2 minute read
Urbanism Portfolio
Girish Shashikant Thakare
Langarth Garden Village
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Truro, Cornwall
Lavigne Lonsdale
Rejuvenation of High Street
Penryn, Cornwall
Lavigne Lonsdale
Smart Urban Heritage
Trafford, Manchester
Academic Project
Floating Over Thames
North Bank, London
Academic Project
The Immitating Bridge
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Archdaily Competition
Langarth Garden Village, Cornwall
The LGV its a initative of Cornwall Council. The Masterplan offers a diversified population high-quality, well-designed housing, enhanced infrastructure, and work and service areas. It facilitates greater access to green space and promotes the use of eco-friendly transport among locals and tourists. Providing the design code for LGV required a variety of tasks. As the entire project consists of 3500 dwellings, the site was broken down into multiple phases of development.
The Design code work includes of masterplan derivatives along with architectural intervention and landscape RMA stages.
The visuals to the left show how the grain varies in various areas of the large masterplan, where we strove to maintain the resemblance of Cornish architecture as it was proposed in the design code. The upper portions describe the site’s street hierarchy patterns, including secondary and tertiary streets, and the lower section describes the site’s gradient treatment.
There are multiple parks in the area, and each of their designs was envisioned and designed. RMA has already been approved, and visuals have been utilised for design code work and public meetings in order to properly understand the park’s density. The aesthetic was considerably more natural-looking while still maintaining the allure of the landscape designs. The key to understanding the organic point of view and local demand was the integration of the existing and projected landscape, as people like to be in the same environment.
The analysis focuses particularly on the movement’s potential to enhance Commercial Road’s surroundings and links to the historic town core. We have, however, noted a number of locations where increasing the constructed character would aid in the “rejuvenation” of the route. These still represent potential areas for development and were mentioned in our more detailed framework plan. Commercial Road connects to Broad Street several times as it goes along Penryn’s eastern border.
Before arriving at the final interpretation of the project’s demand, we carefully consider the many layers of the aforementioned parameter plans. The site is gifted with a variety of layers, and the final product should make advantage of them.
The graphics below represent the results of the project submission. The project has already been started by the Penryn council, and the results are well-liked by the populace. To better explain development, the visuals were generated by overlaid existing site pictures.
examined as a site study that may be built using urban rejuvenation, livable, smart, and sustainable city concepts. It is known as “Manchester’s hidden island” due to its location between the Manchester Ship and Bridgewater canals, as well as between Manchester city centre, Salford, and Trafford.
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