Jaeyoung Joo

Page 1

JAEYOUNG JOO Architecture Portfolio 2007-2020


2


TABLE OF CONTENTS

00. CV / SELECTED WORKS

4

01. LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER

8

02. SEOUL ECO HUB

16

03. GURI LANDMARK TOWER

22

04. G-CITY MASTER PLAN

30

05. ROBOT SCIENCE MUSEUM

38

06. JACOBS JAVITS CONVENTION CENTER

42

07. THE HOME DEPOT BACKYARD & PARKING DECK

48

08. MEMORY & SPACE (Academic)

52

09. BLUE RESCUE (Academic)

54

10. THE NEXUS BUILDING (Academic)

56

11. RUBBING SPACE

58

12. PROJECTS SHOWCASE (2007-2012)

60

3


JAEYOUNG JOO KIRA, LEED AP BD+C

01. CERTIFICATION

REGISTERED ARCHITECT (South KOREA)

NOV 2018 - Current

LEED AP BD+C

SEP 2015 - Current

Korea Institute of Registered Architects Green Building Certification Institute

Architectural Engineer

SEP 2012 - Current

SAMSUNG SDS America Plano, TX * Design & Construction Project Manager - Construction Management for Office Interior Renovation Project - Managing and tracking project schedule and budget with Change Order, RFI, Submittal preparation and review - Bellevue TMO Samsung Office Renovation, WA - Legacy Samaung Office Relocation, Plano, TX

JAN 2020 - Current

Human Resources Development Service of Korea

02. PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

TVSDESIGN Atlanta, GA * Associate Architect - Assisted design principals throughout all phases of projects - Las Vegas Convention Center Phase-III Renovation, SD - Guri City Masterplan, Concept Design - Javits Convention Center Expansion, DD Phase - Georgia World Congress Center Phase II Parking Deck Envision Heritage, University of Florida Gainesville, FL *Research Assistant - Involved in planning and implementing 3D laser scanning; - Created products from point clouds including presentation drawings.

AUG 2015 - MAY 2016

PETERPRAN+H NYC *Project Designer - Involved in design competition of church, hospital and hotel project; - Coordinated schedules and workloads.

NOV 2011 - FEB 2012

HEERIM Architects & Planners Seoul, South Korea *BIM manager - Prepared for construction documents and Revit modeling; - Participated in quality control using BIM (visual check + crash check); - Trained the basics of Revit Architecture and Navisworks to employees;

JAN 2007 - JAN 2013

*Assistant manager - Assisted in the coordination of project plans and designs; - Involved in design-built and competition projects; - Produced design documentations and presentation materials.

4

JUN 2016 - DEC 2019


CV 03. EDUCATION

04. SKILLS

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA // Gainesville, FL Master of Architecture

AUG 2014 - MAY 2016

GACHON UNIVERSITY // South KOREA Bachelor of Engineering in Architecture

MAR 2001 - FEB 2007

Autodesk- Revit, Navisworks, Autocad 3D- Rhinoceros 3D, Sketchup 3D, Grasshopper Render- Vray, Maxwell, Lumion, Enscape3D Project Management - NewForma, Bluebeam Adobe Suite- Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign MS Office Suite- MS Project, PowerPoint, Excel, Word Physical Model Crafting- Laser cutting, 3D printing

05. HONORS & AWARDS

The AIA Certificate of Merit // University of Florida Architecture Academic Achievement Award // University of Florida Architecture Design Honor Award // University of Florida BIM Design Awards // Building SMART KOREA Student Architecture Design Competition // Korean Institute of Architects Docomomo Korea Design Competition // Docomomo Korea

06. MEMBERSHIPS

AIA // The American Institute of Architects // Associate // #38592394 USGBC // U.S. Green Building Council // #E535EMEPGKIRBOC NCARB // AXP 100%, ARE 5.0 EXAM 2/6 progress KIRA // Korean Institute of Registered Architects

07. WORKS FEATURED

Online Portfolio https://issuu.com/home/published/2020_portfolio_web Personal Website https://jaeyoungjoo.wixsite.com/studiojoo

08. CONTACT

951 Greenside Dr #6226, Richardson, TX 75080 +1.470.985.6264 // jjy0816@gmail.com

2016 2016 2015, 2016 2012 2006 2005

5


SELECTED PROFESSIONAL PROJECT

6


Las Vegas Convention Center Phase-III // 1.4 million sf, SD // Las Vegas, NV, USA - Schematic Design, RCP, MEP Coordination, and Documentation Seoul Bio-Hub Global Collaboration Complex // 5,300 sm, Competition // Seoul, Korea - Design competition deliverable package production Guri Landmark Tower // 98,330 sm, Concept Design // Guri, Korea // 2019 - Residential tower + retail podium design.

