Haley Lundquist Architecture Portfolio 2022

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PORTFOLIO LUNDQUISTHALEYAUSTINUT CONTACTPHONEEMAILWEBSITE 559.304.9241haleymlundquist@gmail.comissuu.com/haleylundquist

01CONTENTS-14REPRODUCTIVE CARE COLLECTIVE MARBLE FALLS RECREATIONAL FIELD CULTIVATING CARE MONTAGUE SAFETY REST AREA MANUAL ARTS CAMPUS 15 - 22 23 - 30 31 - 36 37 - 44

The Reproductive Care Collective acts as a hub for those in surrounding communities who don’t traditionally feel comfortable or valued in a clinical setting. Considering leakiness and the habitation of in-between spaces, this project attempts to delaminate boundaries and call attention to the inherent power dynamics within the healthcare system. By acknowledging the asymmetry between giving and receiving care, the design focuses attention to the leakiness between private and communal spaces, instead seeing them in terms of an impression and residue. The building is squished in and around the surrounding public infrastructure, acting as an insulating residue. The program is loose, relational, and guided by the user with areas of programmatic overlap defining the excess, in-between, as spaces of care. The spaces are relationally created with varying levels of intimacy built up that allow for the visitor to inhabit a nested experience. Nested spaces are created through built up layers of translucent material, with increased privacy as you move inward.

01 - 02 REPRODUCTIVE CARE COLLECTIVE with KENDALL FLEISHER STEPHANIE CHOI | SPRING 2021

EXTERIOR PERSPECTIVE

03RESEARCH04 INQUIRY – WHAT ARE THE SOCIAL, LEGAL, AND TECHNOLOGICAL CONDITIONS THAT SHAPED ACCESS TO AND ATTITUDES ABOUT CONTRACEPTION?

ACTOR NETWORK DIAGRAM

2 3 4 5 THROOP AVENUE AVENUEFLUSHING 0’ 30’120’ 60’

SITE PLAN 1 REPRODUCTIVE CARE COLLECTIVE 2 NAISSANCE BIRTHING CENTER 3 HAUS LGBTQIA CENTER 4 WOODHULL HOSPITAL 5 FDNY EMS STATION 6 PS 59 ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 7 COMUNILIFE HOUSING 1 67 AVENUEPARK BY SHARING THE SITE WITH A BIRTHING CENTER AND LGBTQIA+ CENTER, WE THINK OF OUR BUILDING AS PART OF A LARGER MESHWORK THAT INTEGRATES CARE AND ACCESS.

07 - 08 1 ENTRY 2 EXHIBITION SPACE 3 GROUP REFLECTION SPACE 4 COMMUNITY ADVOCACY SPACE 5 CAFE 6 INDIVIDUAL RECOVERY SPACE 7 CHILDCARE 8 INDIVIDUAL RESTROOMS 9 INDIVIDUAL REFLECTION SPACE 10 STORAGE 11 OPEN AIR COURTYARD 12 PROCEDURE ROOM 13 RECOVERY SPACE 14 CONSULTATION SPACE 15 OFFICE MANAGEMENT SPACE 16 CONTRACEPTIVE LIBRARY 17 WAITING SPACE 18 INFORMATION DESK 19 IMAGING SPACE 1 2 5 7 6 9 11 12 13 14 15 17 0’ 40’ 8 B A 19 PLAN

CLIMATE DIAGRAM 4 3 8 10 16 18 TRANSLUCENT MESH POLYGAL 32 MM FROSTED SANDWICHINSULATEDPANELS �������� ������� POLISHED CONCRETE MATERIAL DIAGRAM LAYERING AND IN BETWEEN SPACE IS EXPLORED AT THE PROGRAMMATIC LEV EL AS WELL AS IN THE WALL ASSEMBLY. VARYING LEVELS OF INTIMACY ARE BUILT UP IN LAYERS THAT ALLOW FOR THE VISITOR TO INHABIT A NESTED EXPERIENCE.

