Undergraduate Portfolio - 2020

Page 1

PORTFOLIO Fifth Year | ARCHIDES | Azm University

Hanadi Chaarani


Softwares

Hanadi Chaarani

Undergraduate Architecture Student

Personal Info

hc

Tripoli, Lebanon, Abou Samra,

Adobe InDesign Google SketchUp Rhinoceros KeyShot AutoCAD 2D Microsoft Power Point Grasshopper GIS Revit Adobe PhotoShop

Oujaza Street, Above Sultan Pharmacy, Fifth Floor 1996-05-13 hanadi.chaarani@st.azmuniy. edu.lb

Education

hanadichaarani@gmail.com

09-2015 present

AZM University

h_charc

. GPA: 85/100

10-2014

Lebanese University

06-2015

. Biology in the Faculty of Sciences, 3rd branch

09-2011 06-2014

Al-Iman High School

00 961 81 619 161

Languages Arabic Native language

French Good speaking, writing, and listening

English Good speaking, writing, and listening

. Undergraduate BA in Architecture

. GPA: 85/100

Activities 12-2018 12-2019

Hult Prize

04-2017

Theemar Business Idea Competition

Participant

Participant


Volunteer Activities 05-2017

Volunteering in the project: “Our City, Our Way”

07-2017

Won JAH scholarship for leadership at AZM University

Administrative assistant

Major: Architecture

08-2014

Won AJWAD full scholarship at Univer sity of Balamand

Major: Education

07-2014

Won the Perfect Student Award at Al- Iman High School

Conferences 04-2017

Entrepreneurship Symposium

10-2016

AFED annual Conference: “Sustain able Development Goals in a Chang ing Climate”

AUB University

AZM University

09-2019

How Will We Live Together

03-2019

Design Praxis in Bab El-Ramel

10-2018

Train-Train NGO

10-2018

Cycles of Collapsing Progress: Re-en visioning Oscar Niemeyer’s Interna tional Fair (with Arch Juan Palomar)

10-2017

01-2018

Part-Timer Entrepreneur Embroidery Desserts cooking

Workshops

Awards

Design for Culture- Interuniversity Ur ban Design Workshop

Interests Horseback riding DIY crafts

Methodology I always try to re-imagine the boundaries our world is stuck in. I re-question every topic training my brain to rethink the world’s biggest title. “Why” has been always a tool for me to break the boundaries around me.


Experience and Internships 06-2019 07-2019

“Atelier Persective d’Achitecture”

06-2018

“Benchmark Develop ment”

08-2018

Bois-Guillaume, France

Downtown, Beirut

06-2017

Construction sites

08-2017

Summer university internship

06-2016 08-2016

Eight material factories Summer university internship




TABLE OF CONTENTS

Pushing Efficiency and Sustainability in a Real Case

Tripoli Train Station: Aesthete Mentor

Order of Physicians of Tripoli - ll

Rethinking the Mosque

Moving from Suburbia to the City

Cultural Center: Tower of Light

Car Repair Shop: Jaguar Company

Arts and Crafts School: Reviving the River

[p.7]

[p.15]

[p.25]

[p.33]

[p.39]

[p.49]

[p.59]

[p.71]



p. 8

PUSHING EFFICIENCY AND SU STAINABILITY IN A REAL CASE During the semester, our design studio aimed to investigate a real project. Our subject was the new headquarters of the Lebanese order of physicians of Tripoli (LOPT). The goal was to create a medical hub that has its signature in the city and that enjoys the maximum efficiency of an office building. Our main challenges revolved around achieving efficiency on a small site, market competitiveness, and environmental sustainability that minimizes the O&M costs of the building.

SFR: 35% Floor plate area: 560.2 m² FAR: 1.8 2 Basements ( 53 Cars) 3 Rentable floors 1 Order floor Rentable Area: 523.88 m² Rentable Order floor Multi-purpose room Mezzanine Entrance Cafeteria Services


9.00

9.00

p. 9

N

6.00

Buildings :

Landscape/ greenery :

6.00

5.25

Access : Buildings :

Landscape/ greenery :

5.25

Materiality: Access :

Materiality:

Mechanical equipments : Mechanical equipments :

The enclosure of my project is a double skin facade that consists of glass and perforated aluminum sheet due to the high performance for each material and the way they are affecting the building’s thermal behavior. The varied perforation of the aluminum sheet is designed to cater for different orientation and needs.

