain gardens can collect water and re-charge the ground. Any overflow in these areas will be sent to the storage tanks. Here the water can be re-used as greywater recycling in the new developed buildings and to irrigate the levee park. Any overflow here can be sent to the water treatment plant. By collecting so much water, the use of CSOs would be less frequent and help to clean the water.
BRONX, NY
The green infrastructure is vital to the success of the levee to prevent water from pooling in the lower inland. To prevent this, the run-off of impermeable surfaces has showed the need for stormwater tanks that collect overflow from these systems. By using concrete tanks below the berm and allowing the abandoned rail to become an overflow tank, the volume of all of the run-off can be collected.
UD 183
SPACE VISUALIZATION
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
Along the bus routes the green infrastructures acts as a way-finding system that directs you to the Levee park at the waterfront. Water can be collected in the bioswales located within widen sidewalks. There is also spaces for seating along the route to allow leisure for both residents and workers.
BRONX, NY
UD 185
THE EDGE: AN URBAN CATALYST
SPACE VISUALIZATION
BRONX, NY
UD 187
Project Type: Architecture & Urban Design - Student Work Educational Institution: Columbia University Partner: Bridgett Cruz, Jessica Adiwijaya Location: Main Street, Poughkeepsie, NY
FULL S.T.E.A.M POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
FULL STEAM
Innovation has been a founding part of Poughkeepsie’s economic landscape. Much of this is attributable to IBM, the leader of received American patents for 23 consecutive years. Once the dominant employer of the area, IBM is now one of many technology forward companies in New York State. Because of NYS initiatives, the high concentration of technology in the Hudson valley, as well Poughkeepsie’s central location along the tech corridor, Poughkeepsie has the potential to become the heart of New York TECH.
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 191
FULL STEAM
CURRENT TECHNOLOGY ASSETS
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 193
CURRENT ECONOMY AND PERCEPTION
FULL STEAM
Learning from IBM’s failure as a centralized company model, our strategy for Poughkeepsie is economic development through revitalization, diversification, and accessibility of the technology and manufacturing industries. This will be implemented through cooperative and community based development.
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 195
TECH CENTER DEVELOPMENT
We propose a strategy of economic revitalization through the concentration and expansion of S.T.E.A.M. Industries on Main St. Pulling from numerous resources: • •
•
FULL STEAM
• •
Existing technology and manufacturing infrastructures, Robust investments from the National, State, and Private sectors aimed at technology industry development near SUNY/ CUNY schools, High concentration of quality vacant buildings and lots, Local amenities, and Easy accessibility by the highway and metro north systems we offer a strategy that creates an epicenter of dense, diverse technologies rather than isolated developments.
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 197
FULL STEAM
TECH CAMPUS SYSTEM GUIDE
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 199
FULL STEAM
CENTER TECH CORRIDOR
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 201
STREETSCAPE AND TRANSPORTATION
FULL STEAM
This will provide a sharing of resources and knowledge, intercollegiate collaboration, friendly competition, job creation and accessibility of S.T.E.A.M. to the local population. In addition, this plan offers the local Universities an opportunity to invest in Poughkeepsie City. Full S.T.E.A.M. establishes a new technology forward civic infrastructure that is designed to provide the necessary conduit for local youth to participate in and eventually enter the S.T.E.A.M. workforce
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 203
FULL STEAM
POUGHKEEPSIE, NY
UD 205
Project Type: Architecture & Urban Design - Student Work Educational Institution: Columbia University Partner: Ahmed Jawdat, Mayra Mahmood, Yang Liao, Zarith Pineda Location: No Man’s Land, Jordan
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS AMMAN, JORDAN
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
No Man’s Land: A Water Commons is a commentary to the humanitarian crisis in the informal camps in the North-Eastern border zone between the Syrian and Jordanian berms, where over 80,000 refugees are stranded. Rather than viewing the zone as a holding area, this project proposes to reimagine the berm as an inhabitable productive landscape.
AMMAN, JORDAN
By using fog harvesting, waste water management, permaculture and landscaping techniques, the project creates the possibility of an autonomous No Man’s Land. Through the harvesting of this scarce resource not only is a humanitarian crisis mitigated but it proposes to create a different strategy for organizing emergency migration and a long term ecological solution for Jordan’s water infrastructure.