09 - 10 EXTERIOR PERSPECTIVE

EXPLODED AXON TRANSLUCENT SAILCLOTH BUILDING WRAP POLYGAL TRANSLUCENTROOFPUBLIC LAYER STEEL PORTAL OPENINGS FROSTED PRIVATE LAYER FLOOR

11 - 12

A

B

SECTION SECTION

13 - 14 WALL SECTION SANDWICHTRANSLUCENTSTRUCTURALSTANDOFFSTEELSAILCLOTHAIRGAP32MMPOLYCARBONATEPANELASSEMBLYMESHTRACKPOLISHEDCONCRETEFLOORGUTTERFOOTINGGRAVELDRAINAGEBASEPLATESTEELPIERSTEELBEAMALUMINUMFASCIAMETALDECKSTRUCTUREBEYOND

INTERIOR PERSPECTIVE

MARBLE FALLS RECREATIONAL FIELD FRANCISCO GOMES FALL

|

15 - 16

2020

High school football plays an integral role in the social and cultural fabric of small town Texas communities. Sited on a hillside riverbank adjacent to the Colorado River and downtown Marble Falls, this project necessitated a design response that utilized its proximity to public spaces and nature –providing access to discovery, adventure, and sport. Improving access to and awareness of the natural environment, this project seeks to provide educational and athletic facilities to a broader sector of the population of Marble Falls. The design embraces the wilding of landscape through an abundant array of native Texas wildflowers on the field, beckoning nature into a landscape where it is normally rebuffed. In doing so, it fosters environmental awareness by creating new relationships with the outdoors through celebrating the earthy and dominant forces of nature that are present yet often shunned by urban spaces. Instead of just a football field, it becomes a field for playing football amongst other things.

PROGRAMMING DIAGRAM

SITE PLAN NESTLED UNDER THE OVERPASS AT THE LEVEL OF THE RIVER, THE FIELD BECOMES PART OF A LARGER MESHWORK THAT INTEGRATES NATURE AND COMMUNITY SPACE.

STREET LEVEL PLAN -2 FLOOR PLAN -1 FLOOR PLAN 19 - 20

PERSPECTIVE

21 - 22

SECTION THROUGH FIELD BUILDING ELEVATION

23 - 24

CULTIVATING CARE with ANNI NIEMINEN STEPHANIE CHOI | FALL 2021

Cultivating Care is a supportive framework within a Central Valley neglected farming communi ty in California. The project imagines an approach of care and repair grounded in the long history of collective action by farm workers in the area. Sited in Pixley, the project proposes an integrated and relational approach to farming characterized by agroecology. The boundaries of the fixed agricul tural grid dissolve with the implementation of zones based on frequency of care. Zones incoporate ex perimental food plots, agroforestry, and community garden plots and are connected by covered and un covered pathways. Seen as a further articulation of zones, three buildings surround a gathering space under the covered path. An education wing opens out to the plant library, a dining wing opens out to experimental food plots, and the administration wing looks out to the community garden plots.

