Immanuel Tashiro
Architecture 7 Academic Works 2007-2014
The Hague, May 2015 Immanuel Tashiro MSc Architecture 7 Academic Projects Architecture Portfolio
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Index Z U I D A S CITY CAMPUS Master Thesis
HOTEL FOR THE LONE TRAVELER Bachelor Semester 1
p. 28 - 31
COMMUNITY CENTER AND WORKSHOPS VREDESBLOCK
Master Semester 2
p. 52 - 57
p. 8 - 27
GROUND FOR PERFORMANCE & NEW MEDIA
Master Semester 1
p. 32 - 37
CATECHISM SCHOOL
Bachelor Semester 4
-7-
p. 58 - 65
HEDONIST´S VAULT
Bachelor Semester 2
p. 38 - 51
COMMUNITY C E N T E R SCHLIEREN
Bachelor Thesis
p. 66 - 73
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Amsterdam, Netherlands “Nine to five? no way... 24/7, 365 and 360° don´t be shy now.”
Through the conversion of a secondary road into a public city campus at the prominent location of Amsterdam Zuidas, an attempt is made to create public interiors that are liberated from their usual allegiance to places of consumption, infrastructure or corporate business. The former no man`s land will be transformed in a contemporary workscape with studios in an exposed public environment.
ZUIDAS CITY CAMPUS
This public interior is an intervention on an urban scale; a flat, 520m- long building that adds high quality pedestrian interior (halls, pits, mezzanines, studios) and exterior (courtyards, gardens, stairs) domains to the already existing systems of rather dull squares, paths and lobbies
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that make up the pedestrian realm of the Amsterdam Zuidas quarter. It is designed to address multiple user groups and to invite them to occupy different spaces that are available over a certain negotiable period of time. The objective to create a public interior as a framework for all kinds of emergent and traditional functions, programming and events was achieved by creating charged and hierarchically organized ground contrasted with the continuous omnipresent roof structure. The relationship between the clearance heights of the different spaces and their degree of openness, character and dimension determine the potential uses. There are also spaces predesignated for informal gatherings or more formal concepts of work.
50 m Amsterdam Zuid - site plan
to Schiphol Airport 7 min
- 10 -
to Museumsplein 15 min
A
B
Urban sections
A
50 m
B
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View with Zuidplein and Station Amsterdam Zuid
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Gar
den
Aud
itor
ium Par k
CafĂŠ
Bar
/B
ing
Stu
Cou
CL
obb
y
s k to
rior
WT
dio
Lin Inte
s
o k to
den
age
istr
Lin
Gar
Gar
Par k
rtya
ing
rd
Gar
WT
CL
obb
y
age
s
New Public Interior Datum +4.00m mastic asphalt
Gardens
lawns, plants, pathways
Lin
k to
Presentation Pits
Offi
ce
parquet flooring
Tow
er
Marble Cores
service shafts, storages, toilets
City Campus ground finishes
Zuidas CBD with highway still running above ground
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South elevation
Central longitudinal section
Horizontal section at +4.00 m new public datum
Horizontal section at +0.00 m city level
Amsterdam RAI Convention Centre Amsterdam Municipal Court
Station
Amsterdam Zuid
Urban relations ABN Amro HQ Free University Amsterdam
educational Institutions offices pedestrian paths
- 14 -
50 m
Conceptual approach: 5 pavilions in an elevated Arcadian landscape
Circulation and functional diagram public functions
interiors
enclosed studios
catering
public study gallery
presentation
- 15 -
Cross Section Entrance
1
5
10
Entrance situation with shop
- 16 -
0
Cross Section Multi-purpose Hall West
1
5
10
0
Multipurpose-hall
- 17 -
Cross Section Presentation Pit
1
5
10
Presentation and communication pit with studio
- 18 -
0
Cross Section Presentation Pit
1
5
10
0
Presentation and communication pit facing the garden spaces
- 19 -
Cross Section Garden
1
5
10
View from garden to the interiors
- 20 -
0
Cross Section Garden Studio
1
5
10
0
Garden studios in relation to context (without roof)
- 21 -
Street view west entrance Parnassusweg
West entrance Parnassusweg and station entrance Amsterdam Zuid (in background)
- 22 -
Different degrees of occupation
South facade with study gallery
- 23 -
Green roof
Roof truss
Piers and columns
Facades
Complete
- 24 -
40
15 10 15
1.
