Portfolio

Page 1

ARCHITECTURAL PORTFOLIO

HEMAMBICA MAGANI


RESUME Extra-curricular Activities

Personal Name

Hemambica Magani

Birthday

18 Jan 1995

Nationality

Indian

Laguages

Telugu, Kannada, Hindi, English

Contact

About me A strong believer of creative expression, my goal is to expand my knowledge and skills in the field of architecture. I believe in hardwork and I am always eager to learn. As a fresh graduate I would want to be associated with a workplace where my abilities and skills are put to best use. There also remains a scope for learning new techniques and technologies in order to utilise them for the betterment of the organization and myself.

-Cultural head of SOA DSATM -Took part in design competetions and attended various seminars at ZoNASA 2014,15,16 -Won 1st place in Street Architecture [Design competetion at ZoNASA 2015] -Released newsletters as part of the Editorial team of SOA DSATM -Won 1st place as part of the Fashion team at ZoNASA 2015 -Attended various seminars and workshops by MASA, PRAXIS, ARH 101 etc.

Mobile

8197572808

E-mail

hemamagani.18@gmail.com

Hobbies and Interests

Address

#2460 “SAGI” 16th main, Kumaraswamy Layout 2nd stage, Bangalore - 560078

-Sketching & Painting -Belly dancer and performer -Photography - Literature and Poetry

Education BACHELOR IN ARCHITECTURE 2012-2017 B.Arch degree from School of Architecture, Dayananda Sagar Academy of Technology and Management,Bangalore

Softwares & Skills

PRE-UNIVERSITY EDUCATION - 2012 Completed my PU from Sri Kumarans PU College, Bangalore 10TH BOARD - 2010 CBSE 10TH Board, Kendriya Vidyalaya IISc, Bangalore

Papers presented Presented two research papers at national conferences. 1. IS FUTURE GREEN? - NCGCT 2015 2. PSYCHO-SENSITIVE DESIGN - NCCSTM 2016

KEYNOTE


CONTENTS ‣

CAMPUS HOUSING

3

CAMPUS DESIGN

4

CITY CENTRE

5-6

PSYCHO-SENSITIVE CENTRE

7-8

MODEL MAKING

9

INTERIOR DESIGN - KITCHEN

10

INTERIOR DESIGN - STUDIO APARTMENT

11

BUILDING CONSTRUCTION AND MATERIALS

12

3D VIEWS

13

PHOTOSHOP RENDERS

14-15

PHOTOGRAPHY

16-17


Director’s Villa Duplex villa with 4 bedrooms, hexagonal courtyard as the central focal point

CAMPUS HOUSING

Housing for faculty and staff

Concept : Compact Disk – knowledge

Design scope: 1.VILLA – DIRECTOR’S RESIDENCE 2.ROWHOUSING – 8 UNITS 3.CLUSTER HOUSING – 8-10 UNITS 4.APARTMENT – 16 UNITS The site chosen was an island and the main design criteria for this semester was creative expression and conceptualisation. The individual plans of the different categories of buildings were stressed on rather than the campus planning, since it was a 4th semester project.

Row housing for faculty Duplex houses with requirements of 3 bed-rooms and private backyard for each house Total number of units : 10 Concept: Fort – interconnectedness


CAMPUS DESIGN Design scope : PROJECT - HOTEL MANAGEMENT INSTITUTION SITE AREA - 19.5 Acres The concept for this project was inspired by nature. The zoning was conceptualised from the form and function of a bird’s nest to create an environment that will represent Growth and nurturing, Hospitality, Service & Warmth.

Organic forms that interact with each other to form a whole. The entire campus has been laid out to give the feeling of an interlocked whole. The aim of such zoning was to provide pockets of spaces that can act as interactive spaces between the buildings. The criteria for design was mainly based on campus planning rather than individual planning of blocks.

Natural materials such as bricks and stone used the most. Exposed brick walls and bare stone floors instead of more processed marble, ceramic tiles and granite.


CITY CENTRE Design scope : PROJECT - CITY CENTRE SITE AREA - 12 Acres Concept : ▪ The site is divided into a honeycomb pattern of side 40M. ▪ Area of each hexagon = 4156.92 SqM ▪ Built forms and unbuilt spaces are derived from the shapes white links or pathways are derived from the edges.

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

SITE PLAN

GROUND FLOOR PLAN


CITY CENTRE

DESIGN OF LEFTOVER URBAN SPACES: As part of the urban level design, the urban issue provided along with the city centre was designing of the leftover spaces under and around the Hebbal flyover. The above solution is for the land along the roads, the flyover and the Hebbal lake. This exercise was done as part of a time problem which included the resolution of 5 leftover spaces tin the vicinity.


PSYCHO-SENSITIVE CENTRE PROXEMICS THEORY : PSYCHO

BIO

SOCIO

The theory explains the perception of space by humans in context to social conditions. Using this theory the massing of the site is developed in a way to replicate the perceptions with respect to the scale of open areas.

The site is easily identifiable by the hierarchy of open spaces surrounded by built mass. The residential spaces become the intimate or private spaces. The space The program is derived from the adjacent treatment triad. surrounded by the residential wards I. BIO – stands for the biological aspect, the becomes the personal space. The larger medication prescribed to the patients. open space surrounded by the rest of the built masses becomes a social space . And II. SOCIO – stands for the sociological aspect of in comparison the rest of the space rehabilitation centres where in patients are allowed to learn and grow within a closed society.surrounding the site acts as a public space. III. PSYCHO – stands for the psychological counselling.

Materials and texture: Natural materials are used which will create an organic feel and incorporate earthy textures. This draws the user closer to nature and what exists naturally. Thus the use of exposed brick walls and bamboo structures.

HUMAN PSYCHE AND ARCHITECTURE Architecture and psychology maintain a symbiotic relationship and one cannot exist without the other. Architecture is born out of psychology. What the architect imagines and feels is conceptualised into a form and further onto the site. This means that the emotions and psychology of the designer has influenced the space that he created. And in turn the space he created will impact the emotions of the user. Broadly spaces are perceived in the same way by majority of the users. But people suffering from mental disorders and those who have a completely different perception of the world will define normalcy as something quite different from our definition. Their environment should be moulded to comfort them and provide a better understanding of the world. The father of analytical psychology Carl Jung described architecture as “a structural diagram of human psyche.”

ARCH

SPACE

PSYCH


ADMIN BLOCK : Contains a reception area, four washrooms (2 each), admin office, enquiry room, waiting lounge, 10 counselling rooms.

PSYCHO-SENSITIVE CENTRE PATIENT WARDS : Each block consists of two floors consisting of a lounge area, 2 warden rooms, 8 singlesharing patient rooms, 4 double-sharing patient rooms and 2 triple-sharing patient rooms.

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

DINING BLOCK : GROUND FLOOR PLAN

The dining block contains preparation area, kitchen and dining area with a capacity of 142 pax.

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

GROUND FLOOR PLANS

STAFF RESIDENCE : Consists of 4 singlesharing rooms, 4 double-sharing rooms and one triple sharing room. Lounge area and pantry.


MODEL MAKING


INTERIOR DESIGN - KITCHEN


INTERIOR DESIGN - STUDIO APARTMENT

CONCEPT BOARD


BUILDING CONSTRUCTION & MATERIALS


BUILDING CONSTRUCTION & MATERIALS


3D VIEWS


PHOTOSHOP RENDERS


PHOTOSHOP RENDERS


PHOTOGRAPHY


PHOTOGRAPHY


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