2018

Guri City Masterplan // 806,649 sm(site), Concept Design // Guri, Korea - Master Plan Design, Feasibility study, Convention and Towers design Robot Science Museum // 6,353 sm, competition // Seoul, Korea - Design competition deliverable package production

2017

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center // 1.2 million sf, DD // NYC, USA - Code Review, Core Design, and Documentation

SELECTED WORKS

2019

GWCC Phase II Parking Deck // 51,686 sf // Atlanta, GA, USA - SD, DD, CD Documentation and Coordination 2016

Pragati Maidan Convention Center // 4,436,500 sf // New Dehli, India - Masterplan competition, Hotel design, Presentation documentation

2012

SK Eco-Hub // 502,000 sf, DD+CD // Seongnam, Korea - Revit modeling, BIM documentation work, CD drawing, Animation for presentation Incheon Hotel // 346,000 sf, competition // Incheon, Korea - Concept idea, Elevation study

2011

Man Min Church // 1,244,000 sf, competition // Seoul, Korea - Concept idea, Schemetic Design, Animation sequence scenario Me Lihn Hospital // 725,000 sf, SD // Me Lihn, Vietnam - Concept idea, Schemetic Design, Computer graphic control work Busan Port Passenger Terminal // 1,000,000 sf, Design-build // Busan, Korea - Revit modeling, BIM documentation work, Rendering Korea South-East Power Co. HQ // 255,825 sf, BIM+CD //Kyungnam, Korea - Revit modeling, CD drawing, BIM Design Awards panel work: 1st Prize

2009

Korea Power Exchange HQ // 218,000 sf, BIM+CD // Gwangju, Korea - Revit modeling, Support building CD drawing, Revit family work, Rendering YTN Media Center // 650,000 sf, DD+CD // Seoul, Korea - Facade design, Vertical louver system design, Curtain wall study, Physical modeling

2008

Pastel Tower // 655,000 sf, competition // Seoul, Korea - Concept idea, Diagram works, Physical model study

2007

The National Assembly Members Office Building // 825,000 sf, competition // Seoul, Korea - Concept idea, Physical model study, 3D modeling, Rendering Song-do Science Village // 52 Acre, masterplan competition // Incheon, Korea - Concept idea, Physical model study, 3D modeling, Rendering

7


01. LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER PHASE-III

Associate Architect, MEP Lead at TVSDESIGN LOCATION SIZE TYPE ROLE

LAS VEGAS, NV LV1: 2,177,380 sf, LV2: 309,026 sf, LV3: 835,803 sf CONVENTION CENTER RENOVATION 2D+3D DRAWINGS, MEP COORDINATION, RCP DESIGN

Phase 3 Renovation is the common name for the Third Phase in the Las Vegas Convention Center District Plan and includes the renovations of the existing LVCC Campus east of Paradise Road. The program goals for Phase 3 include overall renovation of spaces and amenities to create a more efficient operation and enhance customer experience. To the extent possible and within the budget, space standards established in the planning and design of the Phase 2 expansion are to be referenced as an analog for the prioritization of upgrades made during Phase. An overarching goal for Phase 3 is to strive for consistency of customer experience across the entire campus. This includes but is not limited to following : 1. Site Circulation and vehicular wayfinding strategies, including landscaping and the availability and relationship of outdoor exhibit to the building. 2. Finish and fell of customer facing spaces such as lobbies and concourses, meeting rooms, exhibit halls and supports spaces such as restrooms and business centers. 3. Amenitie and utilities available to the exhibitors within the leasable spaces.

8


9


RE-

INNOVATION

In addition to upgrades to the existing spaces, the project scope also includes some strategic additions and enhancements as outlined below: 1. Addition of a new Grand Lobby, similar in area to the new Phase 2 lobby, by expanding the footprint of the existing grand lobby 2. A significant transformation of the grand concourse that runs along the north of Central hall, connecting the grand lobby to the Blue Lot entry. 3. The extension of the ribbon roof across Paradise, along the building facades facing the silver lot and southward to the south-west lobby. The roof form will be an icoic architectural expression that delivers a consistent visual identity to the entire campus. 4. Add alternate: The creation of an indoor connector concourse such that visitors can circulate between the grand lobby and the south lobby without going outside. 5. Enlargement of pre-functon spaces at the south-west lobby.