2.
Roof Layers: 1.
extensive green roof Kalzip™ “Nature Roof” System total thickness 11cm with 2% inclination towards drainage points sedum vegetation 6 cm Substrate layer on Kalzip™ Drainage modular mat with filter layer in Kalzip™ Aluminium profile sheeting clipped to roof slab 18-30 cm mineral wool insulation vapor barrier 6 cm structural roof slab plywood boards
3.
2.
primary roof structural grid: h=170 cm glued laminated timber in combination with cross laminated timber. box beam in middle axis, full profiles in cantilevering areas. Flanges 2x 15 cm + 10 cm cavity.
3.
secondary roof grid: h=170 cm 3 layered cross laminated timber 10cm wide and 170 cm high; invisibly attached to primary beams with metal fittings and overleap joints Columns hinged on both ends Ø= 30cm, compression forces steel tube hollow section filled with concrete
1. - 3.
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+11.83
+11.20
15
22
1.815
10
2.185
+9.50
+4.00
South facade elevation and detailing
50 cm
- 26 -
15
22
1.815
10
Facade:
50 cm
Schüco™ Mullion and beam curtain wall 18cm x 6cm Aluminium profiles reinforced by 150x50x5.6mm steel profile Connected to interior roof structure and standing on concrete floor slab at the base reinforced by a steel profile Beam at the base is flush with floor finish low emissivity triple glazing total thickness 3.80cm vertically adjustable sun protection awning Warema™ Type 450 with acrylic screen material suspended on a stainless steel wire. can be lowered until +1.80m above floor level opening ventilation slats between facade mullions in main axis and individually operable blind window leafs Floor:
Plinth:
9.00 cm polished grade-A mastic asphalt with white and yellow pigments copper heating runs attached to heating metal plate
(only facing south)
polythene separating layer
dark stone veneer (slate or artificial stones) mounted on Halfen™ stainless steel anchors and substructure
8.00 cm perlite thermal insulation
6cm air cavity
2x 12.5mm board material as double flooring bearing layer
8cm Mineral Insulation
adjustable supports in a 600 x 600 grid distance
earth retaining wall
25 cm concrete floor slab 12 cm pressure resistant insulation of entire concrete floor slab ventilation vents and media interfaces integrated in the floor
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Berlin, Germany “After a long stroll through this buzzing city, riding her trains, east and west, I recede into my chamber. Among strangers I feel at home, this trip I wanted to take alone.”
The project was carried out at the end of the first Bachelor semester within a 2 week period. In this first semester individual project, I designed a hotel with 100 rooms and beds. Each room accommodates one Berlin visitor and offers basic comfort organized in a 10 m² module.
HOTEL FOR THE LONE TRAVELER
Inspired by Kurokawa´s Nakagin Capsule Tower with its modular cells and by the shell of the nautilus with its splendid proportions, I proposed a 12 floor high rise building, located on the prominent tip of an island in the Landwehrkanal in West-Berlin.
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The overall orientation of the building and its basic entity -the cell- opens up towards the vast greens of the Tiergarten and the nearby Zoo. The guest accommodations are protected from the noisy and constantly frequented tracks of the Stadtbahn. For the river-cruise-boat passengers passing the last lock of the Landwehrkanal, the Hotel for the lone Traveler is a distinctive landmark and it responds to its nearby waterfront context. All the furniture and appliances are integrated into the prefabricated room module. The self-supporting cells can easily be assembled and stacked on the building site.
