1
INTERFACE MOVEMENT + INTERACTIVITY
EXPOSING PROCESS
02 03 04 05 06 07
MORSE+STILES
08
URBAN STAGE
10
09
11
PERCOLATE PROLIFERATE
12 13 14 15
2
SYSTEM CRAFT+TECHNOLOGY
ADAPTIVE PREFAB
16 17 18 19
RE CONFIGURE
20 21 22 23 24 25
3
INFRASTRUCTURE URBANISM+CULTURE
TEMPORAL TYPOLOGY
26 27 28 29
ISEEE
30 31
COMPOSTING MEDIANS
32
ASSIMILATING CONSUMPTION
34
33
35 36 37 38 39
1 INTERFACE MOVEMENT+INTERACTIVITY
03
LIGHT LEVEL 4 (25
LIGHT LEVEL 3 (150-200 lux)
LL 2 (100 lux)
LIGHT LEVEL 1 (0-50 lux) VAULT (16700sf)
Third Semester Graduate Studio, Fall 2009 1 (individual studio project) 150,000 sf (building) 4 mo (09-12.2009) INSTRUCTOR Joel Sanders SITE Corner of Trumbull Street and Hillhouse Ave, New Haven, CT PROGRAM extension of Bieneke Library’s current facility, vault, archivist process spaces, offices, reading room, group meeting, classrooms, theater My main idea is to express the circulation and processing of visual materials, exposed through circulation routes that allow visitors to selectively navigate through these normally off-limit zones. The proposal also incorporates a connection to the Farmington canal greenway, facilitating a connection to temple street and sponsoring a new bike path to the center of the green. In massing, I used two rows of compact storage modules and a central access path stacking these to the six stories to continue the urban edge. Inserting a loading dock along the back edge to sponsor a processing/admin bar to frame a front lawn and respecting the suburban scale. The entry sequence for the public first involves the underground digital interface, a basement level connection with digital display screening the digital storage modules behind. The tunnel and street level paths parallel the processing facilities to the right and converge at the lobby, lodged in plain view of the loading dock. From this point, event and researcher paths break encountering a myriad of connections to the material of the archive and between users.
READING ROOM (6000 sf) GALLERY (5000 sf) ARCHIVING (3000 sf)
ROOM SIZE
02
EXPOSING PROCESS
LOADING DOCK (3000 st) CLASSROOMS (1500 sf)
5
10
GROUP STUDY (1000 sf)
ADMINISTRATION (1500 sf)
PROCESSING (2000sf)
VAULT, GALLERY
READING RM
highly protected light levels, motion activated local artificial lighting, highest mechanical control
200
150
100
20
northern exposure, filtered eastern and western light
500
250
ADMIN, CLASSROOM, LOADING
louver system for minimal light levels, artificial task lighting, natural ventilation
GROUP STUD
full glazing and sun natural ventilation
PEOPLE HILLHOUSE STREET looking north away from campus
FARMINGTON CANAL PATH looking toward Hamden
1 2
TO TEMPLE STREET
D
G ESSIN PROC
C E
B
N/ CTIO R EFUNTHEATE R P TO
A
ELEVATOR TO CANAL PATH
MODULES
LOADING/PROCESSING
PUBLIC EROSION
PUBLIC ROUTE/INTERFACE
STREET PARKING
IN
TO WH ITN EY GR EEN
50-1000 lux)
FROM
I-91
TO
LINK
HA
MD
EN
OUT
TO
WA TE
R
TO
WAITING/CAFE (750 sf)
750
lux
E EK EN BI
TO GREEN
DY, CAFÉ, CIRCULATION
PEDESTRIAN
BIKE
CAR
TRUCK
n exposure,
+75
SECTION A1
SECTION A2
1. digital gallery 2. underground bike path connection 3. entry from grade 4. lobby / front desk 5. theater / projection 6. classrooms 7. gallery 8. group collaboration 9. open green roof
1. start of researcher loop 2. underground bike path connection 3. recieving / loading dock (2/2) 4. shipping / loading dock (1/2) 5. waiting cafe 6. vault
6
8
+63
6 +51
6
9
+39
7 +27
5 6
6
MATERIALS A+15 +12 1
3
TO TEMPLE M STREET
3 4
+3 +0
2
5
4
-12 -15
5 6 -27
CIRCULATION
COLLABORATION
RESEARCH
ARCHIVING
OPEN GALLERY SECURE GALLERY
PHYSICAL STORAGE
ADMINISTRATION
ARCHIVING
READING ROOM
RESEARCH
CLASSROOMS
CIRCULATION
MATERIALS
PEOPLE DIGITAL STORAGE
RECIEVING LOADING DELIVERY PROCESSING PROCESSING
PREFUNCTION
THEATER
study model sequence
04 05
+63: LEVEL 6
+51: LEVEL 5
IN
-5/+0: LEVEL 1 1. pedestrian path from grade 2. bike path from farmington canal 3. main lobby 4. front desk 5. stairs to recieving/waiting 6. ramp to theater/event 7. vault below 8. parking and digital storage below 9. elevator lobby / bicycle parking
1. vault 2. archivist area (3/4) 3. research area (3/4) 4. group collab (1/2)
1. vault
7 -12
B
SECTION B
3
B
2
B
6 -5
1
3
1
5 4
1
-5
-5
2
+0
DN
9
8
4
A1
A1
+0
A2
A2
+0
+27: LEVEL 3
+39: LEVEL 4
1. research area (2/4) 2. archivist area (2/4) 3. reading room (1/2) 4. digital research 5. vault 6. gallery 7. admin offices 8. admin conference 9. bathrooms
OPEN TO BELOW
1. vault 2. individual research 3. reading room (1/2) 4. archivist area (3/4) 5. research area (3/4) 6. group collab (1/2) 7. roof deck
