Heather Hinton Architecture + Health Portfolio 2019

Page 1

HH

HEATHER HINTON

2019


University of Kentucky College of Design Teaching Assistant; Arch. History & Theory Fall 2017 - Spring 2018 -Assisted with grading assignments and exams -Guided lecture series -Tutored students

Johns Hopkins Medicine All Children’s Hospital Specialty Care Medical Assistant; Pediatric Oncology & Specialty Clinics 2014-2016 -Worked independently in a 24-bed clinic -Provided patient-centered care -Performed tasks designated by clinical providers -Managed lab procedures and satellite testing

The curriculum includes both the study of health facility design and the study of relationships between architectural settings and their impact on human health and well-being.

Bachelor of Arts in Architecture University of Kentucky · Degree awarded May 2018

This degree combines a broad liberal arts education with a foundation in theory and practice of architecture.

Baptist Health Louisville

Emergency Technician & Emergency Room Unit-Coordinator Phlebotomist 2007-2014 -Certified Nursing Assistant -Medical Assistant -Provided patient care in a high-intensity environment -Performed medical procedures as delegated by a clinical provider

Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy; Bioethics University of Louisville · Degree awarded May 2014

Awarded based on academic excellence

Richard N. Monohan, Jr. Endowment · 2017

Conferred to recognize outstanding Design Students

Architecture Second Year Studio Award · 2017 Nominated by design studio professor

UK Education Abroad Scholarship · 2017

Based on academic achievement & educational intent

Phi Sigma Theta National Honor Society · 2017

3D Modeling

Torrence Goldston Hanner, Sr. Fellowship · 2018

Rhinoceros

Skills

Honors & Recognition

Bioethics blends philosophy, theology, history, & law with medicine, nursing, health policy, & the medical humanities. Insights are brought to bear on the complex interaction of human life, science, & technology. Bioethicists explore our morality in personal & community life.

3D Printing

Grasshopper Maxwell Studio V-Ray

Laser Cutter Woodshop

Sue Fan Gooding Scholarship · 2016

Model Making

Kentucky Governor’s School for the Arts · 2004 Architecture + Design

Illustrator InDesign Lightroom Photoshop

CNC Router

GPA of 4.0 for academic years 2015-2018

Awarded based on academic excellence & leadership characteristics

Adobe

Master of Architecture + Health Clemson University · Expected Graduation May 2020

Research Assistant Fall 2018 - Current I assist the Center in the study of the relationship between the physical healthcare environment & various outcomes; -Mock-up OR simulations -Presentation graphics & editing -Website & social media design -Virtual Reality research

Autodesk

About

For the past 10 years, I have worked in healthcare as a Medical Assistant & an Emergency Department Technician. I am a returning student passionate about architecture & how it shapes our health & behavior. I have a combined education in Ethics and Architecture and I am pursuing a Master of Architecture + Health. I believe buildings can serve as a bridge between everyday life and health and wellbeing.

Education

HEATHER HINTON

Workplace Experience

HH

502.682.8096 hhinton@clemson.edu 724 W. Whitner St. B Anderson, SC 29624

Clemson University Center for Health Facilities Design Testing

3ds Max AutoCAD Maya

Photography

Revit

Hand Drafting

SketchUp


TABLE OF CONTENTS

A HEALING PLACE

1-6

GRADUATE

A 45,000 SQFT outpatient cancer center located on the Greenville Health System campus in South Carolina. Fall 2018

THE COCOON | MAGGIE’S CENTRE

7-10

An 8,000 SQFT centre that provides free practical, emotional and social support to people with cancer and their family and friends. Fall 2018

THE GARDEN SCHOOL

11-14

A community center and park proposal in Queens, New York. Fall 2017

TINY CABIN

15-20

An 800 SQFT cabin for an intimate gathering. Fall 2016

UNDERGRADUATE

ANALYSIS OF A BOUND SPACE

21-24

An investigation of light, mass and material for the foundation of a living space. Spring 2016

A PLACE FOR GATHERING

25-28

A campus intervention designed to provide respite for students and staff during their busy days. Fall 2016

PERSONAL WORKS A few personal artworks to showcase ability in various media.