10


11


12


13


1

3

2

4

5

6

7

8

U

T

S

GR-1

R PT-1

Existing South-West Lobby

Q

P

S

P,8

INTERIOR RENDERING - SOUHTWEST LOBBY

1/16" = 1'-0" S2

S3

E480-0

S4

S1

E510-0

S5

E540-0

S5.4

E570-0

S6

E573-0

E600-0

SN.2 N478-4

SN

SN

N474-4

SM

SM

N447-0

SL

SL

N417-0

SK

SK

N387-0

SJ

SJ

N357-0

N357-0

ACT-2

15' - 2"

ACT-2

16' - 2"

ACT-2

30' - 0"

16' - 2"

H

12' - 6" PT-5

GYP 30' - 0"

J

30' - 0"

N387-0

30' - 0"

K

30' - 0"

N417-0

30' - 0"

L

30' - 0"

N447-0

30' - 0"

M

27' - 4"

N474-4

27' - 4"

N

SH

SH

G

30' - 0"

N327-0

30' - 0"

N327-0

SG

SG

30' - 0"

N297-0

30' - 0"

N297-0

F SF

SF

SF.5

30' - 0"

SF.5

N267-0

30' - 0"

N267-0

E SE

SE

30' - 0"

N237-0

30' - 0"

N237-0

16' - 2"

GYP

16' - 2"

ACT-2

16' - 2"

GYP

12' - 6" PT-5

D

SD

30' - 0"

30' - 0"

N207-0

C SC

SC

N177-0

30' - 0"

N177-0

9' - 0"

B

F,1

ACT-03

____________________________________________________________

A6-601

SB

SB

N147-0

N147-0

S NW2

A

REFLECTED CEILING PLAN - SOUTHWEST LOBBY LEVEL 3

A,1

1

F

A,8 1/16" = 1'-0"

1/16" = 1'-0"

14

GYP

30' - 0"

BIM 360://Las Vegas Convention Center Phase 3/A-11141-LVCC PH 3-MAIN.rvt

10/4/2019 7:20:16 PM

SD

N207-0

2

3

4

5

6

7

8


9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

MATERIAL LEGEND Keynote ACT-2 CPT-2 GFRG-1 GR-1 OH-1 PC-1 PT-1 PT-5 TL-1

17

18

19

21

20

INTERIOR COMPONENT DRAWING LEGEND Keynote Text

U

ACOUSTIC CEILING TILE, 2'X4' SCORED PATTERN, PUBLIC CONCOURSES AXMINSTER CARPET, PATTERN B, PUBLIC CONCOURSES GLASS FIBER REINFORCED GYPSUM, INTERIOR COLUMN COVER 1/2" LAMINATED TEMPERED GLASS OVERHEAD COILING DOOR DECORATIVE POLISHED CONCRETE FLOOR WITH CUSTOM PATTERNED ZINC STRIPS WHITE, INTERIOR WALLS ACCENT COLOR A (GRAY), EXHIBIT HALL PORTAL FLOOR TILE, RESTROOMS

NEW PARTITION

EXISTING ACT, 2' x 4'

EXISTING GYPSUM CEILING

EXISTING PARTITION TO REMAIN

EXISTING ACT, 2' x 2'

NEW GYPSUM CEILING

OVERHEAD

NEW ACT, 2' x 4'

NOT IN SCOPE

PC-1, POLISHED CONCRETE

NEW ACT, 2' x 4' SCORED PATTERN

OPEN TO STRUCTURE

TVS Nevada, Inc. 1230 Peachtree Street NE Suite 2700 Atlanta, Georgia 30309 404 888 6600 fax 404 888 6700

tvsdesign.com

Scales as stated hereon are valid on the orginal drawing, the dimensions of which are 36 x 48 inches. These scales noted hereon are hereby changed by the ratio of the overall sheet dimension of the print to the corresponding dimensions of the original drawing. This drawing is the property of TVS Nevada, Inc. and is not to be reproduced or copied in whole or in part. It is only to be used for the project and site specifically identified herein and is not to be used on any other project. It is to be returned on request.

SC-1, SEALED CONCRETE

NEW ACT, 2' x 2'

OPEN TO BELOW

GR-1, LAMINATED/TEMPERED GLASS GUARDRAIL

PT-5, ACCENT PAINT

PT-7, ACCENT PAINT

T

These documents represent a design progress issuance. As such, the information herein is preliminary and represents the state of coordination and systems as of the issuance date.

© TVS Nevada, Inc.