3 2
4
B
2
3
1
B
5
4
2 5
1
A2
6
A1
A1
6
7
-12: LEVEL B1
+3: LEVEL 1M
1. shipping/loading (1/2) 2. vault 3. theater 4. prefunction 5. bathrooms 6. control room / storage 7. truck parking 8. digital storage / display 9. digital gallery
1. recieving/loading dock (2/2) 2. vault 3. sloped grass over theater 4. processing storage 5. processing stations 6. bathrooms
4
+15: LEVEL 2
-12.5
SECTION B
6
B
2
8
B
9
2
B
+7.5
1
6
+3
5 5
1 A1
-10
1
-15
A2
(SHARED PARKING)
6
7
+0
7
7
8
9
A2
8
5
A2
5
+3: LEVEL 1.5
+13.5 +12
6
A1
4
7
9 -10
3
4
3
3
5
1. retrieval waiting 2. research area (1/4) 3. archivist area (1/4) 4. vault 5. classrooms 6. admin storage 7. admin offices 8. admin conference 9. bathrooms
2
-7.5
-10
A2
7
A2
7
final site model view from Farmington canal
final sectional model through main entry and auditorium
06 07
cover sheet from systems integration elective / Revit composite of research path INTEGRATED ARCHIVING FACILITY
DRAWING INDEX SHEET
NAME
A0.0 A0.1 A0.2 A0.3 A0.B1
Cover Sheet Room Schedule Egress Diagram Site Level 1
YALE UNIVERSITY
A1.1 A1.1M A1.2 A1.3 A1.4 A1.5 A1.6 A1.B1 A1.B2 A1.R Ken Gibble Structural Consultant
A2.1 A2.2 A2.3 A2.4 A3.0 A3.1 A3.2 A3.4 A3.5 A3.6
ion n
A5.1 A5.2 A5.3 A5.4
SYSTEMS INTEGRATION ARCHITECTURE 2022b
er Rooff ation
FINAL REVIEW
A8.1 A8.2
DATE
M0.1 M0.2 M0.3 M1.1 M1.1M M1.2 M1.3 M1.4 M1.5 M1.6 M1.B1 M1.B2 M1.R M3.1 M3.2 M3.3
S0.1 S0.2 S0.3 S1.1 S1.1M S1.2 S1.3 S1.4 S1.5 S1.6 S1.B1 S1.B2 S1.R
an
Environ Section Reading
Structural Grid Struct Struct First F 1M Fl Secon Third Fourt rh Fift fhF Sixth Basem Found Roof Structural
AMMENDMENT
SCALE: DATE:
05/07/10
DRAWN BY:
JD
DRAWING NAME:
Cover Sheet DRAWING NUMBER:
A0.0
Level 5 51’-0”
Level 4 39’-0”
Level 3 27’-0”
Level 5 51’-0”
Level 4 39’-0”
Level 3 27’-0”
INTEGRATED ARCHIVING FACILITY 4
2
YALE UNIVERSITY Roof 75' - 0"
Level 6 63' - 0"
ZONE 1 Level 5 51' - 0"
EXTERIOR
ATRIUM
ZONE 1
Jacob Dugopolski Phillip Winn Laura Wagner YALE SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
ZONE 1
ZONE 1
180 York Street New Haven, CT 06511 203.432.2288
Laura Turlington Architectural Consultant Bob Haughney Mechanical Consultant Ken Gibble Structural Consultant
(ROOF TERRACE)
Level 4 39' - 0"
ZONE 1
ZONE 1 Level 3 27' - 0"
ZONE 1 Level 2 15' - 0"
SYSTEMS INTEGRATION ARCHITECTURE 2022b
ZONE 1
EXTERIOR (LOADING ACCESS)
Level 1M 3' 0"
EXTERIOR (ENTRY PATH)
MIDREVIEW DATE
EXTERIOR
AMMENDMENT
LABRYNTH
(BIKE PATH)
ZONE 1 (THEATER)
ZONE 1
MECHANICAL
PLENUM SCALE:
1/16" = 1'-0"
DATE:
03/04/10
DRAWN BY:
JD
DRAWING NAME:
Envrion Section Lobby
1
Envrion Section Lobby 1/16" = 1'-0"
DRAWING NUMBER:
M3.1
view of lower court from central passage / Revit composite of reading room
MORSE+ STILES
view of lower court from central passage
stairs to addition on Morse side
addition plan (overlay by Olin Partnership)
Morse stair material option, from Revit
completed addition corridors
completed Morse stair sequence
KieranTimberlake, 2006-2008 7 (work team) 200,000 sf (building) 9 mo (08-10.2006+06-11.2007) 08 09
PROJECT PRINCIPAL Stephen Kieran SITE Yale University, Morse and Stiles Colleges designed by Eero Saarinen, New Haven, CT PROGRAM complete renovation of 180,000 sf and underground addition of 20,000 sf including a new auditorium and social/recreational spaces. PERSONAL ROLE focus on entrance lobbies and stairs down to addition, help with design and detailing of underground addition, physical model, presentation images One of the last works designed by Eero Saarinen and completed in 1962, these two residential colleges have a rich history and architectural prominence. Built in the style of pre-Gothic Tuscan towers, the rubble masonry and lack of right angles form an amazing shell but with time the inside has worn and become outdated. Program for the renovation includes an expanded servery, new kitchen, and a considerable amount of additional social and recreational space, now housed in the dark concrete quarters of the basement. As part of this intervention we sought to re-define the identity of the colleges especially in relation to each other. This was achieved in part through establishing a material language for layering new texture and linking to the addition. Part of the challenge was working a new cohesive flow into a very rigid existing structure. For the subterranean addition, we established battered walls and edge skylights within structural boxes aligned to the curving geometry of the two colleges.