50 m Berlin, Tiergarten
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2m The module Guest room with bed and shower
Floor plan Levels 2-3
10 m² * 100 = 1000 m² 100 guest rooms
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Berlin, Germany “Up and down. On and off. Within and without. Come and act or watch how others were/are/will be doing things!”
Approach to the Site
Zone Program
The site for the designated project is traversed by routes to and from the neigbouring Museumsinsel, the Grimm-Library of the Humbold University or the S-Bahn Station Friedrichstraße.
The territory is organized in a way that it suggests future or most adequate uses. In contrast, more formal spatial arrangements are introduced in the cut and folded system of strips. The index model is a diagram of urban conditions - so is this proposal- which tries to emulate urbanity within the singular project or system.
GROUND FOR PERFORMANCE & NEW MEDIA
The results of an urban sampling and indexing exercise conducted along the U8 subway line show a fragmented logic which sets the stage for typical metropolitan life with its contingencies and events predominately happening in the public realm. Informed by the logic of an index model, the cutting and folding of sheet material, the proposed architectural configuration intends to delimit an area on which the urban conditions of random encounter, interaction between strangers and visual relations “en passant” are given a territory in which to unfold. The cutting and folding up or down of the striated site segments offers the opportunity to suggest different areas or zones within the territory and - far from being imperative - offer flexible and dynamic spaces for a vast palette of activities.
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Major elements of this deliberation are the main passage and the gangways which traverse into the territory and connect the exterior with the interior. Though the site is an integral part of a passage coming from the library in the west, leading to the Bode Museum, the configuration of the striated slabs shields the territory from the exterior and only grants insight when it bows down to form accessible roofs and decks. This demarcation is important to the idea of the urban laboratory or experimental field that needs both limits and connections to the surrounding urban context.
Paper study models
Berlin, Mitte. Pedestrian movement from station FriedrischstraĂ&#x;e to Museumsinsel 1. S-Bahnhof FriedrichstraĂ&#x;e 2. Admirals Palast Music Hall 3. Grimm Library 4. Archaeological Archive 5. Bode-Museum 6. Pergamon Museum 7. Alte Nationalgalerie
8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14.
Neues Museum Altes Museum Berliner Dom German Historic Museum Maxim Gorki Theatre Humbold University National Library
5
6 4
2
7
3 1
8
9 10
12 14
11 13
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Public agora
Passage and roof terraces
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Folded roofs and terraces
Forest of columns
curtains
Floor slaps
auditoria
gangways
central passage
city plane
performance pit
- 36 -
GRIMM LIBRARY Books
program
FOYER
0
-8
1.0
.4
10
.00
15
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GRAFFITI WALL
SHORT CUT
RESTAURANT
SHOPS
EXHIBITION
CAFE/BAR
CINEMA
REHEARSAL
floorplan
.00
5.0
0
10
5.0
AUDITORIUM
STUDIOS
GROUND FOR PERFORMANCE & NEW Activities
.00
0
0
5.0
10
STORAGE
WORKSHOP/ASSEMBLY
PEDESTRIAN STREET STUDIO STAGE
CLOAKROOM
PUBLIC SQUARESHOW ROOM STREET MARKET
GALLERY
AUDIO-VIDEO STUDIOS
SNEAK PREVIEW
LIBRARY
CHAMBER MUSIC
OFFICES PERSONNEL WC
PARKING OUTDOOR STAGE
Passage
0
5.0
0
7.5
0
5.0
INFORMAL ANCILLARY LARGE MASSES FORMAL TRANSIENT
PERFORMANCE
section
MEDIA BODE-MUSEUM Sculptures
-3
-1 0
-4 .9
±0 -3 .7
5.0
0
.00
0
0 0.0
5.0
0
0
1
7.5
5.0
15
.00
10
1
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Berlin, Germany “Give me your cherished, your precious, your valuable playthings! Objects of desire, so utterly beautiful no one else can see them shine. I will keep them, I will guard them, I will protect them. Duly pay your toll and appreciate them well so others may learn to see through your eyes.”
