ARCHITECTURE U & Y LANDSCAPE N
Contents Professional 1.Sulk Residence -Triarch.inc Architecture Roof Terrace Design 2.Spafinder Office -Triarch.inc Architecture Office Renovition Design 3.Blaylock Residence -Triarch.inc Architecture Townhouse Renovition Design 4.Defu Middle School -Atelier GOM Architecture Design 5.Pixel Topology -Nanjing Technology Park Master Plan And Architecture Design
Acadamic
3. Save Architecture For Landscape----Site, Ecology & Design 4. Waterscape -Urban Studio 5. Hopkin Highschool Water Treatment -Construction Landscaep Studio 6. Suspension - Low Carbon Exhibition Hall of Revit Cup Competition 7. Living and Context ----Urban Housing Architecture Design Studio 8. Other Works
Sulk Residence
OYSTER
TriBeCa, New York City, NY10013
-Triarch.inc Architecture Time: 2014.8-2015.2 Site: New York, NY Area: 1,500 sft Client: Phillip Sulk Contribution: On-site supervision, Rendering, Lighting Design & Detailing, Railing Detailing.
LARIAT
SNOWBALL
WARMSAND
IVORY
Spafinder
Wells Fargo Center, 333 Avenue Of The Americas, 37Th Floor Miami, Florida 33131 -Triarch.inc Architecture Time: 2014.8-2015.1 Site: Miami, FL Area: 7,900 SF Client: Pete Ellis Contribution: SK, CD, renderings, walkway detailing, furniture order, furniture rep meeting.
Defu Middle School Architecture -Atelier GOM Architecture Intern Time: 2013.6-2013.9 Contribution: concept design,entrance ,barrier landscape system,courtyard landscape design and constrction drawing,gate house design and construction drawing, classroom building construction drawing, 3D modeling and renderings, physical model.
Pixel Topology
no display reflection
influence
influence
pixel height
pixel height
-Nanjing Technology park master plan and architecture design Time: 2013.1-2013.6 critic: Leng Jiawei 1�=160’
exisiting buildings topology assigment
exisiting entrances topology assigment
influence
influence
pixel height
pixel height
piexel height system exisiting paths topology assigment
noise topology assigment
influence
influence
pixel height
pixel height
water topology assigment
sight topology assigment
influence
influence
pixel height
pixel height
function height topology assigment
overall topology assigment
grid-city
original buildings
distribution formaty
path-water
grid-site
architecture rationality grid
entrance
exisiting site plan
grid-exisiting buildings
improved water system
noise
winter wind environment
grid
water system sensibility grid
mountain landscape
sunmmer wind entironment
Reappear the Disappearance -Urban Design Studio Time: 2011.2-2011.5 Critic: Wei Chen
Introduction: This is a project in Nanjing, China. It used to be a water lock where the Outer Qinhuai River and Inner Qinhuai River intersect. The water lock was used to control the water from Outer Qinhuai River to Inner Qinhuai River. Besides, Ancient Ming City Wall surrounded Nanjing. The site is exactly at the edge of Nanjing ancient city; the city gate was designed in a special way to show the importance. The aim is to recreate the disappearing scenes and atmosphere in this sensitive are. A city with wall and river:Nanjing has a long history, which dates back to Dongwu Dynastic (AD222AD280). Viewing the maps during different periods, we can learn that the development of the city is related to the city walls and river system. Site:The current site is complex: a road runs through the middle of the site, upon which there is an overpass: the Outer Qinhuai River and the Inner Qinhuai River met here. Though the two rivers are not connected yet, in the future planning, two rivers will be connected together and both rivers will be navigable. The boat shape: Urn City is a small town outside the city gate, enclosuring for defense outside a citygate. The Urn City in Nanjing is special for its shape. Three pieces of arc-shape walls form the Urn City. If extending the outer arcs of the walls, the plan of the Urn City would look like a boat. According to the historical research, the ancient designers of the Urn City tried to express a kind of wish to build the Urn City like a boat, as the Urn City is closed to the Qinhuai River and West Water Lock. Atmosphere recreation: Apart from recreating the ancient spatial structure, the atmosphere from ancient time is also reappeared in landscape design. Four elements, wild charm of External Qinghuai River, walls in Sequence, Chiang-nan water alley and _flying bridges are displayed to recall the memory.