Structure


p. 10

2

4

3

2

1

1

2

4

3

4

3

5

5

6

6

FLOOR PLATE: 560.2 m²

5

11

11

11 8

58

4

3

2 1

LEASABLE AREA: 525.98 m²

7

7 11

2

3

4

5

6

9

9

9

9 1

6

7 11

11 7

8

11

1 9

11 8

6

9

9

RENTABLE AREA: 501.08 m² 7 11

11

CORE OFFICES

9

SERVICES MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM

8

Basement two

Ground floor 9

9

1

1

LOBBY

LOBBY 4 1

4

Floor plate: 303.13 m² Leasable area: 268.91 m²

1 3

LOBBY

2

1

4

3 LOBBY

2 LOBBY

4

3

4

2

3

Rentable area: 244.31 m² 3

Basement one

Mezzanine

2

2

CORE OFFICES CONCIERGE ROOM


p. 11

1 1

2

3

4

5

2

3

4

5

6

6

15 15

7 7 1

2

3

4

5

6

14 14

16

16

8

8 15

17 2

1 14

7

3

18

18 4

5

17

18

12

11

6 9

18

Floor plate: 560.2 m² Leasable area: 525.98 m² 9

16 8

17

13

18

18

12

9

13 11

10

10

15 13

12

11

10

7

14

16 8

17

First floor 13

12

18

18

11

9

Rentable area: 459.1 m²

CORE OFFICES W.C.

10

CORE W.C. ZONE ONE ZONE TWO ZONE THREE ZONE FOUR

Second, third, and fourth floor



p. 13

Since the physicians’ main purpose is to protect people, the aluminum sheet being the enclosure of the building is all around it, giving it as well this sense of protection.

Physical model




p. 16

ORDER OF PHYSICIANS OF TRIPOLI - ll The LOPT requested an alternative design based on a smaller program and the accommodation of an auditorium. A team from the design studio volunteered to work on the new alternative design. The work was done between fall and spring semester of the third year.