This project was the final thesis at the end of the first academic year of the bachelor program at the TU Berlin. It was the first major design project to be conducted in groups of 4 students in order to train the ability to work in teams, to discuss and comply different ideas and approaches.
Different layers, levels and hulls easily combine the two required qualities of the closed and guarded storage places and the open and exposed compartments for contemplative indulgence of the stored good.
The brief called for a place for collection and storage of objects. It was left open to the students to decide what item was to be stored.
HEDONIST´S VAULT
After the decision was made to create a vault for the storage, presentation and consumption of collectibles, memorabilia, or other treasures, we worked as a group of four students on the initial idea of the cube as a strong shape. The vertical hedonist´s vault soon became a viable concept for our building. The design of our collection had to be able to offer protection and a safe keeping system for the precious items while also creating adequate spaces for the presentation, celebration and consumption.
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The highlight of the cube is the cone shaped roof top patio. It opens up towards the sky. The visitor arrives in this dignified atmosphere after passing through the dim layered interior spaces. On the way, the user of the storage enters a secret code into the automated high rack retrieval system. The bulk storage unit, which is a fully conditioned weather proof box, is then carried to one of the designated output shelves, where the owners receive their item. Then they choose between the more private compartments, arranged on the different levels of the vault, or the open yard on the roof. The compartments offer various vistas over the River Spree while being isolated from the hectic goings-on of the city.
Typological relations Visual relations
Un
ive
rsa
for
um brü
ck
e
l in
me
r “E
ier
kü
hlh
au
s” Os
Ob e
rba
tha
fen
ori
gin
al
bu
ild
ing
s
ne
wa
ter
fro
nt
bu
ild
ing
s
oh
mü
hle
nL
oc
k
w
dL
Mo
ule
Ma
n
La
nd
we
hrk
an
al
an
lec
Ar
en
Clu
bd
er
Vis io
aE
ve
nt
Lo
ca
tio
n
nä
re
2
- 40 -
Sp
ree
2
1
La
nd
we
hr
ka
na
l
3
50 m 3
- 41 -
Void
Functional layering
Bulk storage
DĂŠgustation cabinets
- 42 -
Voids
Rooftop patio
DĂŠgustation cabinets
Display shelves
Outer cladding brick
Bulk storage shelves
Logistics
- 43 -
Entrance
-3.50 m Logistic
2m
4°C - 22°C Storage Units 75 x 40 x 90 cm
- 44 -
40% - 75%
± 0.00 m Foyer
2m
4°C - 22°C
40% - 75%
Storage Units 75 x 40 x 90 cm
- 45 -
2m
+3.00 m Level 1
- 46 -
2m
+6.00 m Level 2
- 47 -
2m
+9.00m Roof patio
- 48 -
elevation
view from foyer level
- 49 -
Study models
- 50 -
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The Hague, Netherlands “Backyard Boogie-Woogie�
What began as a small design and research task - to think about potentials of the small vacant Vredeskapel in The Hague - soon turned into an intervention that affected the entire neighborhood and especially the typical narrow Dutch urban block of the Archipelbuurt.
COMMUNITY CENTER AND WORKSHOPS VREDESBLOCK
The chapel, together with an existing neighborhood center, were prominently positioned at one side of the block. Through consolidation of all existing buildings that were already public gathering spaces, it was possible to form the head or main entrance to a system of lowered courtyards and an array of rooms that would house private or public workshops of domestic sizes. This system of courts and rooms is located on a lower level making it possible to reestablish private gardens as roof gardens on their original ground level. These
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gardens are only slightly smaller than they were before the lots were realigned and offer a close visual and acoustic relation with the public passage and courts underneath. The main entrance through a foyer next to the former Vredeskapel was originally the parish center which consisted of one larger room and a kitchen. In the redesign, the kitchen is turned into an open neighborhood restaurant at the location of the former neighborhood center. It is now possible to traverse the block via the foyer on one side or a passage next to the restaurant on the other side. Further functions located in this entrance ensemble are a small scale media center with books, magazines and computers, the main hall of the former Vredeskapel and an outdoor market square still on street level. In this project, the public and the private realm are fused together to form an enriching, familiar environment for a local community.