Certain parts of cities get unequal attention. Our impression of a city is often shaped by the ‘important’ physical landmarks and objects; the scenes of major buildings, constructed waterways, formal open spaces, and grand boulevards. Influenced by these formal urban forms, city planners tend to respond with equally grand gestures for open spaces, like parks, playgrounds, greenways, and plazas. Nevertheless, the true experience we get from the city is far more than these. Our lives are spent largely in the mundane places scattered throughout the formal city. These places are plain, uninteresting, or even unpleasant and dangerous; they might be called “placeless” places; they are spaces in the city’s wrinkles. They may be the small dark alley between two buildings that is the fastest way to school; the building with a dull façade on our daily route; and the dead-look parking lots where we have to drop and reach our vehicles. They are there; they come to our life everyday and we neglect them; but they are also resources and opportunities.
Strip Exhibition:The program suits the area I create: a pathway where a short-term art exhibition could take place under or besides the fire escape; across from seating under the trees. Hence in the future, it will become a gathering place for artists and others who are interested in art. In this case, the need for an outdoor exhibition space in downtown Providence will be met.
An amiable city should have a variety of different scale of gathering spaces. Larger scale (urban green space, plaza, park), middle scale (street, street green space, neighborhood green space, entry plaza.), smaller scale (street retail, small alley). Downtown Providence has relatively pleasant larger scale urban green space, but its streets have become less vigorous and attractive because of excessive vehicle parking and abandoned alley. The gap in smaller scale is to blame for this phenomenon. My thesis is to seek the opportunity for the leftover spaces distributed along streets and alter them systematically into urban architectural infill, pocket parks or improved paths, which enhance the daily life for people and strengthen the overall open space system.
Performance Center:This design actually stimulates the night bar business since the basement could be rented and opened to the public. It aims at adding a city night-life spot.
primary open space useful elements leftover space active main road and buildings
LeftoverSpace Reinterpretation -Master of Landscape thesis Time: 2014.2-2014.5 Critic: Colgate Searl
Fleat Market&Exhibition:In summary, by doing the alternative designs, I could repurpose leftover space on various scales, exploring the balance of change and stasis. Thus I could add value to the land by creating the mixed-use activities. I learned that program-oriented strategy and user-oriented design could build a better relationship between locals and visitors, which is the main character and restriction that drives the designs and the result of considering three different requests for future urban planning.
Save Architecture For Landscape -Site, Ecology & Desgin Landscape Studio Time: 2013.2-2013.5 Critic: Scheri Fultineer, Suzanne Mathew, Paul Lukes
Site Plan
Section C
1”=80’
Section B
1”=80’
1”=80’
Site Context Abandoned Buildings Transform Strategy
Section A
1”=80’
Site Section Transmutation Pre 1700
1636 Roger Williams’ arrival 1646 erection of John Smith’s grist mill
1750
1711 Neck waterfront was designated as common land 1714 agriculture products bought and sold at market square
1800
1752 the concord distil-house built on the waterfront 1765 mills erected on Woonasquatucket river 1792 appearance of the first steamboat
1850
1831 first steam train appeared 1835-1848 railroad line construction
C
1900
1850s city recreation facilities, squares and park by 1860 jewely and textile as major industries 1861 construction of the first street railway line
B
1950
1910 vehicular connection 1942 abandonment of steamboat lines 1947 urban renewal plan finalized
First Floor Plan
1”=80’
present
1950 use of buses, erection of bus terminals 1976 renovation of commercial projects 1986-1996 Providence River relocation project 2002 opening of Providence River riverwalk.