p. 17

Buildings: existing building future building

Landscape/greenary: future green space existing green space

Access: Parking access main entrance

Materiality: marble terrace concrete terrace Master plan


p. 18

SHF

35%

Far

1.8

2 Basements

48 cars

Floor Plate

505m2

LOPT

1010m2

Multipurpose room 200m2 Cafeteria

60m2


p. 19

Ground floor

NB

Type

Area

NB

Type

Area

1

Entra nce

22 m²

1

Li bra ry

70 m²

Cl ea ning room

6 m²

2

Room

43 m²

2

3

Offi ce

18 m²

3

Mecha nical

10 m²

4

Stora ge

6 m²

5

Res trooms / men

16 m²

6

Res trooms / women

17 m²

4

Core

42 m²

5

Lobby reception

38 m²

6

Cl ea ning room

6 m²

7

Res trooms / men

16 m²

8

Mul ti -purpose room

200 m²

9

Servi ces

15 m²

10

Stora ge

28 m²

11

IT

7 m²

12

Technical

20 m²

13

Res trooms / women

17 m²

Mezzanine floor


p. 20

NB

Area

NB

Type

Area

1

Secretary

42 m²

2

Lobby / Wa i ting

35 m²

1

Lounge

32 m²

2

Audi torium

204 m²

3

Sta ge

38 m²

3

Pens ion

32 m²

4

Projecti on room

29 m²

4

Di rector

33 m²

5

Stora ge

8 m²

6

Servi ces

7 m²

7

Ki tchen

15 m²

8

Cl ea ning room

6 m²

9

Technical

10 11 12

First floor

Type

5

Soci al security

20 m²

6

Accounti ng

19 m²

7

CME

19 m²

8

Meeti ng rom

27 m²

9

Lounge

17 m²

10 m²

10

Trea surer

14 m²

El ectri cal

5 m²

11

Offi ce

17 m²

Res trooms / men

16 m²

12

Technical

10 m²

13

El ectri cal

6 m²

Res trooms / women

17 m²

14

Res trooms / men

17 m²

15

Res trooms / women

11 m²

16

Core

42 m²

17

Cl ea ning room

6 m²

Second floor


p. 21

Third floor

NB

Type

Area

1

Meeti ng room

35 m²

2

Vi ce president

42 m²

3

Pres i dent

32 m²

4

Commi ttee

33 m²

5

Meeti ng room

20 m²

6

Lounge

19 m²

7

Offi ce

19 m²

8

Technical

27 m²

9

El ectri cal

17 m²

10

Res trooms / men

17 m²

11

Res trooms / women

11 m²

12

Core

17 m²

13

Cl ea ning room

14 m²



p. 23


p. 24



p. 26

MOVING FROM SUBURBIA TO THE CITY The Case of a multi-story Building in Ras-Beirut The project consists on working with a real client with an objective to design a multistory building for an extended family in Beirut. The project must therefore be tailor-made responding to all family members’ different needs. The central design challenge was to offer a creative design solution that convinces the family to relinquish the life qualities in the suburbs and move to the city and offer a building that reflects the different identity of its inhabitants while maintaining the unity of the architecture. Enhancing the interaction between the family members, each two families will benefit from one main lobby becoming the heart of the two independent units. Although the expressed client need is to have four independent habitation units unified in one building, I wanted the units of the building to look vertical by overlapping the same functions and stressing on the horizontal openings. House 1 House 2

Heart 1

House 3 House 4

Heart 2


p. 27

The internal division of each unit was based on a grid that was derived from the best position of the core in the basement, taking into consideration, in the upper levels, the sun and view studies to benefit from what we have


p. 28

LANDSCAPE: The landscape is completing and insisting on the same idea: overlapping the same functions and stressing on the horizontal openings till the ground that will be distinguish through the different materials used that are aligned with the building

GROUND FLOOR: The ground floor is separated into two parts: services for the building and a gym with its mezzanine

Main floor: - 4 storages for each family (4x11 m²) - 1 mechanical room (16 m²) - Space for pets (10 m²) - Gym with its services (70 m²)

Mezzanine: - 4 rooms for each driver (4x10 m²) - 1 studio for the concierge (27 m²)


p. 29

HOUSE 1: Each unit has a floor with its mezzanine

Main floor: - Living room (72 m²) - Kitchen (34 m²) - Maids’ space (47 m²) - Office (28 m²) - Small library (17 m²)

Mezzanine: - Bedrooms and restrooms

HOUSE 2: The ground floor is separated into two parts: services for the building and a gym with its mezzanine

Main floor: - Living room (72 m²) - Kitchen (34 m²) - Maids’ space (47 m²) - Office (28 m²) - Small library (17 m²)

Mezzanine: - 4 master bedrooms with their services (25 m²)


p. 30

COMMON FLOOR (HEART):

ROOF:

Rather than having a unique salon and dining room for each family, a common floor was created for each two units (each two houses) between them forming the heart of the building.

Pool (75 m²), Shower space (7 m²), Technical room (18 m²), Outdoor dining space (33 m²), Indoor dining space (22 m²), Kitchen (21 m²).



p. 32



p. 34

C A R

R E P A I R

S H O P

Every car company offers the design of a car, and its motor. Jaguar has a classic design that gives a little bit of fluidity, but it hides the power of it motor/engine under the title of: “The Art of Performance�. This project is a car repair shop for Jaguar company, on the highway of Qalamoun. It consists of a showroom not only a repair shop.


p. 61

Sketch


p. 36

I created a promenade architectural at the entrance of the building that will lead me to the administrative section of the building creating an elegant alley that will expose the client to see the workshop as well.

ELECTRICAL ROOM

Basement

B1 1

4

3

TECHNICAL ROOM

+00.00

2

5

Ground Floor

Ground Floor

1

2

3 4 5 6

6

7

8

First Floor

First Floor

1: Housing 2: Show Room 3: Sass/Service Path 4: Workshop Storage 5: Workshop 6: Workers’ Changing Room

1: Waiting Space 2: Tellers 3: Director 4: Assistant 5: Accountant 6: Restrooms 7: Kitchen 8: Cafeteria


p. 37

: Dynamism +01.00

+02.00

+03.00

+04.00

+05.00

N

+04.02

What makes it special is its dynamic shape with the elegant curves as an elevation, but its plan is a rectangle with sharp edges to give it the power of its engine that is hidden inside the car, and so is the plan: you can’t judge unless you enter to the inside.

+07.40 +00.00

+00.00

: Rigidity

MUSHROOM WALLS A way to grow wall insulator and packing materials using mycelium, a bacteria found in rotting organisms like tree trunks and agricultural byproducts. If placed in a mold, these organic matters grow to the desired shape within a couple of days.