A1
AA BB
Street / Garden level ±0.00 m
BB Media C entre
Neighbourhood K itchen and R es taurant
CC
CC -1.35m Multifunktional Hall 182.28 m²
DD -1.35m Market-place
F oyer
DD
± 0.00m G allery / S treet Level
A1
AA
Archipelbuurt
EE
EE
FF
FF
-3.75m P as s age / P atio
± 0.00m S treet Level / P rivate G ardens
25k
m
Private surfaces
OU DID Y ERE WH OM FR
COME TO THE
VRED ESK AP Y? DA TO
0m
B ik
1
30
50 0
EL
m e
m 00
lk Wa
ran lic T Pub sp o
rt
Car
N
23 m
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A1
AA
Workshop level -3.75 m
BB
BB
CC
CC
DD
A1
AA
DD
Community centre
EE
EE
FF
FF
Private
Exterior passage
Public
Private gardens
Facilities Street
N
23 m
- 55 -
+10.20
+7.60
3.35
+6.26
2.72
+3.00
Adminis tration
+2.60 28
+1.65
47
+1.62
2.60
+4.65
28
+5.99
Main E ntrance V redes kapel Multipurpos e Hall
+1.34 3.95
+1.15
2.50
E ntrance R es taurant P as s age to Market-place
-1.35
-1.35 38
-1.35
Section CC
2.62
-1.35
Âą0.00
2.72
Âą0.00
-4.35
10.50 m Foyer Malaka street entrance
Foyer and main hall
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±0.00
±0.00
Section EE
-3.75
10.50 m
Detail workshop facade, green roof
Facade: suspended double glazing with horizontal steel beams U-profile 140 mm with aluminum clippings vertical glazing joints are glued vertical steel ties: diameter = 16 mm
200 mm
Skylight Funnels: 20 cm prefabricated concrete elements, thermal insulation, double glazing, 6 mm sheet - aluminum finish Skylight flush with ground: 480/ 8mm steel Frame thermal insulation double glazing
Roof: 30 cm 20 mm 12.5 mm 200 mm 30 cm HEA 200
1 2
substrate layer intensive green roof perforated polyethylene protective mat drainage mat compression resistant thermal insulation liquid plastic seal reinforced concrete edge beam
Structure: Ø 250 mm steel-concrete composite columns
3
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4
1 2 3 4
Finishes: ceiling workshop: ceiling office: floor office: floor workshop:
painted concrete / plaster board wooden veneer sheet materials 2 m strip of parquet flooring coated concrete screed flooring
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Zaachila, Mexico “Ferros de espera rise and scratch the perfect blue sky. Rust and dust over quiet streets. Siesta. Beyond the crumbling walls, there is paradise devised by light and shadows.”
The “Mexico Project” is an advanced practical hands-on workshop, open to bachelor and master students of the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture and construction engineering at the TU Berlin.
CATECHISM SCHOOL
For almost 20 years, the Mexico Project sends committed students abroad, to realize a project during the summer semester break. The planning and drafting takes place in the winter semester followed by the two months on the building site in Mexico. In the summer semester the project is evaluated, documented and presented to the faculty of architecture with lectures, a film and an exhibition. Due to the nature of this project, all design aspects needed to be practical and executable within 50 days of work and with the means and resources locally available in Mexico.