Waterscape -Urban Studio Time: 2012.1-2012.6 Site: Nanjing,China Critic: Leng Jiawei
I chose water to be the media with which the site responds to the city. By introducing diverse expression of water and various state of water to the site, to the building, we finally speak to the complex context. I designed two different-oriented squares to response to the local people and the tourists separately, and arrange diverse water alone the courts. Thus , the choreography between water, courts, and architecture form an organic integrity to interact with the city.
Hopkin High School Water Treatment -Technology Studio Time: 2013.9-2014.1 Critic: Colgate Searle Hopkin High School is at the location of the riverine system, and storm water management becomes the significant design element for the reconstruction of the parking lot and recreation part of the school. This is a real project that focusing on the best practice of on-site water management.
Section B 1”=5’
Section A 1”=5’
Section C 1”=1’
Section D 1”=4’
modules & structure
section
entrance
open view
circulation ground plan
Suspension Low Carbon Exhibition Hall Of Revit Cup Competition Time: May .8 2010 - July.11 2010 Site: Hangzhou, Xixi wetland, China Critic: Liu Jie Low carbon is the subject of feverish speculation even in construction, in order to avoid destroying the weak ecosystem in wetland of the site and I chose to take advantage of local material such as bamboo and reed leaves, to build a temporary exihibition architecture.Even if it is a trail in some degree,it is worth trying because of its potential operability and practicability.
Urban Housing
Living and Context Architecture Design Studio, St. Louis, Missouri Instructor: Li Bao Today’s “globalized,” universal civilization, while providing increasing information and interchange, cannot produce or sustain culture, which is always local, and which is essential for the making of architecture. Every architectural project should be understood as an addition to a pre-existing inhabited context, whether urban, suburban, or rural. The Project focuses on the design of housing, the residential fabric of the city, as a design that both determines and is determined by a collective community, and reveals the cultural and social meanings of public actions.“What matters most in architecture is not what a building looks like, but what a building is like to be in, to live in—how it is experienced in inhabitation by many people over many years.”
Topsoil Drainage/protection mat Calendered polymeric roo Thermal insulation (XPS) Vapor barrier Screed laid to falls Concrete slab
2.5” 1” , 2 layers 1/12” 2.5” 3/16” 1” 6”
Ready-to-lay parquet ooring I-beam Separating layer Thermal insulation (XPS) Concrete slab
5/8” 6.5”
double layer low-E window
7/8”
Clay masonry (8 x 4 x 2.5) Ventilated cavity Thermal insulation (XPS) Clay masonry (8 x 4 x 2.5)
4” 1” 2” 4”
Wooden oorboards Battens Layer of felt Screed Separating layer Thermal insulation, vapor proof Concrete slab over basement
1” 1” 1/12” 2.5”
1” 9.5”
2” 8”
Other Works
Indestrail Wasteland Renewal Urban Studio:The Planning Of Panda Indestrail Area Of Nanjing Site: Nanjing, China Time: April .8 .2011 -June.13. 2011 Critic:Leng Jiawei
Control perspective
The Kiosk as Metaphor
-Interdisciplinary(-Heritage Preservation, -Tourism, -Experience and -Art + Culture) Studio Time: 2014.1-2014.2 Site: Newport,USA Critic: Ernesto Aparicio
Section
Youth Hostel Site: Nanjing, China Critic:Ying Bai
Architecture Mapping
The Measurements Of The Troditional Architecture In Qingshu Time:Sep .1 .2010 -Dec.8. 2010 Site: Qingshui, Fujian,China Critic:Xue Li
Elevation
41
42
Memorial Center Site: Nanjing, China Time:March .8 .2012 -May.8. 2012 Critic:Yang Jing
Sunlight Angle Land-Saving Residence Packing The Diversity of Local Open Space Landscape Studio Time: 2013.9-2013.10 Site: Boston,USA Critic: Eamonn Hutton
Sara Cohen
Seamless Conmunication
Landscape & Architecture Collaborative Studio Time: 2013.11-2013.1 Site: west central France Critic: Eamonn Hutton Sara Cohen
Site: Nanjing, China Time:March .8 .2011 -May.8. 2011 Critic:Yang Jing