underground addition model (personal role - coordination and creation)
Santa Maria della Pace
URBAN STAGE SET Traveling Graduate Studio, Summer 2010 1 (individual project) 0 sf (drawing) 2 wks (06.2010) INSTRUCTORS Stephen Harby, Alexander Purves TOPIC analyzing the public space making techniques of Raguzzini and Valadier SITES Santa Maria della Pace, Piazza di St. Ignacio, Piazza del Popolo 10 11
Forming the urban space as a three dimensional scene in relation to its place in the city and the buildings they look to aggrandize, I traced the connections between the reinventions of Santa Maria della Pace (1667), Piazza di St. Ignacio (1727) and Piazza del Popolo (1793). Even though they start with very different needs, all three use transforming ideas of framing and layering to create dynamic urban spaces. I analyzed these strategies of framing and layering in each and project, through approach, urban experience, and strategies of revealing. These projects show the progression of these ideas about urban experience through the Baroque, Roccoco, and Neoclassical periods, how each translated planes to theatricality. This was a two week independent drawing project generated on site as part of a four week Rome drawing studio exploring continuity and change in the cities major architectural sites, topography, and systems of urban organization.
1 In 1656-1667 Pope Alexander VII had the edifice restored by Pietro da Cortona, who also added the famous Baroque façade projecting from its concave wings: this, devised to simulate a theatrical set.
2 Raguzzini’s solution to relieving the small forecourt of St. Ignacio was “turning the visual angle around” transferring the emphasis from the church façade to the entire ensemble of buildings. By using overlapping ovals to create the concave facades and corners, the layering of buildings both extends the depth of the space and provides a layered backdrop for an even greater dramatic realization of the church façade. 3 Valadier’s connection up the hillside, linking with Pincio, the Pincian Hill of ancient Rome also provided a theatrical backdrop, resolving layers of access and views into a new access for the piazza. He also used a framing of palazzi that provide the edges for this scenography.
Piazza di St. Ignacio
Piazza del Popolo
PERCOLATE PROLIFERATE
kayaks fro m the East Riv er
First Semester Studio / Project 1, Fall 2008 1 (individual studio project) 150,000 sf (landscape-building) 3 wks (09.2008)
CIRCULAT ION
EVENT
BATHRM SEATING
PREP
RENTAL
STORAGE
REPAIR
INSTRUCTOR Ben Pell SITE Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island City, NY PROGRAM boathouse, educational space, offices, community meeting space, bicycle rental
OFFICE
STORAGE
PROGRAM B
REAKDOW N
people fro m park, riverfront path
OPEN HOUSE EXHIBIT 09.2008 RETROSPECTA 05.2009 Making use of the visual and experiential effects of the moiré pattern, this project uses shifted programmatic grids to filter and connect Socrates Sculpture Park, the Long Island City Boathouse, and the greater Long Island City community. Maintaining the outer path following the edge of the East River and creating an urban street edge along Vernon Boulevard, the intervention connects both edges through a network of paths around the overlaps of three misaligned striations. These overlaps are composed according to external influences and become pavilions or enclosed spaces which at the speed of movement across the site create moirés intensified according to a catalog of speeds.
st
Ea
er
Riv
Bl
vd
84th Street 83rd Street
Broad
way
on
13
Ve rn
12
FLO A VIEW TIN [-8’] ING
plan catalog OPEN
CLOSED
PARALLEL TO GRAIN
OPEN
VARIES
12"
9"
6"
typical solid wall blending width
moire pattern bike storage
18"
kayak storage large wall width
24"
movie screen building entrance
CLOSED
PERPENDICULAR TO GRAIN
VARIES
PROGRAM (varies)
LG PASSAGE
VARIES
SM PATH
APPROX 6'
LG DOOR
4'0"
1'0"
FILTERED WALL SM DOOR SOLID WALL
section catalog
THICK
THIN moiré wall 20'0"
moiré wall
moiré wall
moiré wall
8'0"
1'-4" 4'0"
DISPLAY WALL: 24" flat display front, back combined with cafe
POSTING: 12"
interlocking pieces, tilting towards viewer
SCREENING: 12"
separation of paths, program zone filters
SEATING: 12"
sporadic seating around the park
BIKE RACK: 9"
alternating cuts up and down
KAYAKS: 18"
sloped rack with protective higher strip
CHANNEL: 12"
SEATING AREA (ABOVE): 12"
larger seating plateaus
SEATING AREA (BELOW): 12"
depressed group seating areas
CAFE: 12"
simple storage and counter area locked storage adj.