SL

SJ

SK

N417-0

N387-0

SH

N357-0

30' - 0"

SG

N327-0

30' - 0"

SF

N297-0

30' - 0"

30' - 0"

SE

SF.5

N267-0

30' - 0"

15' - 0"

SD

N237-0

30' - 0"

S6

SC

N207-0

15' - 0"

S5.4

E600-0

N177-0

S5

E573-0

15' - 3 1/2"

30' - 0"

S4

E570-0

KLAI JUBA WALD

S3

E540-0

14' - 8 1/2"

E510-0

30' - 0"

30' - 0"

PT-5 PT-5

GFRG-1

15'-0"

2'-6"

PT-1 GFRG-1

15'-0"

PT-1

GR-1

GR-1

GFRG-1

133' - 10"

133' - 10"

LEVEL 3 - SOUTH

LEVEL 3 - SOUTH

architecture + interiors

101 Convention Center Drive, Suite 950 Las Vegas NV 89109 (702) 470-2311

R

DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS REMAIN THE PROPERTY OF THE DESIGN PROFESSIONAL. COPIES OF THE DRAWINGS AND SPECIFICATIONS RETAINED BY THE CLIENT MAY BE UTILIZED ONLY FOR HIS USE AND FOR OCCUPYING THE PROJECT FOR WHICH THEY WERE PREPARED, AND NOT FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF ANY OTHER PROJECTS.

2'-6"

PT-5 ACT-2 PT-5

17'-6"

PT-1

S

GFRG-1

PT-1

103' - 10"

103' - 10"

LEVEL 1 - SOUTH LOBBY

LEVEL 1 - SOUTH LOBBY

Q

NOTE: Information contained in the drawings and documents are preliminary and provided for design intent only. Drawings and specifications are not issued for construction but are design documents provided to convey the services required by the contract. Design shall be limited by the aesthetic, program and functional requirements directed and approved by the owner.

SOUTH - SOUTHWEST LOBBY - TOWARDS EAST

SOUTH - SOUTHWEST LOBBY - TOWARDS SOUTH

P,18

S3

30' - 0"

E510-0

S4

30' - 0"

Life safety, building code and zoning assumptions conveyed in these drawings and documents shall be reviewed by the local Architect of Record. The Architect of Record shall develop and be responsible for all final documents meeting life safety, building code and zoning requirements.

S5

E540-0

E570-0

30' - 0"

NW2

S2

E480-0

S3

S4

S1

E510-0

P

This set of Drawings and others documents (such as written narratives, specifications and proposed Construction Contract Conditions) are complementary and collectively convey and mark the progress of design at the indicated milestone of the Schematic Design phase.

1/16" = 1'-0" S2

E480-0

These design progress documents do not indicate or describe all the work requirements for the full performance and completion of the Project. As such, these design progress documents are not issued for construction, are preliminary, and are incomplete/uncoordinated for construction purposes unless otherwise designated.

S5

E540-0

S6

E570-0

E600-0

SN

N

PRELIMINARY

N474-4

NOT FOR CONSTRUCTION 27' - 4"

15.00°

SM

M

30' - 0"

N447-0

SL

N417-0

LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER 30' - 0"

KJWA JOB NUMBER

18071

TVS JOB NUMBER

11141.000

CONTRACT NUMBER

19-4561

SHEET ISSUE DATE

10/4/2019

GR-1 SK

N387-0

P,8

30' - 0"

P,8

___________________________________________________________

A6-200

L

PHASE THREE

PC-1

___________________________________________________________

REV

A6-200

DESCRIPTION SCHEMATIC DESIGN

K

DATE Oct. 04 2019

CPT-2

PC-1

J

SJ

N357-0

PT-5 P,18

P,18

___________________________________________________________

30' - 0"

___________________________________________________________

A6-200

A6-200 OH-1

SOUTHWEST LOBBY

SH

H

GFRG-1

30' - 0"

N327-0

PT-5

G

SG

N297-0

DN

UP

F TELE

ELEC

SECURITY

LVCC PHASE 2

TELECOM.

NORTH HALL

W BROWN DR

ELEVATOR MACHINE ROOM

ELECTICAL

GR-1

TL-1

TL-1

JAN.