concept. The cleverness of the winning project was that it consisted only of a few different constructional modules and elements based on the longest available standard board length of approximately 2.50m. It was possible for us as untrained workers to produce and assemble the conceived construction system because many major parts (columns, beams, form-work, etc.) could be mass produced serially. We successfully broke down this 400 m² g.b.ar. building to only a few details and 3 different building phases. During the planning I became the specialist for the roof construction and worked out the design of the structure and later on lead the building team of the roof. The project was carried out successfully and finished just in time. We were able to create two classrooms, a library, a roofed place for gatherings and a new landscape layout of the entire backyard. Total cost of the project: approximately
Through a competition during the planning period in the winter semester, we elected the best design
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30.000 €
Project site walled church lot
Existing complex
9
1. Church 2. Vestry 3. Parish rooms (former monastery) 4. Kitchen 5. Roofed terrace 6. Festive committee 7. Classrooms 8. Stage 9. Lavatory
7
8
7
7 5
6
4
3
3
3
2
3
1
12 m
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1
2
3
4
1
4.50 m
1. Classrooms 2. Assembly space 3. Library 4. Access suitable for cars
View from north into assembly space. 5 years in use
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2010 OCT.
NOV.
DEC.
Competition
Detailed Design, Construction Workshops Fund-raisers
Application
JAN.
FEB.
MAR.
APR.
MAY
JUNE
Documentation Booklet, Exhibition, Film
Presentation
Execution
Phase Section Preparation Legwork
Foundations
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Allotment Site Calibration Reinforcement Cages Beams Structure Beams Roof Moldings Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Alpha Gamma (Library) Delta Alpha Beta (Assembly) Gamma (Library) Gallerys Delta Alpha - Gamma Delta Drainage Electro Installations Doors / Windows / Shelves Landscaping
Inside the library
Structure Wood
Walls Flooring
Roof Building Technology Finishes
Building cost according to DIN 276 KG [Kostengruppe] = Cost type
α
ALPHA
β
γ
BETA
GAMMA
δ
DELTA
KG 200 Development charges 455 €
KG 300 Construction costs 25.896 €
1.230 €
Assembled column & reusable molding for column base
KG 500 Landscaping / Exteriors 2.869 €
KG 600 Furniture 565 €
KG 700 incidental building costs 1.934€
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2010 OCT.
NOV.
DEC.
Competition
Detailed Design, Construction Workshops Fund-raisers
Application
JAN.
Phase Section
Legwork
Foundations
Structure Wood
Walls Flooring
Roof Building Technology Finishes
MAR.
APR.
MAY
JUNE
Documentation Booklet, Exhibition, Film
Presentation
Execution
Academic year bachelor 4
Preparation
FEB.
Week 1
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Week 6
Week 7
Week 8
Allotment Site Calibration Reinforcement Cages Beams Structure Beams Roof Moldings Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Alpha Gamma (Library) Delta Alpha Beta (Assembly) Gamma (Library) Gallerys Delta Alpha - Gamma Delta Drainage Electro Installations Doors / Windows / Shelves Landscaping
Building phase schedule α
ALPHA
Classroom before operation
KG 200 Development charges 455 €
KG 300 Construction costs 25.896 €
1.230 €
KG 500 Landscaping / Exteriors 2.869 €
KG 600 Furniture 565 €
KG 700 incidental building costs - 63 1.934€
β
BETA
γ
GAMMA
δ
DELTA
Executed simplified version
Early roof design with open nave
Project team 2010
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Schlieren, Switzerland “It takes a village...”
In my Bachelor thesis, my project partner and I propose a hybrid-building for the upgrade of the city center of Schlieren, Switzerland.
permeable barrier between the public anonymous space and the intimate charming old town core with its church and marketplace.
COMMUNITY CENTER SCHLIEREN
The program of the new community center has both, public and private, commercial and residential aspects. Besides attractive appartments for multigeneration occupancy, there are many other divers functions woven together, thus creating an urban atmosphere within the building itself.