EVENT: 12"
simple enclosure with varying profiles furniture formed through system, allowing for light entrance correlated
thin water element connection to water
elevation catalog OPEN
SEATING: 12"
random placement in cafe and relaxation zones
KAYAKS: 18"
sloped rack with protective higher strip
CLOSED
BIKE RACK: 9" alternating cuts up and down
MOIRE WALLS
vertical or near vertical walls visual effect along pathways
POSTING WALLS
near entrances and key points for park and community postings
WINDOW OPENINGS
in solid program walls allowing for specific light entry
DISPLAY WALL
r
bicycles fro m North Ver non
Rd
community acc from Vernon ess Rd
SITE FLOW S/
PROGRAM ZONES
DISTRIBU TION
bicycles fro m South Ver non
people fro m park, secondary entrance
Rd
EAST RIVER [-8’]
G VIEWIN RM PLATFO
[WATER -2’]
SEASO NAL K AYAK RACKS SEATING AR EA KAYAK REPA IR/ NATURE CE NTER
CAFE
BATH
ROO
M
LONG
NG C G TE LASSRO OM RRAC E AB / OVE
SEATING AR EA
STEP PED SEAT ING
SEAS O STO NAL RAG E
STAG
[0’] CAF
E
KAYAK
E
CAFE/P
RACKS
HOTO
SEATING AR EA
KAYAK RENTA L OFF ICE
[SEATIN G -2’]
[WATER -2 ’]
[-4’]
INDO VIEW OR SEA TING ING /
TERM
BAC K SUPP STAGE/ ORT
[WATE R -2’]
DISP L AND AY SCRE E THEA OPEN A N IR TER
POSTIN G WA LL
BIKE RACK/RENTAL
[-4’] [0’]
CITY
BIKE R OFF ENTAL ICE
EVEN SPAC T E
SEATING AR EA
[WAT ER -2 ’]
[WATER -2 ’]
[SEATIN G -2’] BIKE RACK/RENTAL
INFO
COM MEE MUNITY TING
DESK
14 15
top view of interlocking systems
section A: slow path
section B: fast path
view of corridor, entry posting wall and bike rack
E8
+40
E7
U2 dn +36
units/sta
irs morp
hology
+36
D6
A
vertica 12 stacl entry system ked un betwee its n
dn
D5
+32
dn
+28
up +28
U1 +28
E8
E7
+28
B
dn
up
A
COMMON
A
300 sf
informal/ living room
2 SYSTEM CRAFT+TECHNOLOGY
17
+24
section betwee al shift for gre n units, a possibleter adaptabil ity subdivis ions
patio 150 sf
C4
+24
C3
+24
B
B
16
+24
+20
up
U1
dn
+20
up
+20 U2
+20
+20
D4
D3
+20
+16 +16
E6
E5
+16 +16
+16 B
C
compa stairs, bcting plan th ro ecome internaugh staggere d l to unit s
up +12
dn
-4
+12
A
dn
U1
+12
bridge
up
+12 U1 +12
+8
A +12
+12
F4
COMMUNITY MEETING / DINING open
C2
450 sf
C1
+12
B
F3
D
U1
optimiz variableing per flat g rou unit size s on eitnd condition her end
+8
+8
common internal space, /views
+8
D2
D1
+8
+8 dn
shapin captureg massing to addr sunlight toward ess street, back of site common street fr space, ontage
dn
+4
up +4 +4
+4
E4
E3
+4
optimiz spaces, ing per site, add carving passag ing common e throu gh
to church
P1
B
E node
U2
up
-4
up STUDY
A
-4
up
-4
-2
100 sf
-4
LOBBY
(bridge)
100 sf
-4
+4 +0
P2
-8 MECH
-4
F1 +0
-4 +3.25
P4
P3
+0
+8
A
+0
P5
ADMIN/INFORMAL GATHERING 450 sf
up +2.0
to street
+12
-4
LAUN
F2
+0
ramp dn
bike rack
B
church laundry connection, room, circulat ion
+4
-4 up
+1.0
+0
+0
ADAPTIVE PREFAB Second Semester Studio / Project 3, Spring 2009 1 (individual studio project) 50,000 sf (building) 3 wks (02.2009) INSTRUCTOR Peter de Bretteville SITE 8-10 West Street, New Haven, CT PROGRAM ten units of affordable housing and communal areas YALE STUDENT EXHIBITION 05.2009 RETROSPECTA 05.2009 In relation to the constantly changing family size of the immigrants entering the neighborhood and church, this assemblage of units needed to address flexibility and community integration as its core. Through a similar operation of stacking and shifting the main living spaces along the south facade as well as interlocking the utility functions on the north, the units formed a network easily adaptable for hundreds of combinations. Working the assembly at both the urban and unit scale bringing unique intersection into the site and connecting across lots to the sponsoring church. each unit accessed by two prefab stair assemblies, composed of three furniture prefab elements, option for one 150 sf habitable room or two (2) 70 sf additions habitable rooms adaptability of unit combinations to accommodate individuals to families, 100s of options from 11 units to 1 unit
to
to
solor ho panel, t water heat no doorSouth elevatioer n if to terrac e
18 19
+0
(dn)
-4
solar hot water heater on non-operable stair unit
F3A/B/C
division point: 180 door
RELAX
dark floor surface as infill and absorber
WORK
47x
kit
S1
interna with fral stair assem additio me attachembly nal unit e above nts for and be low
st
division point: 180 door
F1A/B
U1/U2 translucent wall (nanogel)
division point: 90 door
(up)
+4
ZONE 3: 2" WOOD
kitchen 4 struc /bathroom a access tural bays widssembly from th e ree unit , possible s kitchen 3 struc /bathroom a tu ss ra embly l ba access from tw ys wide, poss o units ible
ZONE 2: 4" WOOD
S1/S2
(up)
+8
ZONE 1: 8" CONC
ZONE 2: 4" WOOD
S1/S2
ZONE 3: 2" WOOD
+52 JUN M 21 AP AY 21 M R 20 AR 20
5x 3x
U2
TERRACE (+0)
SLEEP
bath
U1
F2A/B
possible division point
r
20 B FEAN 21 1 J C2 E D
N
+48
S
+44
5x
7x
F1A
F1A F1B
F1B
entry/e storag xit unit divisio stair upe, bed slot, n, South to North entry/e xi storage t unit divisio stair up , bed slot, n, North to South
F1A
F1B
F1A
U2
F1A
F1B
kit
F1A
F1B
12-0x
0-12x 4x
F3A F3B
2x
6x
F2B
F3C
mid-un storag it division, open be, workspace , etween halves mid-un it d iv is storag ion, closed e, workspace , betwee n halve s
F1A
dn
entry/e 7.5 o ro xit unit divisio stair up tation, storag n e, South to North entry/e xi 7.5 o ro t unit divisio stair up tation, storag n e, North to South entry/e xi no rota t unit divisio no stair,tion, storage n , glass b ehind