ACTOR NETWORK DIAGRAM EXPAND THE MEANING OF ‘REFUGE’ TO ENCOMPASS COMMUNITY LAND DESIGNATED FOR AGROECOLOGY. CARE FOR LAND REPLACES USE FOR LAND. RISING TEMPERATURES AND CHANGING WEATHER PATTERNS DROUGHT RESTRICTEDFARMERS FROM USING SURFACE WATER RELIANCE PUMPINGGROUNDWATERON OCCURSOVERDRAFT DECREASELEVELSAQUIFERS LAND SINKS DAMAGE TO INFRASTRUCTUREVITAL AS CANALS, LEVEES, AND ROADS AMOUNT OF SAFE DRINKING DECREASESWATERDISRUPTIONS TO WATER SUPPLY ACROSS THE STATE WATER SOURCED FROM RESERVOIRS AND DAMS CONFLICTING MOTIVES CREATE DISORGANIZATION AND LACK OF COLLABORATIONSTATEWIDE CREATION WATERAGENCIESNUMEROUSOFLOCALTOOVERSEEMANAGEMENT PUBLIC INTEREST IN ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION INCREASED AND POPULAR SUPPORT FOR NEW LARGE WATER PROJECTS DECREASED INCREASED POLITICAL TENSION MANAGEMENTTOEFFECTIVEDIFFICULTCORPORATIONSANDENVIRONMENTALISTSBETWEENAGFARMERS/TOPASSLEGISLATIONIMPROVEWATER NEED FOR TOIMPROVEDMANAGEMENTFLOODANDIRRIGATIONMEETDEMANDS CORPORATIONS SEEK TO MAINTAIN THEIR PROFITS IN THE SHORT TERM WITH A CONCENTRATION ON ONE OR TWO CROPS INDUSTRIAL AG IN CA EMPLOYS 1/4 OF ALL HEAVILYNATIONWIDEFARMWORKERSANDRELIESONIMMIGRANTLABOR STAGNANCY IN COMING UP WITH ANDGROWINGMANAGEMENTAPPROACHEFFECTIVETOWATERPOPULATIONECONOMY LARGE SCALE WATER PROJECTS OFF-SITE MOVEMENT OF PESTICIDES TO HYDROLOGIC ENVIRONMENT HAS BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH ADVERSE EFFECTS ON HUMAN HEALTH AND ECOSYSTEM INCREASED USE OF PESTICIDES TO CROPMAXIMIZEYIELD 90% OF SALMONID REARING HABITAT HAS DISAPPEARED, 25 THREATENED AND ENDANGERED SPECIES RELY ON THIS HABITAT95% OF EXISTSVEGETATIONWETLANDHISTORICALANDRIPARIANNOLONGER VALLEY SYSTEMWATERTRANSFORMEDDRAMATICALLYBYTHEMANAGEMENT LOCAL COMMUNITIES FACE EXTREME POVERTY WITH 45% OF FARM WORKS BEING FOOD INSECURE PRODUCE FORCOMMODITYQUANTITIESVASTOFCROPSEXPORT HIGH PROFITS PRODUCTIONTOWARDCORPORATIONSFORGOMORE EXCLUDED FROM MAJOR FEDERAL LABOR PROTECTION LAWS EXPERIENCE POOR WORKING CONDITIONS AND LOW WAGES

PIXLEY TULARE 25CALIFORNIA’S26 CENTRAL VALLEY CONTAINS THE WORLD’S LARGEST PATCH OF CLASS 1 SOIL WITH MORE THAN 230 CROPS GROWN. PIXLEY IS LOCATED IN TULARE COUNTY IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY. INCREASED SENSE OF COMMUNITY AND IDENTITY WITH TOWN IMPROVED INFRASTRUCTURECIVIL AREAS OF SMALL-SCALE FAMILY AGRICULTUREOPERATED PRIORITY OF PROTECTING AND RESPECTING SPECIES AND HABITATS NUMEROUS COMMUNITY SPACES PROMOTING LOCAL ECONOMY IMMEDIATE ACCESS TO RAIL AND HIGHWAY PEOPLE HAVE A MORE PARTICIPATORY AND RELATIONSHIPACCOUNTABLEWITH THEIR WATER RESOURCES RESILIENCY CONNECTIONANDIN THE FACE OF CLIMATE CHANGE CARE FOR WATER REPLACES USE OF WATER REVITALIZATION OF PIXLEY REFUGEWILDLIFE PEOPLE COOPERATIONANDSHARINGENCOURAGEOFRESOURCESMAKEPOSSIBLE ENGINEERED OTHERIRRIGATIONPESTICIDESPOLLUTANTSCONSTRUCTEDWETLANDSTOREMOVEINCLUDINGINAGRICULTURALRETURNFLOWANDWATER PROGRESS ACHIEVED THROUGH NURTURING NATURAL PROCESSES AND CARING FOR NATURAL WATER BODIES FARMS ROTATE CROPS TO HOLD A WORKFORCEPERMANENT INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND LOCAL COMMUNITIES AS KEY STAKEHOLDERS FOR CONSERVATION AND INTEGRATED MANAGEMENTWETLAND LIVESTOCK GRAZED AT WETLAND MARGIN DURING DRY SEASON FALLOWED FARMSCONVERTEDLANDTOSOLAR PEOPLE HAVE A STRONG RELATIONSHIP WITH THEIR FOOD AND FOODSUSTAINABLELYVALUEFARMED FAIRNESS AND EQUITY IN THE SHARING OF THE BENEFITS FROM CONSERVATIONWETLAND ORIENTATION TO CONSENSUS BUILDING AND OUTCOMESSHARED