29-32


HH

A HEALING PLACE

Fall 2018 | David Allison, Byron Edwards

A freestanding, state-of-the-art cancer center that incorporates the latest advances in cancer treatment, all under one roof. The proposed Greenville Health System Cancer Center brings the services and treatments that cancer patients need together in one beautiful, healing-centered place. This not only enhances convenience for the patient, but enhances overall quality of care. This 65,000 SQFT center incorporates a medical oncology unit, a radiation treatment department, and a 24-bed chemotherapy infusion suite. This design minimizes patient and staff steps, and offers daylighting throughout the space to maximize health benefits of the built environment. Contributing team members include Mariah Gresko, Jiarui Tan and Yuqing Zhou. My contributions on this team project include goals, concepts, site and context plans, diagrams development of the north facade, and medical planning.

Massing diagrams

Vehicular Pedestrian Site The Healing Place

Daylight

Nature

Vertical Massing

Bridge to Community

N


Reception

Infusion Bays

Linear Accelerator

Entry to Building, North Facade

2


STA FF BRE AK 206 SF

STO RAG 65 S E F

REG CANC ER IST R OFF Y/ OP ICE EN 288 SF

QU IET RO OM 173 SF

WC 66 S F

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

PAT WC 64 SF

NOURISHMENT 120 SF

RECEPTION/ CHECK-IN/ APPOINTMENTS/ FAX 277 SF

PAT WC 71 SF

MED PREP 61 SF

MED PREP 61 SF PORT ACCESS 124 SF

PAT WC 78 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

NOURISHMENT 120 SF

PORT ACCESS 124 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 83 SF

CUBICLE 84 SF

EQUIPMENT STORAGE 106 SF

ANTEROOM 162 SF

INFUSION PHARMACY + WORK STATIONS 447 SF

PAT WC 64 SF

CUBICLE 81 SF

SOILED UTILITY 120 SF

LOCKERS 69 SF

TREATMENT 122 SF

PAT WC 64 SF

PRIVATE WAITING 173 SF

CLEAN STORAGE 223 SF

PAT WC 64 SF

TREATMENT 122 SF

WC 65 S F

CLEAN SUPPLY/LINEN 173 SF

CUBICLE 82 SF

DRUG STORAGE 357 SF

RES O CEN URCE LIB TER + RAR Y 615 SF

RECORDS/ FAX/ COPY 80 SF

STORAGE 79 SF

PA NAV TIENT IGA TOR 320 SF

SE C ADM RETE IN A RY/ S 95 S SIST F

FAX / CO 39 S PY F

STA FF WC 75 S F

ADM IN 119 SF CO PY/F AX 59 S F

NM OFFICE PHARMACIST OFFICE 91 SF 108 SF

STAFF WC 67 SF

STAFF WC 68 SF

NP OFFICE 94 SF

STORAGE 94 SF

L03 Chemotherapy Infusion Suite

A

OPE N

OFF ICE 369 SF

AV 61 S F CO NSU LT 167 SF

DRA W 49 S F DRA W 46 S F DRA W 47 S F DRA W 47 S F

STO RAG E/ W OR 108 K SF

LAB WC 72 S F VIT ALS 58 S F

WC 66 S F

PROCEDURE MEDS ROOM STORAGE 167 SF 99 SF

PROCEDURE 150 SF

CONSULT 149 SF

PROCEDURE 149 SF

CLEAN SUPPLY 105 SF

PROCEDURE 150 SF

CONSULT 149 SF

PROCEDURE 137 SF

NM 95 SF

BILLING MGR 126 SF

STO RAG 76 S E F

CLINICAL MGR 94 SF

CATE RIN G 99 S F

PRACTICE ADMIN 95 SF

L CLA ARGE SSR OO M 490 SF

CLEAN SUPPLY 263 SF

QU IET RO OM 173 SF

WC 71 SF WC 65 S F

BILLING + MEDICAL RECORDS 262 SF

CHECK-IN + SCHEDULING 202 SF

STORAGE 65 SF

VITALS 61 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 118 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 118 SF

WC 71 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 118 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 118 SF