F2A
F2A
+24
bath
F2A
F2A
+20
F2A
F2A
plumbing and electrical connection at +2' to North elevation service panels
F2A
wood decking
F3A
F3A
F3B
+8
F3A
dark floor surface as infill and absorber
F3B
F3C F3A
+12
F3A
F3C F3B
+16
F3A
F3B
F3A
+32 +28
U1
F2A
F2A
F2A
F2A
door to terrace
up
F2A
+40 +36
F1B
F1A
F2A
F2A
door to terrace
F3B
+4 +0 -4 -8
20 21
RE CONFIGURE Second Semester Studio, Spring/Summer 2008 10 (group project) 2,000 sf (building) 2 mo (03-04.2009) INSTRUCTOR Alan Organschi, Coordinator Adam Hopfner, Building Project Director SITE 10 King Place, New Haven, CT PROGRAM two family house - accessible ground floor unit with three bedrooms, rentable tenant unit with one bedroom PROJECT MANAGER (1 OF 2) 02-09.2009 WINNING BUILDING PROJECT TEAM 04.2009 BUILDING PROJECT INTERN 06-08.2009 In our proposal, we developed a coupling mechanism that allows for dynamic cohabitation between the owner and the tenant. The tenant is treated as part of the utility of the house, along with the mechanical systems of the house. The two main construction systems are the SIP panels for the exterior envelope and conventional balloon framing for the inside structure. The SIP panels make up a neutral and systematic enclosure that is efficient in terms of thermal performance, construction labor management, and sequence/ease of assembly. The internal armature is a result of both the needs of the owner and the tenant, shaping spaces as a result of the clustering of program. In this framework, plug-in furniture allows for labor to be distributed across the team of interns for greater detailing through the span of construction. The shell or container system is more static and systematic; it responds to the local context and allows for the house to participate in the local condition or urban fabric. The internal system of construction on the other hand is active, made of multiple layers, adaptable and flexible per site condition and needs of the occupant. Both systems are replicable and have possibilities beyond this site while also interacting on the human scale to sponsor dynamic cohabitation. 4 3
5
6
2
1 2 3 4 5 6
owner porch bedroom window bath skylight kitchen skylight living room window tenant balcony
1
CONSTRUCTION SITE
SITEWORK
excavation, foundation, slab
millwork/casework revision
millwork/casework design millwork & casework testing and fabrication - YSOA shop
SIPs order placed
10
17
24
sills, beam, 1st floor deck and framing
landscape formwork pouring begins for ramp
2nd floor deck
2nd floor framing
31
ridge, SIPs
7
JUNE
14
insulation, windows, stair, exterior drs
metal roofing, exterior cladding
waterproofing
MEP
sheetrock
sitework remainder (decks & porches, walls, etc)
1
A
2
6 5
B
6
3
7
8
7
C
4
9 22 23
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
section A
section B
CASEWORK/MILLWORK DRAWINGS DUE
SIPS SHOP DRAWINGS DUE
SIPs revision
3
SIPS PANELS ARRIVE
design documentation
MAY
CD SET DUE
DESIGN PRODUCTION SUPPLY CHAIN & OFF-SITE FABRICATION
owner porch kitchen eating living room master bedroom bathroom bedroom washer/dryer owner back porch
section C
millwork and casework fabrication begins 21 (Breakfast Woodworks Inc.)
JULY
5
12
CASEWORK/MILLWORK READY TO INSTALL
28
TERM ENDS INTERNS CONTINUE
RE-ORGANIZATION INTO 3 TEAMS INTERIOR TEAM 1 doors
tiling
SITEWORK TEAM walls
26
AUG 2
painting
millwork/casework installation
kitchen
INTERIOR TEAM 2 flooring
19
interior detail fencing, paving, lawn
storage
Final MEP
tenant living room/eating/kitchen
1
2
4
3
5
6 1 2 3 4 5 6
bedroom bathroom eating kitchen living tenant balcony
owner living room/eating/kitchen
king street elevation
building project 2008
9
punch list (all teams)
16
23
cedar siding pattern (personal design)
S4a
N5a
13 '-8 9/ 16 "
'-2 20
S6a
20 '-2 5/ 16 "
N6a N3a
S7a
S3
N4a
" 16 5/
F.C. @ SECOND FLR = +20'-11"
S2
N7
N2a 8'-8 1/4" RO WINDOW
28'-0"
TOP OF EXT. WALL = +18'-3-3/4"
S1a
E5
E7
E6a
E8
E9
E10a
N1
E11
FACTORY INSTALLED WIRE CHASE ATTIC
N3b
5'-6 1/2" RO
S5 " 16 5/ '-2 20
6'-55 8"
2ND FLOOR WIRECHASE
S8
16'-0"
E1
E2
E4
E3a 4'-11 5/8" RO
9'-13 8"
20'-3 7/8"
4'-0" RO
E3b
4'-0" RO
E6b
F.F. @ FIRST FLR = +1'-9" 6 1/2"
32'-0" 33'-1"
6 1/2"
SIP shop drawings (coordinator) front porch, opening evening
24 25
N6b
COLUMN BEYOND (3) 2x6
COLUMN BEYOND (3) 2x6
44'-0"
E10b
N4b 16'-0" 16'-6 1/2"
10'-2"
S7b
8'-0" RO WINDOW
S6b
16'-7 1/2"
5'-7 3/4"
4'-0" RO
4'-0" RO
8'-0" RO
S4b
8'-0" RO WINDOW
N5b
BEAM NOTCH
F.F. @ SECOND FLR = +11'-11"
4'-11 5/8" RO
S1b
9'-9 1/4" RO
16'-7 1/2"
18'-2 1/8"
T.O. 2ND FLOOR
N2b
FACTORY INSTALLED CONTINUOUS WIRE CHASE
6 1/2"
16'-0" 16'-6 1/2"
FACTORY INSTALLED WIRE CHASE
33'-1"
FAC WIR
N8 44'-0"
W2
W3
W4
W5
W7
W6a
W8
W9a
W10a
W11
2ND FLOOR FACTORY INSTALLED WIRE CHASE
8'-0" RO WINDOW
4'-0" RO
BEAM BEYOND
COLUMN BEYOND
7'-8 1/2" RO WINDOW
6 1/2"
7'-8 1/2" RO WINDOW
CTORY INSTALLED RE CHASE
W6b
W9b FACTORY INSTALLED WIRE CHASE
12'-0"
32'-0" 44'-0"
owner living/dining/kitchen space
W10b
15'-11 9/16"
6'-5 1/2"
W1