UD 209
AID AND HUMANITARIAN EFFORTS
3
1
4 13
6 11
5 2
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
9 12 8
7
10
11
10 9 12
1. Ottoman Empire 2. Arabi a 3. Syria 4. Lebanon 5. Trans-Jorda n 6. Ira q 7. Egypt 8. Saudi Arabi a 9. Israe l 10. West Ban k 11. Gaza 12. Jordan 13. No Man’s Land
The once permeable borders of the Middle East have hardened more and more dividing people, ecologies, and resources. This has created a series of forced exiles across the region. Jordan has housed refugees throughout the history of the Modern Middle East and faces strain on its resources, particularly water. A border once drawn with a ruler has now been delineated as a zone through the construction of eastern berms by the Syrian and Jordanian Governments. This zone became a “No Man’s Land.”
AMMAN, JORDAN
OIL
lentils | chick peas | white beans
1-5 people
30 kg
10 k g1
6+ peopl e
60 kg
20 kg
k g2
2 kg
k g3
4 kg
L
6 L4
2 kg x 3
kg x 3
UD 211
THE BERM
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
Since 2011, The Jordan-Syria border has become the point of entry of a mass exodus of Syrian refugees. As the situation in Syria worsened, hundreds of thousands of people emigrated to Jordan by land. As the North-western border crossings began to close, refugees were forced to cross through the desert on the Eastern section of the Jordan-Syria border. Having transformed from an informal crossing to a militarized formal crossing point, the passage of Syrians fleeing through No Man’s Land was eventually blocked, turning it into a de-facto refugee camp within the border. The berms began to swell with refugees at two main points, Rukban (with around 77,500 refugees) and Hadalat (with around 7,500 refugees). Currently, there are two berms along the edges of the 1916 Sykes Picot Jordan-Syria border line - a line flanked by the aforementioned berms creating a seven kilometer wide “No Man’s Land.” The southern berm delineates the official point of entry into Jordan.
AMMAN, JORDAN
UD 213
CURRENT CLIMATIC ADVANTAGE
We analyzed fog patterns across the region to see where the greatest amount of fog could be harvested. Fog is produced when the heat absorbed by the earth during the day is released into the atmosphere during night, mixing with cool wind. The greater the temperature difference, the greater the amount of fog. This inversion makes arid climates optimal for fog harvesting.
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
To ameliorate the current conditions facing refugees at the berm, the existing placement and congregations of tents were analyzed then compared with the UNHCR Emergency Guidelines for refugee camps community standards. Constructed sand berms serviced with facilities are proposed as an infrastructure to cluster refugees and service them as a clustering unit. Each berm cluster will consist approximately of 40 families, roughly 200 people. A range that is serviced by combinations of fog towers that can collect 800-2000 liters daily and shaded fog wells that can collect around 500 liters a day.
AMMAN, JORDAN
POSSIBILITY OF FOG
MORE FOG
LESS FOG
UD 215
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
SITE TRANSFORMATION
The site is transformed through a phasing strategy: 1. The puncturing of the berm using on site tractors to allow resources entrance. 2. Humanitarian aid trucks drop off resources to construct the shaded fog collector. 3. Installation and assembly of the shaded fog collectors and solar panels. 4. Refugees begin to cluster around fog collector. 5. Additional resources trucked to the site to build fog towers and the backbone sanitation service infrastructure. AMMAN, JORDAN
6. Cut & Fill topography: Tractors begin creating a keyline from berm to plant, allowing water to channel from the cluster into the permaculture. Permaculture begins. 7. Repetition of phases 1-6, accounting for aeolian processes to strengthen berm integrity and mass to create a “berm cluster.” 8. Once the permaculture systems have matured, harvesting of food and resources such as date trees can begin to self sustain communities.
UD 217
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
BERM CLUSTER
AMMAN, JORDAN
UD 219
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
WATER SYSTEM CYCLE
The shaded fog structure can be constructed by refugees from on site material. The structure is built out of palm wood while the mesh is knitted from ration sacks used to transport aid. This structure harvests enough drinking water while providing shade and congregational spaces. Some configurations have been designed to harvest solar power for electricity. The large fog tower is built similarly but has the ability to harvest more water.
AMMAN, JORDAN
The spiral structure carries the water collected from fog into an underground reservoir tank. The water collected is then channeled into the service spaces, permaculture and shaded fog catchers. Clean water from the fog collectors is channeled into the showers and greywater into the latrines. The black water is channeled through the back of a berm into a constructed wetland to filter the water so it can be used for irrigation in the permaculture landscape.