FIRST AID

N237-0

E DESERT INN

CENTRAL HALL

E JO

MEN

WOMENS SE

PARADISE RD

SF.5

E

RD

PT-5 30' - 0"

SOUTH HALL

CAMPUS PLAN

D

CPT-2 GFRG-1 SD

N207-0

30' - 0"

FOOD HALL

C SC

N177-0

30' - 0"

ZONE PLAN

INTERIOR COMPONENT SOUTHWEST LOBBY

TL-1

TL-1

SB

B

N147-0

10' - 2 5/16"

S1

S2

NW2

E480-0

FLOOR PLAN - SOUTHWEST LOBBY LEVEL 3

A,15

FLOOR PLAN - SOUTHWEST LOBBY LEVEL 1

A6-200

1/16" = 1'-0"

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

A

21

15


02. RATIONAL INNOVATION SEOUL ECO HUB GLOBAL COLLABORATION COMPLEX

The site area offers excellent conditions as a hub for the biomedical industry as leading research centers, universities and hospitals are concentrated in it, but spaces to accommodate biomedical startups moving into the area are markedly in short supply. Even in the second half of 2019 when the construction of three buildings will be completed, there will not be sufficient space to meet all the demand. Therefore, we need to expand space to accommodate companies that want to move into the area in order to attract businesses and induce new startups. The Seoul Biohub initially aimed to support early-stage startups and allowed moving-in companies to stay only up to four years. Now it needs to switch its focus from supporting startups with a history of less than five years to supporting promising companies to commercialize their technologies and enter the global market successfully. To this end, it needs to create specialized facilities in the area. The SMG should provide support to keep companies at the commercialization stage from moving out to other areas, so that the networks will continue to be maintained, with the cluster strengthening and expanding continuously.

16


LOCATION SEOUL, KOREA | SIZE 13,913.50 sm |

TYPE OFFICE + LABORATORY

|

INDIVIDUAL DESIGN COMPETITION ENTRY

17


18


PROBLEM SEEKING 01

“HOW TO INCORPORATE AND CREATE THE NEW BUILDING TO BE IN HARMONY WITH EXISTING CAMPUS?”

19


PROBLEM SEEKING 02

“HOW TO MAKE A CREATIVE WORK SPACE FOR IDEAL USER COLLABORATION?”

20


PROBLEM SEEKING 03

“HOW TO CREATE A SUSTAINABLE AND SMART BUILDING?

21


03. GURI LANDMARK TOWER

Associate Architect at TVSDESIGN LOCATION GURI CITY, KOREA SIZE 36,200 SM (B6F-49F) TYPE PROGRAMING, CONCEPT DESIGN ROLE DESIGN, 2D+3D DRAWINGS, PRESENTATION Located immediately to the east of Seoul, Guri city is now one of the hottest areas in Korea, readily to be transformed into a new design hub in the Southeast Asian region.

SUMMER PREVAILING WIND FROM SOUTHEAST

WINTER PREVAILING WIND FROM NORTHWERST

A. WINTER SOLSTICE

B. SPRING/FALL EQUINOX

C. SUMMER SOLSTICE

22

Landmark towers, in the heart of Guri city, will set a new standard for a sustainable urban lifestyle promoting health and well-being of the local citizens. The inherent walking nature of the city’s people has been engrained into the project via its indoor & outdoor pedestrian walkways and jogging trails on two levels of the rooftop parks. Pedestrian walkways are intertwined through multiple levels of the podium providing infinite ways to explore the place depending on which direction to take on. Its central atrium with a large skylight is a wayfinding element that visually conects five levels of the podium spaces as well as the essential element of bringing daylight to basement levels. As it stands as a visual landmark of Guri city, the programs of the project also become a cultural landmark. The state of art sports center, smaller scale retail shops, F & B outlets, and the rooftop park form a truely unique combination of programs. Landmark towers will be a special place in Guri city where people live, shop, learn, entertain and excercise all in one place.


23


OUTER SKIN COMPONENT

PERFORATED METAL PANEL

SKIN CONCEPT ACHA MOUNTAIN PINE TREE Pine trees are great treasure of Acha mountain. They complete the beautiful landscape of the mountain, and provide filtered air and cool temperature. Pine trees in Acha mountain are very famous for their beautiful curvature in form, and they compose spectacular perspectives along the hiking trail. Pine tree holds greater meaning to Acha mountain and Guri city because they have lived through the history of the city and Korea. KOREAN PINE CONE Korean pine cones are petit and attractive. Their ability to close and open depending on the humidity of the mountain is applied to the skin design that can filter the hot sun light and cool down the space. The various sizes of opening also control views and privacy of interior spaces. Apart from its practicalities, the gradient of tower skin opening gives a dramatic texture which makes the tower a memorable landmark of the city.