WC 71 SF

STORAGE 81 SF

MD OFFICE 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

MD OFFICE 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

EXAM 119 SF

MD OFFICE 119 SF

MD OFFICE 119 SF

MD OFFICE 118 SF

SOILED 173 SF

LOCKERS 146 SF

WC 68 SF

WC 69 SF

EVS 77 SF

A

STAFF BREAK 456 SF

L02 Medical Oncology Department

Section A-A


INFU

SION

MED

Patient Staff

ONC

RADI

ATIO N

Public

PARK I

NG

PARK I

NG

Views from Building

VESTIBULE 201 SF WIG

FIT T 94 S ING F

BO UTIQ UE 592 SF

RECEPTION

FINANCE 79 SF

MANAGER 120 SF

CONFERENCE ROOM 189 SF

CLEAN UTILITY 149 SF

RADIATION ONCOLOGIST OFFICE 148 SF

RADIATION ONCOLOGIST OFFICE 148 SF

PHYSICS STORAGE + LAB 299 SF

PHYSICIST 149 SF

BIOMED OFFICE/WORKROOM 162 SF

HSK SUPPLY 152 SF

SOILED UTILITY 123 SF

BILLING 93 SF

COPY/FAX 80 SF

REGISTRATION 82 SF

GURNEY HOLD 96 SF

WO ME NS WC 176 SF

NS WC 175 SF

DIN ING 959 SF

STORAGE 68 SF

DRE SSIN G 47 S F

Zoning

ME

R PHA ETAIL RM ACY 250 SF

Circulation

CHECK-IN/OUT 190 SF

EXAM 131 SF

PAT WC 64 SF

REGISTRATION 80 SF REGISTRATION 80 SF

EXAM 131 SF

VITALS + STORAGE 93 SF

CONSULT 131 SF

RADIATION THERAPY MANAGER 119 SF

EXAM 131 SF NURSE STATION, NOURISH, MEDS 349 SF

BLOCK ROOM 206 SF

HOT LAB VAC LOCK 82 SF STORAGE + SIM SUPPLIES 162 SF

CT 454 SF

EXAM 131 SF

ALCOVE 31 SF

CT CONTROL 90 SF

CT STORAGE 80 SF

EQUIPMENT STORAGE 286 SF

STAFF WC 65 SF

STAFF WC 65 SF

DATA 78 SF

EVS 63 SF

LINAC COMPUTER ROOM 220 SF

CT WC 86 SF NURSE WORK ROOM 159 SF

STAFF BREAK ROOM 241 SF

ACCESSIBLE ROOF GARDEN

CHAPEL 500 SF

L01 Entry, Radiation Treatment Unit and Linear Accelerator

4


South Facade

NOR TH F ACA D

E

SOU

TH F ACA D

E

Massing axonometric with North and South facade solutions


Panel Connection Detail South facade solar study Angled perforated panels allow for nature views and daylighting without excess solar-gain

6


HH

THE COCOON | MAGGIE’S CENTRE

Fall 2018 | David Allison, Byron Edwards

Maggie’s provides free practical, emotional and social support to people with cancer and their family and friends, following the ideas about cancer care originally laid out by Maggie Keswick Jencks. Maggie’s Centre’s are places with professional staff on hand to offer the support people need. Inspired by England’s many Maggie’s Centre’s, our studio investigated person-centered environments, especially those specific to oncology. Our site was located on the wooded edge of Greenville Health System’s main campus. This 8,000 SQFT Centre is influenced by the concept of a cocoon. The cocoon is defined as something that envelops or surrounds in a protective or comforting way. The cocoon offers a symbol of transformation through a nurturing and intimate environment.

Self-fulfillment needs

Conceptual sketches

Psychological needs

Basic needs

Self-actualization

Esteem

Belongingness and love

Safety

Physiological

Achieving one’s full potential, including creative activities

Prestige and feeling of accomplishment

Intimate relationships, friends

Security, safety

Food, water, warmth, rest

Goals and Design Strategies

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

Embody a healing environment

Design the Centre to be distinctive from the hospital. Use healthy, warm materials. Integrate large windows with views to nature.

Foster Social Engagement

Maintain an open door policy and provide spaces to gather that vary in levels of intimacy.

Enables resourcefulness

Provide spaces that encourage learning; a library, comptuer computer area, and classroom access.

Encourage cognitive development

adjacencies such as the garden or Sightlines to major adjancencies kitchen will encourage curiousity and exploration.


Grove Rd.

Future Outpatient Cancer Center

Maggie’s Centre

8

93

Health Sciences Education Building

94 6

94

4

94

2

Information Services Center

8

94

Nursing School

N

Site Plan

8


y Rm

Activit

.