UD 221
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
WATER SYSTEM CYCLE
AMMAN, JORDAN
UD 223
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
AMMAN, JORDAN
The Jordan Response Plan for the Syrian Crisis has received aid from organizations such as UNICEF, UNHCR, Red cross and other NGO’s to provide resources to Syrian Refugees. The plan has allotted 2.6 billion dollars’ worth of aid, while our initially proposed intervention in Hadalat would cost roughly $110,000.
UD 225
NO MAN’S LAND: A WATER COMMONS
FUTURE SCENARIOS
The project seeks to respond to a humanitarian conflict created by a political conflict. However, the conflict may remain keeping people in holding for the foreseeable future, a scenario that begs the question - if the conflict subsides and refugees are able to return home - will this area become a ruin? Perhaps, a memorial of a precarious moment in time. Ecological scenario embraces a future once the borders open and the refugees leave to be with their family. The fog catchers would continue to collect water and the permaculture would continue to grow, forming a wild ecological landscape.
AMMAN, JORDAN
Could No Man’s Land turn into a future Megacity? Megacity scenario embraces a future if the borders take longer than expected to open and this become populated as a selfsustainable city.
UD 227
Project Type: Construction Documents - Student Work Educational Institution: Pratt Institute Location: Malibu, CA
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS Malibu, CA
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
MALIBU, CA
ARCH 231
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
MALIBU, CA
ARCH 233
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
MALIBU, CA
ARCH 235
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
MALIBU, CA
ARCH 237
CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
MALIBU, CA
ARCH 239
Project Type: Personal - Student Work Educational Institution: Pratt Institute Location: Various
HAND DRAWINGS Various Locations
HAND DRAWINGS
HAND DRAWINGS
The following are a few of the hand-drawings I have done during my time as a student at Pratt. Space, light and form were explored through a series of representational techniques. The human body is one of the most complex forms where light and space interacts in interesting ways. Once this interaction and the creation of space was captured and understood, one was able to create their own complex space where the play between form and light exists. Below the perspective drawings there is an axon and section study of a sub-sequential cube design. Each component is critical in opening the box, and it is analyzed as three interlocking moments.
VARIOUS LOCATIONS
ARCH 243
HAND DRAWINGS
Pratt’s Library Perspective
VARIOUS LOCATIONS
Pratt’s Engine Room Perspective
ARCH 245
HAND DRAWINGS
Wooden Puzzle Box with Sequence Opening
VARIOUS LOCATIONS
Larger Wooden Puzzle Box with Sequence Opening
ARCH 247
Project Type: Website Design, Graphic Design & Branding Business Type: Online Business - Blog Website URL: thedreamdoer.com Design Firm: Gabriela Fiorentino Designs
THE DREAM DOER WEBSITE
WEB DESIGN
The Dream Doer is a project that required the application of branding and coding techniques on Squarespace to create a cohesive, clean website and user interface. The branding colors and icons give the website the intended personality display with a bit of character. The logo icon is composed of a lightbulb that is combined with a pen. It symbolizes the conceptual ideas becoming tangible as they are sketched and planned through pen and paper. The pen is normally the means by which people begin developing ideas. It acts as the agent to transforms your ideas into a tangible inked reality, helping you clarify your vision so you can make it happen. This is the emphasis go the website, the journey or going from a dreamer to a doer.
THE DREAM DOER
The graphics were made to seem like sketches or hand drawn images. The icons are simple line sketches, whereas the main pages introductions, such as the contact page, about page and the newsletter subscription page, have a sketch linework with highlighted colorings. The image templates aid in the creation of blog posts graphics ready for social media marketing.
WEB-WIDE
GRAPHIC DESIGN 251
GRAPHICS
THE DREAM DOER
Contact Page
About Page
WEB-WIDE
Newsletter Subscription Page
GRAPHIC DESIGN 253
THE DREAM DOER
HOMEPAGE
WEB-WIDE
GRAPHIC DESIGN 255
THE DREAM DOER
INFOGRAPHICS
WEB-WIDE
GRAPHIC DESIGN 257
THE DREAM DOER
TRAVEL MAPS
WEB-WIDE
GRAPHIC DESIGN 259