24

DOUBLE SKIN FACADE Not many residential buildings utilize double skin facade system but people increasingly realize that the upfront cost of double skin quickly pays off by the 4 following advantages. 1. REDUCED ENERGY CONSUMPTION The cavity between the two layers can act as insulation during the colder months. This reduces the need to heat the inside of the building, eliminating reliance on HVAC systems and the cost of operating them. 2. NATURAL VENTILATION In warmer months, the air in the cavity between the two facade layers effectively monitors itself. Excess heat is drained out by air density difference between skin layers. This makes the inner skin cooler and less heat is coming through outer layer of skin. 3. ACOUSTIC INSULATION Sound insulation effectiveness can be greatly increased by incorporating perforated metals. Even if the internal

windows are open, it provides similar acoustic insulation as a single skin facade. 4. OCCUPANT COMFORT A perforated metal outer facade provides shading from direct sunlight while still allowing the passage of natural light. Windows can be open, which promotes natural ventilation while keeping acoustic insulation. REPEATING UNIT FOR 70% OPENING TYPE Three dimensional opening dramatically cuts down solar heat gain, yet preserves maximum view at eye level.


25


THE SPORTS CENTER is one of the most exciting features of the development. It has two basement levels of facilities including a fitness center, a rock-climbing center, and an aquatic center. On the roof, 450 meter long jogging & walking trails connect two levels of rooftop parks. It is expected to be the most famous feature of the project for its uniqueness and convenience of location. The rock-climbing center located at the south main entry of the sports center has 20m high vertical continuous climbing surfaces visually open via glass walls at street and terrace level . Its size can easily host international level rock-climbing competitions drawing players and visitors beyond Guri city and metro Seoul.

26


B A

THE BASIS OF UNIT LAYOUT follows current trends of residential towers in Korea for compatibility of construction industry, and for the trend sensitive Korean real estate markets. However, with unique exterior skin designs, larger window openings, and unconventional interior millwork design, living experiences will be elevated to a higher level. Each tower has its own club house and private outdoor garden on the podium rooftop park level providing easy access to rooftop sports facilities and jogging trails. Yet, landscape design cleverly secludes them from public views. Creating attractive communal spaces for residents will promote healthy and safe communities as individualism has become a serious social issue among younger generations. Landmark towers envision future trends of residential design.

C

27


28


184M

172 M

49 48

48

47

47

46

46

45

45

44

44

43

43 42 41 40

42 41

1

40 39

39

38

38

37

37

36

36

35

35

34

34

33

33

32

32

31

31

30

30

29

29

28

28 27 26 25

1

27 26

2

25

2

24

24

23

23

22

22

21

21

20

20

19

19

18

18

17

17

16

16

15

15

14

14

13

13

12

12

11

11

10

10

9

9

8

8

7

7

6

6

5

5 4

5 3

5

5

5 5

4

7 8 9

8 9

6

7

6

7

1. RESIDENTIAL UNIT 2. REFUGE FLOOR 3. ROCK CLIMBING CENTER 4. SPORTS CENTER 5. RETAIL 6. FOOD COURT 7. SERVICE 8. PUBLIC PARKING 9. RESIDENTIAL PARKING

29


04. GURI MASTER PLAN LOCATION GURI CITY, KOREA TYPE

MASTER PLAN CONCEPT DESIGN

ROLE

MASTERPLAN PHYSICAL STUDY, PRESENTATION

Associate Architect at TVSDESIGN

The ID9 in Guri City, South Korea is the most coveted city scale development near metro Seoul with astonishing views overlooking the Han Rive design symbolic of the 9 historic villages informing the city name, ‘GURI�. The 9 design innovation keywords are, Exhibition, Business, Life style, Cul Entertainment. ID9 is focused on a sustainable MICE (Meeting, Incentives, Conventions, and Exhibitions) industry development. Its design criteria i premium international standards for venue and facility services, activities and events based on cultural identity of the city, businesses that sho world-class standards for the quality of life and well-being of all residents, and creating a sustainable MICE prototype for the next generation in K hensive network of dedicated pedestrian circulation linking the entire districts of ID9, present tangible evidence of the commitment of the ID9 stak sustainable live/work/play environment unlike any other in the world.