Mech n Kitche

Toilet

Living e Path Natur

Deck

Rm

Group

Toilet

Rm

Quiet Space

nter ce Ce r u o s Re Office

n Garde

Librar

A

Plan

y

Office

Entry

A


Glulam Bean and column attachment

Section A-A

Column and mullion detail with glazing

Metal roof seam detail

10


HH

THE GARDEN SCHOOL Located in Queens, New York, Travers Park has become an concrete eyesore over the decades. The city has begun to revitalize Travers Park into a resident-centered haven. My design proposal encourages community health through a series of mind and body support systems. A small public library intertwines with a greenhouse which supports a local CSA on site. A space for a farmer’s market encourages public activity and fresh food to penetrate the once food-desert. Adjacent to the CSA is a green-amphitheater for social gatherings and community events. Across the promenade is multipurpose path that winds through a wooded space. The path dips down to basketball courts, a semi-enclosed playground and splash park, and finally to a public education center.

Location A | Render | East side of Travers Park

Fall 2017 | Tony Roccanova

Axon of Proposed Park


Figure-Ground Analysis

12


HEATHER HINTON | ROCCANOVA ARC 355

A

A

B

Site Plan +30’

A

B

3rd Level Plan +20’

B

N

Plans

Section A-A


Location B | Render | South side of Travers Park

Section B-B

14


HH

TINY CABIN

Fall 2016 |Mark O’Bryan

This 800 SQFT Cabin was designed as a get-away from daily life to the Kentucky countryside. The design challenge proposed was to create a space for a couple who may have a few guests over from time to time. Basic building methods were explored with the incorporation of heavy timber, concrete, and cement. Maxwell Render and 3ds Max were introduced. The inspiration for this cabin evolved from the wheat fields often lining the country roads of Kentucky. Amongst an ocean of golden yellow there would usually be a single tree standing alone in the field. It is a thing of beauty, resilience, and curiosity. The Tiny Cabin encompasses this same ideal; a box, a projecting window, and a glow from afar. The key living spaces all pivot around the hearth; the center of the home.

Massing Concept

Upper level loft


16


Living Room


Kitchen26


A

B

B

A

Ground level plan

Upper level loft plan

Section A-A

Roof plan

Section B-B


Upper level balcony

Hearth and kitchen

20


HH

ANALYSIS OF A BOUND SPACE

Spring 2016 | Nancy Sanders

We began he analysis of bound space with an investigation of kinetic movement. The Delta Shelter by Olson Kundig served as a precedent for dynamic design. These spaces are inspired by ideas that buildings can serve as a bridge between nature, culture and people, and that inspiring surroundings have a positive effect on people’s lives. Through hand-drafted axonometrics, plans, sections, and woodworking, the bound space here becomes something very elegant and playful. Each vertical wall moves along a track. When they are moved, the spaces affected become something new, via lighting, sight lines, and adjacencies, air movement, and form.

Section | Graphite on Vellum

Kinetic Concepts

Model


Plateau level

Upper level

Lower level

Plans | Graphite on Vellum

22


Model


Axonometrics | Graphite on Vellum

24


HH

A PLACE FOR GATHERING This South Florida campus intervention serves as a respite for staff and students during their busy day. In Tampa, Fl., where the university is located, there is an average rainfall of 145 days per year. Based on the almost-constant sunshine and rainfall, this gathering space was sited in the heart of the campus to provide ease of access along the most commonly used footpaths. Partially underground, the public spaces share double-height ceilings with ample access to daylight. The surrounding landscape is filled with local trees and foliage, therefore providing the inspiration of leaf-like dappled lighting. This space was designed through hand-drafting, woodworking and collage. The following pages provide examples of watercolor and ink during lighting investigations.

Spring 2016 | Nancy Sanders

Concept Sketch

N

Plan


N

Section

Context Plan

26


Investigative axons with ink and watercolor


Investigative axons with ink and watercolor

28


HH

PERSONAL WORKS These are a few selected works to provide an example of various media that I enjoy working with; pen and ink, graphite, and watercolor. I have chosen these works to express that I have a great love for detailed line work, yet am capable of an expressionistic tone. Often I find myself enamored in the poetic nature of the world, expressed in a collage of history, complexity, and anthropomorphic forms.

Cordoba Spain | Watercolor and Ink | Sketchbook


Complexity vs Simplicity | Graphite |8.5” x 11”

30


Anthropomorphic discoveries | Graphite and Watercolor | Sketchbook collage


Madrid | Watercolor and Ink | Sketchbook

32


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