Undergraduate Architecture Portfolio

Page 1

jerome co nv ers ati ons by des ign




Archite is an e


cture vent.

From birth, we have entered into an event in a world that creates as it destroys and destroys as it creates. We are molded by our surroundings, our interaction with nature and mankind marks the epoch of our perception of, space, time and architecture. Our very existence is to participate in this event, for we are an unfinished creation.




Water

Reflection

Order

Inner


Community

Society

Rational

Conversations



STUDIO

1

This studio course concentrates on the relationship between architecture and human experience. Students in this studio were required to chose an object that they interact with daily and develop a semi private museum. the site selected was also determined by the objecct chosen. Emphasis was placed on the site culture, building and human dynamic.


Water Water is an element that transcends all life on Earth. It has the power to cut mountains, the ability to cleanse and the potential to connect. Water (H2O) is the most abundant compound on Earth’s surface, constituting about 70% of the planet’s surface. In nature it exists in liquid, solid, and gaseous states. even if he has never experienced a similar situation. The study of the skills and techniques of improvisation can strongly influence one’s competence in business, personal life, and/or in the arts

Rotation

Watercolor 8” x 6”



Rotterdam

Watercolor, & Acrylic 24” x 36”


Rotterdam

A young, dynamic, international city on the water. Itis a metropolis for architecture, arts and culture. The river Maas River flows right through the city, crossed by the now-famous Erasmus Bridge which has become the symbol of Rotterdam. Countless tiny harbours line the banks of the river, each with its own unique character. Further downstream lies the industrial port that has made Rotterdam the biggest port city in Europe. The port of Rotterdam is the largest in Europe. From 1962 to 2004 it was the world’s busiest port until surpassed by Shanghai. Rotterdam is on the banks of the river Nieuwe Maas (‘New Meuse’), one of the channels in the delta formed by the Rhine and Meuse rivers.


Experiential Sketches / Conceptual model



Today water threatens the very existance of Rottermdam but it is in this death that I find Truth, for like the aging process it is inevitable. Water however does not die, it simply changes state over time. Thus my relationship with it is not only one of wonder and joy but one of envy and fear. Through sound, touch color and taste water makes itself a part of our every day life.

My design anticipates the time when water would invade Rotterdam, letting water redefine its galleries, and become a monumental reflecting pool, which would be a beacon for the future, transcending our understanding and bridging the present to the future. A future that like water will never die.

Lookout Deck River Walk

Outdoor Gallery

Sculpture Library Reflecting Pool

Artist Studio/Gallery Lobby Apartment

Main Entrance






Apartment

Ink, & Graphite 20” x 24”


Rotterdam

Watercolor, & Acrylic 24” x 36”




STUDIO

2

This studio course concentrated on the ways in which a building’s site and environmental context influence architectural design. Students conducted simple site analyses and made design decisions on that basis. The ability to create meaningful design solutions and fulfill simple programmatic requirements is also emphasized. Lectures included topics such as environmental and site issues and the meaning of places.


Community A community is a family, born from diversity, supported by truth, governed by hope and strengthened by unity.

Alacrity

Watercolor, & Ink 10� x 10�



New Orleans “Jazz streams out into the moonlight, French doors open to the night breezes, sweet olive scents the air. Nearby there is laughter, a cork popping, and cafe brulot aflame. Welcome to New Orleans. Here, in this little corner of the American South, where European traditions blend with Caribbean influences, the history is as colorful as the local architecture; the food is the stuff of legend. Haitian and African Creoles developed an exotic, spicy cuisine and were instrumental in creating jazz and Zydeco. Their street names are French and Spanish, the Creole architecture comes in a carnival of tropical colors, and their voodoo is a Caribbean import. The magic is irresistible. A cultural gumbo, they celebrate their differences. In fact, they celebrate almost anything in the Big Easy. They have a saying: LAISSEZ LE BONS TEMPS ROULER -- LET THEGOOD TIMES ROLL. A reminder of their french heritage, a way of life that began three centuries ago. New Orleans lingers on the threshold between the Old World and the New, between history and legend. “




The Bunny Friend Neighborhood Association is located in the Upper9th Ward. Due to hurricane Katrina inAugust, 2005, 45% of the residents fled the city. Today, they are still striving to revitalize and rebuild their community, their mission states : “ To stimulate revitalization and building of thecommunity post Katrina.” The association seeks to rebuild their sense of community, restablishing the extended family, retracing roots, regaining memores, and relocating to their former homes, making Bunnifriend future proof. “

United Diversity Watercolor, &I nk 10” x 10”



Devlopment of Site Plan / Building Orientation


Site is a heterogeneous unit that comprises of nature and the manmade. It is the stage for event of the interaction of the unit.

It is the instruments in life’s orchestra.

Every instrument has its own timbre and pitch but life is that great conductor When the instruments are not harmonious we become aware of the dissonance.

Everything is part of a whole; the entire ocean is affected by a pebble.