30


er. The project goal is to realize 9 innovations in ltural, Sustainable, Music, Technology, Smart and include low carbon transport to city and venues, owcase social and environmental responsibility, Korea. The elevated “Green Fingers�, a comprekeholders towards an innovative, rewarding and

31


PHASE-II

PHASE-I

SITE PLAN PHASE-I

1. SIGNATURE 3 TOWERS 2. CONVENTION CENTER 3. TRANSIT CENTER 4. VENTURE STUDIO OFFICE 5. COMMERCIAL 6. MIXED-USE 7. RESIDENTIAL (APARTMENT) 8. RIVER FRONT RESIDENTIAL 9. TOWN HOUSE

32

PHASE-II

1. SIGNATURE HOTEL (180M) + CONCERT HALL 2. LAKE-FRONT RESIDENTIAL 3. RESIDENTIAL (APARTMENT) 4. K-POP RELATED FACILITY 5. K-INSTRUMENTS RELATED FACILITY 6. COMMERCIAL 7. CHILDREN’S MUSEUM + AMPHITHEATER 8. BICYCLE CENTER 9. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

PHASE-III

1. SIGNATURE TOWER (180M) + COMMERCIAL 2. RESIDENTIAL (APARTMENT) 3. TECHNOLOGY-THEMED FACILITY 4. HOSPITAL 5. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL


MASTER PLAN IDEAS 1. ELEVATED WALKWAY “ GREEN FINGER ” AS A CONNECTING ELEMENT

PHASE-III

2. LANDMARK TOWERS + DESIGN CENTER “ CURVATURE OF KOREAN DRESSES ” AS A SYMBOLIC FORM OF ICONIC TOWER

3. WATER + RETAIL PROMENADE “ CANAL STREET ” AS AN ORGANIZING ELEMENT

33


34


SIGNATURE THREE-TOWER Respecting the stature of Acha Mountain, the office, hotel and residential towers reach sweeping heights, with the tallest standing at 220m. Vertically clear from flight zone restriction, these landmark towers offer premium views of the Han River. The lower body of each tower rises as one, then separates at the upper body to give the appearance of two buildings blossoming out of one, totaling six. Inspired by Hanbok’s curvature and layers, each tower gives different looks from different perspectives. The lower level and underground are connected by retail space and the new transit center proving convenient and enjoyable access to the convention center.

35


36


LANDSCAPE IDEAS THE LINEAR PARL / GREEN STREET

2

1. Along all streets, a lush landscape edge provides a buffer from vehicular travel, while providing a stormwater and habitat function 2. Each of the linear parks should mimic the form and texture of the green finger that is adjacent (i.e. mountains, agrarian, river and city) 3. Utilize space under the green finger for a multiuse path and mixture of activity space and artful elements 4. Provide areas for seating and outdoor dining where commercial or retail space is the ground floor use 5. Large residential parks will create a green necklace through the center of site, providing ample space for large activities and respite from the city

1 3

4 5

1 2

THE WATER LOOP EDGE

3 4

1

THE BOULEVARDS 2

3

1. At the intersection of the canal/street/green finger, utilize areas to terrace down and allow seating and dining for ground floor retail 2. Linear and sinuous planting along the street edge blur the line between nature and urban 3. Wetland plants provide a filtering layer to stormwater from the development 4. Multi-use path along the canal edge weaves in and out of the green finger above

1. Allee of trees provide shade and seasonal interest, along with places for seating and dining along retail frontage 2. Create terraced gardens that provide vertical circulation 3. Along the upper edge of canal, design areas for raised planters and vegetation that cascade to the lower level, creating a seamless ‘green’ wall between levels

37


05. ROBOT SCIENCE MUSEUM LOCATION SEOUL, KOREA SIZE 6,353.96 SM TYPE CULTURAL, MUSEUM ROLE INDIVIDUAL DESIGN COMPETITION ENTRY (+ACOMES)

38


39


40


In the four nertheastrn districts, there are insufficient neighborhood amenities and poor cultural facilities, so the satisfaction of residents with their living environment is low. It is necessary to improve the living environment and resolve the local education gap. The Museum will expand science educationl infrastructures to equalize educational opportunities and to promote balanced development of public education infrastructure. In the 4th industrial era, a special science museum will be built with robot theme that will contnue to develop as a growth engine. This will lead to an image of a new economy in the Chang-dong area. Therefore, by adopting a design that reflects an efficient spatial composition and introducing each facility through the competition, the Robot Science Museum will be built in the northeastern area, which lacks culture and exhibition areas, and will contribute to the opportunity for local people to enjoy scientific culture and will bring economic activity to the northeastern region.