CLADDING Aluminum

PLASPHALT Plasphalt is made up of grains of plastic produced from unsorted plastic waste. In testing, it was found that plasphalt roads were far less vulnerable to wear

OPENINGS Glass CORTEN Corten is a weathering steel. This material is a corrosion resistant steel, that left uncoated develops an outer layer patina. This patina protects the steel from additional corrosion.

STRUCTURE Steel

SMOG INSULATORS Placing an electrically charged metal mesh over a building, which attracts large smog particles and sticks them together.


p. 62



p. 40

T R I P O L I

T R A I N

S T A T I O N

All over the world, buildings are dying slowly or rapidly, consciously or unconsciously, expectedly or not… All around us, in many spots, abandoned buildings, forgotten neglected spaces are begging for architectural theoretical and practical solutions. Decay is a not fixed, it takes time and is in a continuous process leading to certain surreal image that provokes emotions and thoughts. Not surprisingly, decay is a main creative inspiration for artists and writers. the aesthetic value of these abandoned places has for long been the inspiration of major works of artists (photographers, painters, writers, movie makers etc…) whose works do manifest and declare loudly an unprecedented love and passion to these spaces… The architectural discourse is of no less importance and incessantly requiring furthermore reactions, thoughts and consideration. This project does indeed venture into this deserted land, and attempts to offer a variety of dreams, proposals and architectural responses to the case of abandoned places. The case study would be that of Tripoli Train station – El Mina, which offers itself as a great example to study and approach the need to ponder on its situation, propose a reuse/an addition and/or any other approach to its current condition of neglect and abandonment.


p. 41

READING A critical issue facing decision makers and conservation professionals is accommodating change to heritage places and adding new layers to the historic urban environment in ways that recognize, interpret, and sustain their heritage values.

Their stories can sometimes be discerned easily, and at other times need to be discovered through thoughtful consideration. The story can be as simple as a metaphor or as complex as a novel. Just as the age goes, you can’t judge the object (book) by its exterior (cover). The richness of the object is its contents.


p. 42

My experience

Transition from a story to another

After studying the fear feeling that I had in this site, I discovered that four elements were affecting that feeling: building condition, human intrusion, acoustic/sound, and vegetation condition.


p. 43

All the previous factors create a dissected reading of the site: each part was talking in a different language as if it is from a different era/age.

Non-linear time axis

Fixing the previous factors I mentioned will change the non-linear time axis notion, and will decrease the fear level.

Stories

Spots that trigger stories


p. 44

Physical model


p. 45

Site plan

Old Lebanese residential houses

Forces The site has many forces that attracts its direction.

Intervention The biggest intrusion/intervention in my site is its landscape.

Materiality Trying to recall the old typology of all the old residential houses, I used bricks.

Orange trees spread in the past in Tripoli

Work & Exhibition

: Hangars structure presence

Dimension I used the dimensions of the hangars structures for my intervention.

Orange trees Recalling the urban dimension of the old orange trees.

City Hub

Residential

Dissection I dissected the site into three clear functions.


p. 46

Demolishing These were the buildings that were demolished based on their condition.

Entrance The entrance was put based on the importance of Al-Mitein Street.

Entrance My entrance is a frame with two orange trees as a reflection of how the city was.

6 1

5

7

8 4 3 3

3

9 2

Fans Frames The fans are continuing the landscape, The frames that I intervene are present in and framing important spots to in and out. red color on the plan.

1 10

Circulation The experience is through the highlighted red axis, from number 1 till 10.


p. 47


p. 62

Physical model



p. 50

R E T H I N K I N G T H E M O S Q U E Mosques do play a vital role in every Islamic society. Although it is primarily a place for worship and “praying�, the mosque has a significant influence beyond religious focus into most, if not all aspects of the life of the community. A review of the current architecture of the mosque often generates a stereotype view of the typical architectural form of domes and arches. What is missing is: - A discourse as to what constitutes a more spiritually-linked framework linking Islam to the formative ideas and eventual compositions of mosques in the modern world. - A confidence in the knowledge. The present diversity of the Islamic world including new cultures in the world necessitates a wide research of rethinking of what fundamentally constitutes the spiritual basis of space in Masjid. The history of mosque was contrived from the Oriental perspectives and historical writings of the Islamic civilization on architecture. What is lacking nowadays is: New writings, raising the issue of the lack of scientific research of the Islamic Religion.


p. 51

Site

Urban void

Road network

Seeing the importance of the site to El-Mina, a point should be highlighted: the sea shore should not be blocked only to the prayers.