Architecture is a part of and a response to this chorus;

Elevation Sketch

Graphite 11� x 17�

it raises its voice not to be a soloist but


that arranges them beautifully. To consider site we must study this relationship and seek to be transparent, not

opaque, to grow and not hinder.

to be part of the resounding sounds of life.

Above: Exterior Perspective Watercolor, & Graphite 10� x 10�


Summer Solstice

Equinox

Winter Solstice

Hot Air

Cool Air

Natural Ventilation/ Sun Shading Diagrams


Exterior Perspective

Watercolor, & Graphite 14” x 20”


Site Plan/ Sketches of Views from Site


RainGarden- for rainfall and drainage from parking area.

Large Gutter- for drainage of roof into Rain Garden

Stoop- A small platform, leading to the entrance of a house or building. stoop-sitting was a great pastime and tradition of New Orleans culture

Vine canopy- for seasonal solar shading.

Roof to shelter the performance/ stage area.

RainGarden- to take advantage of rainfall and stormwater runoff from roof and garden design and plant Privacy wall with plantersfor privacy and additional green space.

North Elevation-


Rhythm

Watercolor, & Ink 10” x 10”




Jazz Band in Preservation Hall Watercolor, Ink & Graphite 7” x 11”


The Ramp

Watercolor, & Ink 10” x 10”


Peering out of Art Studio Watercolor, & Ink 10” x 10”



STUDIO

3

Understanding and utilizing structure within a building. the nature of structural systems, including how long-span structures, can affect and inform architectural design. This design project was focussed on structural steel construction. Students were encouraged to take advantage of steel’s properties and characteristics in order to conceptualize and propose a critical evaluation of a mind and body center.


Reflection Look within.. Learn from the past, Acknowledge the present, Embrace the future.

Release

Watercolor, & Ink 12� x 12�




In 1733, General James Oglethorpe landed on a bluff high along the Savannah River. He named it Georgia and made

Savannah

its first city. Savannah is known as America’s first planned city. Oglethorpe laid the city out in a series of grids that allowed for wide open streets intertwined with shady public squares and parks that served as town meeting places and centers of business.

Trustees’

Garden

was

set

aside as an experimental farm where crops essential to silk culture, were grown. However, large-scale silk production did not happen, so interest waned and the garden closed. In 1794 a tavern for seamen was opened and become known as “The Pirates House.” The high bluff on the northeastern corner overlooking the river was a succession of fortifications until designated Fort Wayne in 1812. Today the brick and stone fortifications can be seen arising from General Macintosh Boulevard.





Faced with this state of affairs, a cooperative of individuals have decided to create a place to practice ‘being’: the Re-ligare Institute. By fostering and celebrating not-doing, not-having, stopping, and wholeness, the organization intends to give people a space to step back and become reconnected with themselves, others, and nature. Faculty, administration, and staff will support patrons to accomplish such goals and conduct research concerning the practice of being. Architecture is to become a sanctuary for finding, studying, enjoying, and developing being. As such the building will provide a necessary retreat from real world dis-eases, promote healing, and foster a re-connection at the individual and collective levels. Given its intense focus on being, the Re-ligare Institute demands a building of great quality that highlights

phenomenological presence at all levels and scales. being means to offer pedagogies directed to the subjective (personal, individual self), intersubjective (social, collective self), and objective (environmental, no-self) Developing

dimensions of

human experience.

This translates

into practices directed to observing, studying, exercising, and expressing being’s others and

mind, body,

and

connectivity

to

nature. And while these aspects of being do

not occur in isolation, it is appropriate to focus on one or the other

to foster particular developmental gains. Hence, the Re-ligare Institute demands programmatic separation and connection, that is, dedicated places to work on our physique or inner mentalscape as well as areas where we can come together in society and nature. For this reason, the Institute seeks to establish fluid yet carefully crafted relationships between urban and architectural spaces, exterior and interior, culture and nature, self and others.


Spatial Programming (Plan)


Spatial Programming Sketches (Section)



Devlopment of building structure / Building Form



Galvanized- Steel Maintainance catwalk. Steel Outrigger

Drop Ceiling Adjustable Blinds

Extruded Aluminum- stick system mullion

Perforated Cortens Steel

Insulated glass with low-E coating

Extruded Aluminum- unit Frame




Main Entrance Experiential Visualization

Watercolor, Ink, Photo & Acrylic 9” x 12”



Main Lobby Experiential Visualization

Watercolor, Ink, Photo & Acrylic 9” x 12”










STUDIO

4

This studio course concentrated on the issues raised by creating new architecture in existing urban contexts with complex social and cultural characters. The class focused on developing an ability to create well developed and artistically meaningful solutions to moderately complex architectural problems. In addition to performing in-depth analysis of the urban site and thefunctional program, students prepared formal building type analyses as a way of understanding the tradition of building in the city. Emphasis was placed on topics such as urban context; social, cultural and behavioral issues; and analytical methods.