METROPOLIS MAGAZINE BLOG POST, WEEK 11: A TAXONOMY OF DECISIONS ... To me, the most interesting parts of the Yale Vlock Building Project are the interpersonal dynamics and the group process of determination. As one of two project managers, my role is to be a peer-organizing element and a conduit to Adam, our project coordinator. Conflict is inevitable when the varying passions and perspectives of 49 classmates intersect. Keeping a hand on the pulse of the class is essential to maintaining a positive and cohesive flow forward. ... Collaboration in this context isn’t cut-and-dry. An evolving part of the Building Project course is learning about team dynamics and project delivery. In my mind, this is crucial and a much under-engaged part of architecture: how the many parts of the process work together to achieve the best possible result. Compared to the typical scenario, the building project throws 90 percent out the window, because we all have to agree on what that window is—type, size, exterior color, and interior finish (and then agree on how to install it correctly). ... Since the beginning of the project, people have been asking me, What makes your house unique? I struggle to answer them in one sentence, because it is both the concept and the people—and both are constantly evolving. It is the SIPs, the interior/exterior “Jimmy” concept, and the site responses from solar to programmatic organization. But more importantly it is the people and the process; that is what really makes this house unique. Decades of team training and group analysis could not solve the intricacies of this dynamic, but that is the fun of it. Collaborative design is an uneven process of decision making and discovery.
TEMPORAL TYPOLOGY
Fourth Semester Undergrad Studio, Spring 2006
Bran
ch:
1 (individual studio project) 15 blocks (urban design) 4 mo (01-04.2006) COURSE Arch 442, Arch Design IV (Final studio) INSTRUCTOR John Comazzi SITE Dequindre Cut, Detroit, MI PROGRAM headquarters, nursery, and education space for the Greening of Detroit, public space for recreation areas, paths, relaxation
Edu
Bran
cati
ch:
DIMENSIONS 20 02.2007
on
Gre
enh
ous
e/M
The Dequindre Cut is an abandoned rail line that was constructed below street level, becoming overgrown and derelict since its last train run in 1960. Running from the Eastern Market to the Detroit River, this one mile stretch is a neglected but vital space to the City of Detroit and has the potential to initiate and merge with a larger system of greenways. This project addresses how architecture can engage and compose the temporal; how it can become a scape in itself, an experiential progression that links the city and the cut. It addresses the blurring distinction between nature and artifice, especially how human and artificial cycles interact, converge, and conflate natural cycles for a better understanding of the other. Working in a cross-grain motion to connect the current figures and voids, the project became a projective urbanism. It is a context sensitive yet flexible typology that can continue beyond the limits of the site, accommodating the growth and needs of the Greening of Detroit. Three main building/bridges and three land transformations were defined. This typology mixes and changes size to fit the context, growing and reshaping with time, developing and integrating across, along, and around.
26
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ch:
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ned
ena
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nce
Brid
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ent
existing longitudinal path
3 INFRASTRUCTURE URBANISM+CULTURE
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#URRENT
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#ONNECT
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&UTURE 5NIT /FFICE ,OCATION 3TAFF 3PACE !DMINISTRATION /FFICES )NTERNS 3TORAGE 3TAFF 3PACE &UNDRAIDING /FFICES 'ENERAL 3TORAGE
7HITE &IR .ORWAY -APLE 3AUCER -AGNOLIA
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CONCERTS PERFORMANCE PUBLIC SPACE
SWIMMING VOLLEYBALL ROCK CLIMBING
PEACHES RASBERRIES STRAWBERRIES CHERRIES
TENNIS BASKETBALL RACQUETBALL
BEANS PUMPKINS SQUASH TOMATOES
HERBS GREENS BROCCOLI CABBAGE PEAS
PICNIC PLAYGROUND
HERBS GREENS BROCCOLI CABBAGE PEAS
"RANCHES
FT X FT "RONZE FT YR YR TRANS v BALL
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WATCHING
WATCHING
RELAXING GARDENING
RELAXING GARDENING
EDUCATION CORE EVENTS RECREATION DISK GOLF
EDUCATION
WALKING INTERIOR SERVICE RUNNING
RECREATION
WATCHING RELAXING
RELAXING
RELAXING GARDENING
RELAXING
EDUCATION
RECREATION
RECREATION
WATCHING RELAXING
RELAXING GARDENING
RELAXING 2'-71/4" 2'-213/16"
1'-101/2" 1'-913/16"
WATCHING WATCHING RELAXING
EDUCATION RECREATION
RELAXING GARDENING
"ENCHES ALONG PATH VIEWS FROM DECENT .ICHES ALONG PATH FOR PERSONAL AREAS
RELAXING
4OP OF BRIDGE ABUTMENTS MIXED IN WITH PATH MATERIAL TREATMENT .ODE BUILDING SPACES INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR
EDUCATION RECREATION
%VENT SPACES PERFORMANCES LARGE MEETING AREA
CORE EVENTS CORE EVENTS RECREATION
,ARGE DEDICATED EXPANSIONS ALONG PATH
RECREATION
.INE STATIONS PLACED THROUGHOUT CONTINUOUS $IRT 7OOD SLOWER PATH
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SERVICE
SERVICE
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&ASTER PATH CONCRETE WITH LESS BENDS 7INTER USE QUICK PASSAGE THROUGH
CROSS COUNTRY SKIING CYCLING VEHICLE INFORMATION
#ONCRETE PATH THE LENGTH
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
VEHICLE