Sun Study:

Summer - Morning

Summer - Afternoon

Winter - Morning

Winter - Afternoon


p. 52

Process of thinking:

Integration with the topography (rocks) of the land.

A circle has no edges: no beginning and no ending. It will reflect the serenity and purity of the project.

Accentuating the Qiblah direction.

Mosque/Library.

Entrance to the mosque and to the library.

Circulation.

Entrance and ablution for men.

Entrance and ablution for women.


p. 53

Sea view to all religions.

The spiritual language (sky) v/s the city and topography language (earth).

: Parking : Garden

Qiblah direction


p. 54


p. 61


p. 56

Section


p. 57

Relation with the sky

Relation with the earth


p. 58



p. 60

C U L T U R A L

C E N T E R

‘Al Tall’ a culturally deprived city center. A heart of a glorious city that no longer can beat. We are reviving this attracting heart by highlighting the knowledge that has the ability to awake the dormant mentality, that has the ability to pump that heart again. Why not highlight the knowledge by creating a magnet? From here, the library will give its dominance to the city to revive it from its dormant condition. Going vertical, the books will call for a rebellion against the illiteracy. A cultural peak will support this heart and have our backs. The title of the project is: “Tower of Light”.


p. 61

Gardens

Landmarks

Sahat

Roads

Backbone Pension (existing building) Extension

Echo of an existing historic monument


p. 62

Program: - Roof restaurant - NGO/Administration - Library - library entrance/ reading spaces - park cafe

Relation of the old renovated building (Penson) with the new installed building


p. 63

Skin decision: After studying the sun path and the needed temperature for a library, a decision was taken to use the PTFE coated glass that can withstand huge temperature ranges and is known for being highly durable. Cooling Load

Surrounding buildings (photos were taken from the roof of the existing building/Pension shows the decision of the roject’s skin dimensions.

Skin material: corten Weathering steel, known as Corten steel, eliminate the need for painting by forming a stable rust-like appearance after several years exposure to weather. It shows how it ages beautifully in a historic aging city.


p. 64

Knowledge/Books

Dormant sites in the city Mapping the dormant sites of the city

Mondrian Mapping technique

Result in Sehet Al-Tall


p. 65


p. 66


p. 67

Basement floor

Ground floor

First floor


p. 68


p. 69

Second floor

Basement floor

Roof floor


p. 70



p. 72

A R T S A N D C R A F T S S C H O O L Tripoli has always been a beautiful city with a river feeding all of it with the branches deviating through the narrow corners. Unfortunately, the river has been defined into one spine killing that spirit, that specific mark in the city. We are reviving this spirit, this sensation, these river branches by flowing the river again in the heart of our project. The old river traces that have the ability to awake that killed feeling that the city was known with. Going fluid contrasting the straight edges of the city, this Arts and Crafts School in the middles of the old city will call for the prosperous past of the city, will flow rather than water. Hence, the title of our project is: “Reviving the River�.


p. 73

Evolution of the river through time

Site

Site

Past

Branches

Transition

Spine

Present

Our site was important that it was the transition point: it was the point of transformation from a spine to branches. From this point, the language of the city and the river will meet.

Introvert

Extrovert

Being surrounded with important landmarks (Khans and mosques), the idea of being introvert was the most dominant in such buildings. How to create this relation? By rethinking the courtyard: the circulation is becoming the intro/ extro core of the building.


p. 74

River language

Differentiation between the Departments

City language

Re-flowing the river in the city again

Practical department Common department Theoretical department

Circulation/ Core Practical department: rotated toward the river. Theoretical department: stacked with the notion of “Form Follows Function�.


p. 75

Exploiting the slope of the site

Combination of two languages

Departments and circulation/core

Overlapping of two languages City and exhibition galleries


p. 106


p. 77

Basement floor

Ground floor


p. 78

First floor

Second floor


p. 79

Using wood to create the mold, alginate to take the negative, and resin to have the organic shape of the project, an experimental model has been made inside the site model.


p. 80

White is creating a contrast inside the wooden site model to see how it is reviving back the river inside the historic city of Tripoli.





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