New City

Watercolor, & Ink 24” x 36”


Rediscovery Embracing human, social and media ecology to rediscover, reconstruct and regenerate the city.


A city is

Living organism... The road and rails its veins and

arteries


the modes of transport its plasma and the people its blood cells.

It relies on a symbiotic relationship between them to survive.



Sketch Book (Studio 4) Mixed Media 8.5” x 11”


Conceptual Model




DuSable Park, a 3.5 acre peninsula located at the juncture of the Chicago River and Lake Michigan just north of Randolph Street, was dedicated as a future park in 1988 to honor Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable, the founder of modern day Chicago. Since 1988, however, the park has not been constructed due first to environmental contamination findings, and most recently to funding issues. The latest major block to the development Spire Memorial- for rainfall and of DuSable Park is the 2009 economic downturn which has halted the drainage from parking area. construction of the Chicago Spire. Currently under development near the mouth of the Chicago River and Aerial Tram Terminalpoint the shore of Lake Michigan, DuSable ParkDocking honors Jean Baptiste Pointe du for trams connecting the site to Sable (ca. 1745-1818), theNavy first non-Native American Pier, Chicago’s River Walk, and settler at Chicago. A neighbouring buildings. Haitian of French and African descent, DuSable traveled to New Orleans in 1764. The following yearDeck he -journeyed up the River to 205ft wood deck, usedMississippi for Taxi and docking otherIndians small St. Louis, where he began Water to trade with the for local and married boats. a young Potawatomi woman. As early as 1772, DuSable moved on to Chicago, establishing a remote trading post near what is now Pioneer Du Sable Park the “Crossroads” Court, just north of the river.DuSable’s world began to change after the Revolutionary War, when the American government claimed the Great Lakes region as its own, and settlers Sound Barriers began arriving from the east. In 1800, DuSable sold his property at Chicago and went south to Peoria. Two centuries after DuSable’s departure, Chicago is an unimaginably different place, home to nearly residents, Lounge three Garden.million Gently inclined grass with skyscrapers mounds public use. In the mid-1980s, developers lining the Chicago River and the for lakefront. began to improve 60 acres of under-utilized industrial land north of the river with residences and commercial structures. To provide parkland for Water Garden- to take advantage of the new CityfrontCenter, the Chicago Dock and Canal Trust donated more rainfall and stormwater runoff garden than three acres of property east Lake Shore Drive to the Chicago Park design andof plant selection. District. The site will soon be transformed into DuSablePark. The Art Institute Water Fountains Chicago’s B.F. Ferguson Fund will commission a statue to honor DuSable’s contributions to the city’s beginnings. The new lakefront park will soon provide an ideal spot from which to contemplate the vast metropolis Chicago has become. Since 2003 progress had been made by the Chicago Park District to complete the required environmental clean-up of the 3.5 acre site. Following the environmental cleanup, the Park District worked with the DuSable Park Coalition to finalize an architectural plan for DuSable Park. The DuSable Park plan includes a sculpture to be designed by Martin Puryear as well as artistic plaques and informational signage which will tell the story of the settlement of the City of Chicago by Jean Baptiste Pointe DuSable at the end of the 18th Century.


Building and Site Sections Ink/ Graphite (2) 14” X 11”



Architecture should have existence but no presence



“If Architecture can be said

to have a poetic meaning,

we must realize that what it says is not independent

of what it means.�

Why does it exist?

How does it exist?

Why does it exist as it does? I do not know Only you know the answer



Walk along the Bridge

Rendering (REVIT/Photoshop)


Mall Interior

Rendering (REVIT/Photoshop)





FUNDAMENTALS

Classical design strategies such as: formal ordering principles, hierarchy

of

spaces/structure,

building skin construction and transformation were introduced. The studios focused on integration to site context and relation to the human experience and scale. A three dimensional model of the structure was then constructed for each project.



FUNDAMENTALS 1


FUNDAMENTALS 3




SUPPLIMENTAL PROJECTS Sample of work completed in: ARCH 414 (Parametric and Generative Design Strategies for the Building Arts) ARCH 341 (Construction Technology II)



ARCH 414 Parametric and Generative Design Strategies for the Building Arts

Parametric and generative modeling was explored through associative geometry using advanced applications in building design. The course focused on simulating behavioral and formal responses to design constraints, limits, & rules as a framework for understanding their implications as applied to building form. The responses ranged from conceptual form finding strategies to structure and envelope systems.


ARCH 341

Construction Technology II This course focused on the various existing and emerging technologies, materials, assemblies and their characteristics. The influences of building codes, industry standards and programmatic requirements on the selection of both structural and nonstructural elements are discussed. Construction drawings and detailing, are developed and an understanding of the relationship between drawings and specifications was established.




Flight Through My Mind Mixed Media (3) 3” x 5”


Hands

Graphite 24” x 36”


Self Portrait Graphite 24” x 36”



Shattered Memories Mixed Media 18� x 8�




elder undergraduate portfolio


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