3LOWED AT CERTAIN POINTS TO CREATE BETTER RECOGNITION
0’-0” EDUCATION
SLOW experiencing, learning winding path
WOOD tactile primary system, railings and rainscreen
FAST direct access down service, maintenance
METAL hard and sleek surface structure, bracing
MIXED ramp access to offices ces ess quick path to nursery
CONCRETE primary building wrap walls, stairs, ramps
-25’-0”
0’-0” GREENHOUSE/SUPPORT
-25’-0”
0’-0” PROJECT BRANCH
top perspective of one bridge combination, physical model
28 29
-25’-0”
0’-0” branch pair from St. Aubin Road, top of abutment
-12’-6” mid-level view, greenhouse branch
University of Calgary campus with summer solstice shadows and site numbers
ISEEE
4
KieranTimberlake, Spring 2007 7 (work team) 650,000 sf (building) 4 mo (11-02.2007) PROJECT PRINCIPAL James Timberlake SITE University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada PROGRAM Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment, and Economy, LEED Platinum proposed building with wet and dry lab space, classrooms, offices, campus links PERSONAL ROLE study of massing and contextual strategy, imaging and production of various site proposals, help with physical model and coordination of detail model METROPOLIS MAGAZINE 08-09.2007, ISEEE rendering created personally on p111 A major competition win for the firm, this massive building required a rigorous study involving the program, site, and sustainability. The floor area of four standard big box stores, the building has potential to redefine the University of Calgary campus. The main design concept was to use the building as landscape in shaping new interdisciplinary connections and a strong campus grain. I was an integral part of shaping the contextual strategy and building massing working directly with James Timberlake to create massing proposals, reshaping, refining, and re-rendering in a continuous iterative process. The site that I studied had two main proposals, the early version bridging across 32nd Avenue toward the research campus, and a later version defining a new edge along the road and connections into campus.
programmatic mixing 30 31
massing progression for bridge scheme
3
5
1
6 7 2
8 9 10
11
(personal role in imaging for all, led site 3-4-5 design)
site 1
site 3-4-5
site 11
site 7-9
site 4 bridge scheme across 32nd Avenue (personal role in design and imaging)
MEDIAN COMPOSTING
1469 sf 2996 sf 1115 sf
Fifth Semester Graduate Elective, Fall 2010 3 (inderdiciplinary team) 0 sf (landscape) 2 mo (11-12.2010)
1515 sf
2127 sf
2617 sf 801 sf
2347 sf 2140 sf 1146 sf 3162 sf 1451 sf 4377 sf
existing median areas
6
15
8
cell flow patterns / phasing
80
West Campus’s business park roots from Pfizer Pharmaceutical leave it with an abundance of parking spaces, intensive landscaping, and oversized loading docks. Under Yale University’s ownership and growing population there is a growing amount of horticultural waste from landscape maintenance, paper waste from office buildings, and vegetable waste from conference events and the cafeteria. To address this demand, our proposal is to reconfigure the flows internally and use existing parking lot medians as sheet composting sites and constructed wetlands. The system is a mix of waste management and water quality management through a designed experiment. With a potential for 21 cells utilizing existing gradation we plan to test the impact of composting mix on water quality and balance this by treating the nutrient rich water. The entire system will function to process the waste streams of West Campus on-site with little environmental impact while producing compost for use on-site or sale. It will also serve as an adaptive management tool that will help manage waste streams on West Campus.
868 sf
2560 sf
3267 sf
683 sf
2225 sf
982 sf
1232 sf
1958 sf
1110 sf
3004 sf 1035 sf
COURSE Arch 4226a, Ecological Urbanism INSTRUCTOR Alexander Felson SITE Yale University’s West Campus, West Haven, CT PROGRAM composting, constructed wetland RETROSPECTA 12.2010 YALE MICROLOAN FINALIST 02.2011
2773 sf
2524 sf
3033 sf
1052 sf
730 sf
19
13
14
6
70
20
7
75
75
15
8
70
1
2
21
9 70
16
5 65
3 10
17
60
60
65
11 4
70
60
18
60
55
5
65
12
75 85
45
50
55
40
full experimental layout
12"
12"
13
10"
6
" 10
CL
10"
12 " AY
12" 1
12" 2
MH MH
CH TREN DRAIN
9
CP
"R 15 8"
18 "
15 "
12 " 18 "
16
MH
10"
15 "R CP
18
15 "R CP
" 18
18 "
15 "
18"
48" RC P
21
CP "R 15
TRENCH DRAIN
8
12 "
10"
MH
15
10"
12 "R CP
10 "
12 "
15 "
7
10"
15 "
20
MH
P RC 12"
33
14
P RC 12"
32
36" RC P
19
CP "R
21 "
3
17
10"
10
CP "R 15
21 "
21 " 11
FRENCH DRAIN
6"
12"
30"
CP
48 "R CP
4
RF.
4"R
18 "
6"PE
24"
18
6"PERF.
18"
21 "
5 12
10"
RC
"
12"
15"
1
24
15"
2"
MH TYP.
8"
18"
21"
full experimental layout
FOOD B
FOOD CONSUMED
food brought from home
all food and container waste
food delivery
cafeteria food waste
MAIN LOADING DOCK
CAFETERIA
C
PAPER
PAPER USED
paper brought from home
D
paper thrown away
paper delivery (office / newspaper)
recycled paper
INPUT 1
TO CITY WASTE FACILITY (CITY CHARGE) GROUND AND ENTERS WATER STREAM (CITY FINE)
INPUT 3
TO CITY WASTE FACILITY (CITY CHARGE) RECYCLED BY THE CITY
OUTPUT
LANDSCAPING
INPUT 2
LANDSCAPING
excess landscaping waste
landscaping supplies
reused on site
CENTRAL LANDSCAPING FACILITY
TRANSPORTED TO LOCAL FARMS OR WASTE FACILITY FERTILIZER
3
2 A
G 3
FOOD
remaining waste: animal waste, adhesives, etc.