PROPOSED CONDITIONS CURRENT CONDITIONS 5 4 3 2 1 0 ZONE UNMANAGED:WETLANDS/HABITAT ZONE ENGINEEREDWETLANDTECHNOLOGYMINIMALCARE:TRANSITION FROM WETLANDS CONSERVATIONGRAZING,LANDSCAPEREPAIROCCASIONALLYVISITED: LARGER FARMS, TREEFARMING,PASTURESEMI-INTENSELY CULTIVATED: MARKETCROPS,SMALLFAMILYFARMSFREQUENTLY VISITED:GARDENS,COOPSPACE,MARKETSSETTLEMENT,HOMES,COMMUNITYFREQUENCYOFCARETHE PROPOSED ORGANIZING MODEL IS BASED ON PRINCIPLES OF PERMACULTURE THAT ADOPTS ARRANGEMENTS OBSERVED IN FLOURISHING NATURAL ECOSYSTEMS. CHANGING COURSE, LOOSENING BOUND ARIES, AND IMAGINING COOPERATION AND RESILIENCY. PIXLEYEARLIMARTDELANOHIGHWAY99SOUTHERNPACIFICRAILROAD PIXLEYEARLIMARTDELANOHIGHWAY99SOUTHERNPACIFICRAILROAD ZONE 5 ZONE 4 ZONE 3 ZONE 2 ZONE 4 ZONE 0ZONE 1 WETLANDSFERTILELAND DAIRYFALLOW LAND SOLAR FARMTOWN

SITE PLAN THE GUIDING PRINCIPLES OF CULTIVATING CARE ARE SEEN AT BOTH THE REGIONAL AND ARCHITECTURAL SCALE.

29 - 30 PLAN

EXTERIOR PERSPECTIVE SITE SECTION 0’ 25’ 50’ 100’

MONTAGUE SAFETY REST AREA NICHOLE WIEDEMANN | FALL 2019

31 - 32

The rest area along Route 287 in North Texas seeks to establish an environment that becomes a launching pad for learning about the ecological and cultural history woven into Montague County. The area is known for its historic trails and movement of people and cattle. The site is also among the 2% of remaining Blackland Prairie in Texas. With this knowledge, the design was composed as three distinct parts that become a way for the visitor to measure themselves against the land, conveying either the feeling of compression or expansion. As people encounter these different experiences on the site, memory and anticipation become vehicles of perception that encourage engagement with Montague County as more than another stop along the highway.

The proximity of Montague County to Native American territory is an essential feature of the development and history of the area. The Tawehash people (also known as Taovaya) inhabited the area for over a century before the early settlers came to North Texas. Therefore, the early history is one marked by considerable conflict between the two groups of people. The fear of attack by native inhabitants discouraged settlement until approximately 1858 and cattle men were to first to venture into the territory.

The first overland mail route through Texas follows most of the trails surveyed by Randolph Marcy and John Pope. The Butterfield Overland Mail Route was established in 1858 out of the public necessity required for a quicker dispatch of mail to the West Coast. Although the route doesn’t technically run through Montague County, it lies in close proximity outside the southern border.