Schlieren is situated in the Limmattal, a valley leading to Zurich. The City of Schlieren can be seen as a suburb of Zurich. Most of the infrastructure is oriented and made for a quick transport of goods and people to and from Zurich. Our project focues on the suburb of Schlieren in order to develop it to become an important and relevant focal point of everyday life for both, local and regional stakeholders. Our proposition is the creation of a new building in the center of Schlieren, right next to the main through fare. The meander-like shape of the floor plan creates a
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A kindergarten, shops, service providers, a café, a gymnasium, a public library and workshops can be found all connected with access balconies and lobbies. Big events can be hosted in the ballroom, creating a vivid and urban atmosphere in the complex.
Bandstadt Limmattal Topographical as well as man made regulating lines are forcing the conurbation development of ZĂźrich to form a band of densely populated sub centers. Along these lines such as the A 1 highway, train tracks, light rail and the river Limmat, towns and cities are found that possess characteristic cores often defined by markets,parks or a church. Over time, these sub centers merged together connected by an efficient infrastructural array of both public and individual transportation to form a “Bandstadtâ€?. The project for a community building in Schlieren understands itself as a part of the efforts of the planning authorities to create noticeable and relevant points along the lines of transit, that can attract visitors with purchasing power.
Residents Workplaces
Killwangen
Spreitenbach
Dietikon
1.800
10.400
23.200
700
11.000
16.400
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Industrial areas Mixed areas City center
Light rail
Schlieren 47°23´ 56.99´´ N
Residential areas
Train
Schlieren Urban functional diagram
8° 26´59.99´´ E
Urdorf
Schlieren
Zürich-Altenstetten
9.700
14.100
28.100
7.100
17.200
30.200
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Health Center Apartments / Studios Retail Public Functions Library Municipality Elevators / Stairs
Level 3
Level 2
Level 1
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3
8 7
2
4 1
6 5
6.50 m
Special functions on the city level 1. Cloakroom 2. Foyer 3. Schlieren CafĂŠ
4. 5. 6.
Urban square Barber shop Fitness center
Single studio on west facade
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7. Garden square 8. Kindergarten
2
3
1 5
4
6.50 m
Special functions on the mid-level 1. 2. 3.
Reception / Bar Community room Multipurpose-hall 330 seats
4. Library 5. Kindergarten
Main street perspective west facade
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2
1
6.50 m
Special functions on the top level 1. 2.
Municipal Administration Adult Education Centre
Main street perspective north facade
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PROJECT FACTS
2007 HOTEL FOR THE LONE TRAVELER 2 weeks Prof. Klaus Block, Roland Poppensieker. TU Berlin Immanuel Tashiro 2008 HEDONIST´S VAULT 1 semester Prof. Klaus Block, Roland Poppensieker. TU Berlin Ingo Lerch, Yasha Anil Kuhn, Christian Kloth, Immanuel Tashiro 2009 / 2010 CATECHISM SCHOOL 1 academic year Dr. Ing. Frank Hassenewert, Simon Colwill. TU Berlin Jorge Sobejano, Antonio Moya Latorre, Carolin Andraschko, Carolin Kuhn, Daniel Becker, Immanuel Tashiro, Ingo Lerch, Johanna Frieben, Julia Pintér, Juliane Buck, Karl Woitke, Katja Godejohann, Maria González Aranguren, Maria Möser, Marisa Lubinsky, Milena Engelhardt, Paul Künzel, Susanna Rieser, Thomas Spiller, Tim Bornebusch, Tyco Cote, Uwe Gimpel, Yves Rogger 2011 COMMUNITY CENTER SCHLIEREN 1 semester Prof. Ute Frank, Helga Blocksdorf. TU Berlin Ingo Lerch & Immanuel Tashiro 2012 GROUND FOR PERFORMANCE AND NEW MEDIA 1 semester Sang Lee. TU Delft Immanuel Tashiro 2013 COMMUNITY CENTER AND WORKSHOPS “VREDESBLOCK” 1 semester Alexander de Ridder. TU Delft Immanuel Tashiro 2013 / 2014 ZUIDAS CITY CAMPUS 1 academic year Mark Pimlott, Jurjen Zeinstra. TU Delft Immanuel Tashiro
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FIN
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