B
FOOD
food brought from home
other recyclable waste: plastics, metals
INPUT 1
food delivery CAFETERIA organic food waste
C
(new sorting practices)
INPUT 3
STORAGE (per bld)
feedback loop - signs in cafeteria showing balance / recommendations
PAPER
PAPER UTILIZED COMPOSTING
D
paper brought from home
NUTRIENT RICH RUNOFF
MAIN LOADING DOCK
paper delivery (office / newspaper) STORAGE (per bld)
NUTRIENT RICH SOIL
used paper (designated bins)
INDIVIDUAL BLD LOADING DOCKS
feedback loop - signs on printers showing balance / recommendations
INPUT 2
LANDSCAPING
LANDSCAPING landscaping supplies CENTRAL LANDSCAPING FACILITY
landscaping waste STORAGE (per bld)
2
3
(new collection practicces) feedback loop - changing landscape practices as demonstrative
G 5
current and projected material flows
1 2
1 sheet composting 2 grass planting on top soil layer over mound 3 added concrete curb to balance plot size 4 possible bench or alternate mound for seating in the void part of the cell 5 existing curb and asphalt
1 2
1
4 5
3
A. COMPOSTING SEGMENT
2000 sf area 7416 cf / 274 cy
B. CONNECTION
867 sf area (varies) 100 sf pavement removed (varies)
3
250 cy - composable area 26% paper = 65 cy 26% leaves and needles = 65 cy 26% branches and twigs = 65 cy 11% grass clippings = 27.5 cy 11% vegetable scrap = 27.5 cy
4
6
1 asphalt cut area with 5” pipe inserted 2 existing curb and asphalt 3 new wall structure 4 sheet composting 5 5” pipe connection at bottom of composting area, connection to edges of the plot to catch runoff
2
C. CONSTRUCTED WETLAND 800 sf area 2352 cf / 87 cy
3 4
2
1
5
3 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
constructed wetland planting filtration material infill distribution layer with large stones added edge layer to wrap filter fabric over existing curb and asphalt 5” pipe connection to composting cell asphalt cut area with 5” pipe inserted 4 5 7 6
2
pipe connection = 80 lf gravel covering = 100 cy pipe connection to main =3 lf fittings = 5” to 12” main
filter fabric = 250 cy top soil = 24 cy
4
END PARTITIONS xx 4x4 wood posts xx 2x4 framing members xx sf of acrylic
1
single cell details
3
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
existing curb and asphalt retain existing planting in void area of balanced plot outflow structure with water level adjustment connection to water main new edge piece to wrap filter fabric over outflow connection zone filtration material constructed wetland planting 5 2
3 6 4
7
8
ASSIMILATING CONSUMPTION Fifth Semester Graduate Elective, Fall 2010 7 (work team) 650,000 sf (building) 4 mo (11-02.2007) INSTRUCTOR Alan Plattus SITE Shanghai, China (North Sichuan Road Station) PROGRAM (Individually determined) commercial shops and anchors, shophouses, informal shops, rural inmigrant housing, upper-income housing H.I. FELDMAN NOMINEE 12.2010 RETROSPECTA 12.2010 CONSTRUCTS 01.2011 Through hybridizing formal and informal activities based around infrastructure, this project cultivates locally based production and consumption patterns. Reacting to the upward trend of the savings percentage, the shift from rural to urban, and the explosive increase in connectivity, the proposal boosts assimilation through business development and uses embedded and interactive technologies to support access and collaboration. The imperfect intersection of Shanghai’s new Line 10 subway provides an opportunity to link the Baoshan Road station with its used/fake electronics market with the North Sichuan Road station and its growing podium blocks. Through a new “superstructure” of bike and walking paths, branches activate the street edges, occupy the vacant upper podium spaces through open-air markets, and connect to a series of modified lilong blocks. These blocks consist of pass-through commercial spaces on the ground level with anchor stores defining end points. A ramp leads to the second level of shophouses which provide adaptable live/work space. Informal stalls are encouraged through street and ramp edge frameworks which unfold for shade and provide electricity and water connections. The steel structure of the prefabricated construction buildings remains under the elevated rail and along the subway line to provide adaptable communal spaces and daylight infrastructure in an engaging and productive means.
34 35
D C
B
A
DONGBAOXING ROAD STATION LINE 3
C-D: 15-2 0
B
A-B: 15-20 minutes
A
minutes
C
C-D: 5-10l liners, utilizing park minutes
C
10
: 5-
B -D
ong ts al ram emen prog prov aring n im sh stria / bike pede ad and n Ro bike Sichua th Nor
s
ute
min
B
A-B: 5-10 minutes
existing, bike and pedestrian paths, reinvigorates nsumption means connects to new shopping/co
bike connectin and pedestrian path g cana s,
inu
tes
line bik Sipin ea g nd Ro pe ad, de m stri ak an e m frie ore nd ly
0m
5-1
inu tes
A-B: 5-10 minutes
existing, bike and pedestrian paths, reinvigorates nsumption means connects to new shopping/co
C
C:
0m
5-1
m 10
ctur e conninform ect al sh to st oppi atio ng arc, n
: 5-
rest ru
B -D
A
C-D: 5-10l liners, utilizing park minutes
ong ts al ram emen prog prov aring n im sh stria / bike pede ad and n Ro bike Sichua th Nor
inu tes
D
B-
A
B
HAILUN ROAD STATION LINE 4/10
NORTH SICHUAN ROAD STATION LINE 10
bike connectin and pedestrian path g cana s,
D
A-D :
BAOSHAN ROAD STATION LINE 3/4
D