In 1841, the Texan Santa Fe Trail passed through the southwest corner of the county close to present day Bowie. This trail marks the path of an expedition initiated by the then President of Texas to further develop the trade links between Texas and New Mexico.Prompted by the discovery of gold in California in 1849, the West was opened, and the California Trail was established. The trail was an emigrant path of about 3,000 miles across the western half of the country and passed through the middle of what would become Montague County. Randolph B. Marcy was a captain in the U.S. Army selected by the war department to follow this trail and propose a railroad route from Arkansas to California.

MAP OF HISTORICAL MOVEMENT CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOLM TRAIL CHISOL ISOLM TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL C A L I F O R NIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL C A L I F O R N I A TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAIL CALIFORNIA TRAI ALIFORNIA TEXAN SANTA FE TRAIL TEXAN SANTA FE TRAIL TEXAN SANTA FE TRAIL TEXAN SANTA FE TRAIL TEXAN SANTA FE TRAIL TEXAN SANTA C H I S OML LIART U S. . LIAM ETUOR MLOSIHC LIART U S. . LIAM ETUOR C H I S O L M T R A I L U S MAIL ROUTE CHISOLM TRAIL U. S. MAIL ROUTE CHISOLM BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND MAIL ROUTE BOWIE MONTAGUE ST JO NOCONA RINGGOLD SUNSET STONEBURG RED RIVER STATION SPANISH FORT BARREL SPRINGS HAGLER’SFORESTBURGSTORE FORT STEADHAMJIMNED LOOKOUT BRUSHY MOUND QUEEN’SADORAPEAKBLUECITYMOUNDHWY287 HWY287 FWDRR FWDRR MKT RR MKT RR

The Chisholm Trail was developed after the Civil War as a solution to move the millions of cattle on the ranges of Texas to the meat markets in the East. A profitable herd consisted of 10,000 cattle, 40 horses, 10 cowboys, a horse wrangler, wagon boss, and trail boss. Montague County became an integral part of the journey as it contained the Red River Station where cattle crossed into Kansas and then Indian Territory. During its heyday, between 1867 and 1884, five million cattle and an equal number of mustangs were moved along the trail –the greatest migration of livestock in world history. By 1887, the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad had arrived in Texas and the long cattle drives to Kansas were no longer needed. The Fort Worth and Denver City Railroad arrived in the county in 1882 and brought about the existence of both Sunset and Bowie. The railroad followed the route of the Santa Fe Trail but did run into difficulties near the fringes of the Cross Timbers. In 1887, the Missouri Kansas and Texas Railroad arrived and passed through the area near Red River Station. Many new towns popped up along the railroad while older settlements disappeared. By this time, the era of the great cattle drives was ending and the area around Red River Station, Eagle Point, and Red Bud turned into a new town called Nocona. Much of the land in Montague County was divided into blocks of 160 acres and sold to new settlers. The trails through Montague County tell a story of the people who have passed through the land as well as those who decided to stay. Its proximity to the Red River of the South and the lush, waist high grasslands made it a desirable home for Native Americans as well as early pioneers. The area became known as “The Texas County of Trails” for its ideal location as a passageway for early settlers. The trails forged by the early pioneers weave together a history of exploration, abundance, and conflict.

NEAR + FAR | a study of historical movement 1:75,000

MODEL 33 - 34

SECTIONPLAN

35 - 36

SECTION PERSPECTIVE

37 - 38

MANUAL ARTS CAMPUS MICHAEL BENEDIKT | SPRING 2020

The project proposes an arrangement of four workshops and a gallery space that define a series of shared outdoor spaces between them. The design acknowledges that what is happening on the inside of these shops is more interesting that the exterior and responds with subtlety and simplicity. A scissor truss system is employed in each workshop. The support members are exposed on the exterior and the roof line extends beyond the windows. The rest of the shops remain simple and the interest happens above the head and out of the way of the work done below. The complex and striking feature above serves as a reminder of the connection between the mind and hand in craft.

