Sub_industry: procedures for prominence of industrial heritage

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Vouras Ilias. Sub_Industry | page 08






NEGATIVE SPACES

12. signs of corrusion and underground 13. negative modes and their 3d scanning






The fl oor plan reproduces around as basic axis. Areas of interest are being developed diametrically as design starts from more standardized spaces and ends in experiential enhancing interventions. A ramp brings the visitor to the only basement display, an entrance tower. The route continues protecting the visitor in a reception area, which is defi ned by a patio, center of a library. Public spaces, reading rooms, are developed in a zone around it, with the laboratories circle them end behind for controlled lighting. North-facing ceiling openings complement the operation. On the other side of the corridor stands a cafeteria with independent entrance. The three exhibition rooms are located diametrically opposite and on the other side of the corridor there are display areas, exhibit maintenance laboratories and storage spaces. The fi rst chamber accommodates a rock hall, mainly lignite and carbonate deposits resting in the area. Inside the room a contour containing pieces of lignite is located. Subsequently a number of AEVAL machines and parts that have been rescued are presented, in need of maintenance. The main area comprises large sized machines, with smaller accompany the entrances. The third room is devoted to paleontology. The proposal embraces the transfer of existing exhibition from the Paleolithic

museum of Ptolemais and some of the separate exhibitions in other adjacent Paleontological museums, becoming a center role. Approaching the exit, the corridor narrows resulting in the “museum” of water, a lake inside an underground ditch. Water is symbolic as an integral part of industry, the cause of the dam opening in the nearby area, but mainly in the form of a lake that covered the area during the Paleolithic period. The reliefs of the sandbox are coated with concrete for better support giving the appearance of a rough surface. An isolation tower with an aperture on the roof is distinguished as an attachment to the surface. The inner walls converge towards the opening, giving a sense of depth. Behind it the path stops and the visitor rises to the surface.




CONTENTS

01. postcard of AEVAL factory in work. approximately 1986 02. area map 1:5000 03. street plan and suggesting interventions 04. AEVAL aerial photograph 05. diagram with creage of existing buildings. Numbers occur from organization plan of the factory 06. list with cross sections of existing buildings 07. creation steps of 3d scanning 08. museum area from above 09. axonometric drawing of the museum area. 3d scanning 10. renders of industrial sites 11. industrial sites 12. signs of corrusion and underground 13. negative modes and their 3d scanning 14. the two - part spliting model 15. impact of geometric cuts in morphology 16. design plan with three levels 17. plan 18. cross section of museum 19. the basic axis with exhibitions 20. museum of water 21. construction technic for the shed 22. model concrete shed- negative imprint of soil. 23. axonometric drawing of the shed. 3d scanning of the model

24. axonometric drawing of museum 25. physical model 26.axonometric drawing of the garden 27.cooling tower’s inside view 28. diagram of spherical cut in the cranebridre 29. axonometric drawing sculptures garden 30. atrium 31.axonometric drawing with helix ramps 32. inside view, light from above 33. physical models 34. cooling tower inside render

21. construction technic for the shed 22. model concrete shed- negative imprint of soil.

Vouras Ilias. Sub_Industry | page 08












exhibition

library and machines


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