Located in Central Austin, this is a satellite campus for Austin Community College devoted to Manual Arts. Here, the manual arts are not conceived of as vocational training but as thinking with one’s hands, spatially and physically.

BETWEEN THE WORKSHOPS

39 - 40 AMONG THE WORKSHOPS

FIRST FLOOR PLAN SECOND FLOOR PLAN

41 - 42 SECTION THROUGH WORKSHOPS THE WORKSHOPS OPEN TO ONE ANOTHER WITH A SHARED OUTDOOR WORK SPACE BETWEEN. THE ACCESSIBILITY ENCOURAGES COMMUNICATION AND COLLABORATION.SECTION THROUGH WALKWAY

ABOVE THE WORKSHOPS

43 - 44 THROUGH THE WORKSHOPS

WITHIN THE WORKSHOPS WEST ELEVATION

45 - 46 STUDY MODELS

ISSUU.COM/HALEYLUNDQUIST HALEYMLUNDQUIST@GMAIL.COM 559.304.9241 LUNDQUISTHALEY SEPTEMBEREXPERIENCE2021-MAY 2022 | UT AUSTIN | AUSTIN, TX GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT • Assisted Director of the PhD Program in Architecture, Fernando Lara, on research related to book project • Data entry, copy-editing, bibliographical searches, and reference checking JUNE 2021 - JULY 2021 | UT AUSTIN | AUSTIN, TX GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT • Assisted 2020-2022 Emerging Scholar, Stephanie Choi, on research related to upcoming projects and performances • Compiled images and literary sources AUG 2018 – JULY 2019 | POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL | LA, CA ADVANCEMENT SERVICES MANAGER • Oversaw prospect management system and responsible for data entry and reporting on prospect information; setting and tracking goals, solicitor assignments, and prospect analytics • Tracked pledge payment fulfillment and reconciliation with the finance department • Created annual updates for endowment and restricted major gift donors on investment performance and program impact OCT 2016 – AUG 2018 | POLYTECHNIC SCHOOL | LA, CA ADVANCEMENT OFFICER • Promoted from temporary Special Events Coordinator position in less than a year • Coordinated logistics for 40+ yearly events, including annual giving, stewardship, donor recognition, and alumni relations events • Processed donations and prepared acknowledgment letters and other correspondence AUG 2014 – OCT 2016 | JULIA KOSTREVA DESIGN STUDIO | SF, CA E-COMMERCE MANAGER • Sourced materials for upcoming projects and communicated with vendors to obtain pricing and quotes • Tracked the status of ongoing projects and deadlines from project beginning until completion • Independently managed online product fulfillment and wholesale orders while managing customer service JUNE 2014 – AUG 2014 | MARS & CO. | SF, CA PRODUCTION ASSISTANT • Managed budgets, maintained office calendars and provided administrative support to global strategy consulting firm • Worked with marketing team and consultants to develop client presentations to Fortune 500 companies GraduatedUCHISTORYBACHELORSEDUCATIONOFARTBerkeleyin2014 ExpectedUTARCHITECTUREMASTERSAustininDecember 2022 AdobeV-RayAutoCADRhinoDESIGNSKILLS3DCreative Suite ResearchRaiser'sDonorProjectFUNDRAISINGManagementRelationsEdgePoint AWARDS & RECOGNITION UTSOA2021 D esign Excellence Award UTSOA2019 Graduate School Recruitment Fellowship Dean's2012 MemberISSUE2020ORGANIZATIONSList-2021XVIIoftheSubmissions Committee. Review student projects for inclusion in yearly publication. 2016COUNCIL2019 FOR ADVANCEMENT AND SUPPORT OF CASEEDUCATIONmember.Attended 2019 CASE Conference in Philadelphia, PA.

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