41


06. JACOBS JAVITS CONVENTION CENTER Design Professional at TVSDESIGN

42


Parti - “Often referred to as the big idea, it is the chief organizing thought or decision behind an Architect’s design presented in the form of a basic diagram...” - Wikipedia An Evaluated’Parti’ - An expanded Javits with internally/efficiently managed service truck traffic, increased rentable function space, respect for adjacent Architecture, and leveraged urban location are the basic part of our team’s ‘Parti’. The basic organizational diagram of the Indicative Design successfully dealt with the parameters of both site and program, locating the major pieces of function appropriately with respect to necessary adjacencies. This sample layout of the Program remains intact within this proposal - but not without rigorous analysis. Using the Alternate Technical Concepts (ATC’s) and Owner RFI’s, we took a detailed look at the ‘bones’ of the program and the functional organization of the parts in an effort to seek out engineering efficiencies, verify operational fit, confirm appropriate material selections, and identify additional urban design opportunities. The Design Excellence imbedded in this proposal begins with this tested ‘parti’, evaluated for cost and value against these base tenets. The ‘Bones’ of the Program - With many convention centers considering expansion, the primary goal is to maintain a customer base while reaching new markets in a changing and competitive environment. To accomplish this, the Javits expansion program addresses two goals - first, to incorporate an efficiently organized internal truck marshalling facility, and second, to expand the size and type of flexible meeting, banquet, and exhibition spaces. The program looks to the principals of good convention center design.

43


AXONOMETRIC DIAGRAM 44


LV 03

LV 04

LV 01

LV 02 45


DESIGN DECISION PROGRESS AT CONCOURSE WALL

DOCUMENTATIONS 46


47


07. THE HOME DEPOT BACKYARD & ORANGE PARKING DECK Design Professional at TVSDESIGN The Home Depot Backyard, provides areas for family activities, entertainment and community events and on stadium event days can serve as a fan tailgating zone. The overarching idea behind the park’s creation was to create a living community park that could host a variety of events instead of a parking lot that could sometimes be used as a park. The project is a 13 acre green space next to the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in the former space occupied by the Georgia Dome. The park is divided into districts, with two side fields and a center field that accommodate soccer fields, festivals, movie showings, concerts and tailgating. Special attention was given to creating active edges to surround the park with viewing platforms, picnic areas and sculpted pathways that connect the event lawn with the adjacent streets and plazas. From this amphitheater setting, visitors will have ‘Instagram-worthy’ views of the surrounding park and city. A critical component of the design challenge was to provide the missing pedestrian linkage from the Westside to downtown. Along the southern edge of the park, tvsdesign joined together a series of tree lined plazas, park overlooks and civic art installations to create a cultural pathway leading to Centennial Olympic Park.

48


49


50


51


08. MEMORY & SPACE M.Arch Design Studio at Univ. of Florida

01. CONTINGENCIES AND PROTO-ARCHITECTURE

02. MEMORY | MNEMONICS | FIELD

“HOW TO MEASURE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN INTANGIBLE MEMORY AND TANGIBLE SPACE?”

52


03. TABOO AND THE IRRECONCILABLE

04. OF MADNESS (AND THE VALUE OF RHETORIC)

53


09. BLUE RESCUE

M.Arch Design Studio at Univ. of Florida

MIAMI’S SEA LEVLE WILL RISE UP TO 3 FEET BY 2010

54

Currently many of experts are expecting that sea level rise will reach 3 feets higher from current condition by 2100. And, in Miami, there are many types of water infrastructure such as rivers, streams, reservoirs, wells, and canal system, and more than 70% of potable water supply is relying on the arquifer, which is fresh water coming from underground, using water pumping facilities. In

this context, when sea level rise happens, we concluded that not only in coast areas but also inner land areas are highly risky. So, taking advantages of existing water-related infrastructure, how architects can provide solutions for creating public cultural space at the same time was our biggest concerning.


“HOW CAN THE MASSIVE LEVELS OF FUNDING ALLOCATED FOR INFRASTRUCTURE BE SPENT TO ADAPT TO SEA LEVEL RISE AND CREATE PUBLIC SPACE FOR COMMUNITIES?”

A NEW TYPOLOGY OF WATER INFRASTRUCTURE The city of Miami faces challenges of urban sprawl, heavy rain, and flooding of its environment. The change in the flow of water through the Floridian and Biscayne Aquifer has exacerbated the issue of

water in the region. It is projected that up to 70% of the drainage capacity of the 28 coastal flood/ salinity control structures protecting southeast Florida from flooding and saltwater intrusion could be lost with sea level rise at less than 1 foot. Adaption solutions may require the addition of high-capacity pumping stations costing millions of dollars each. The Blue Rescue focuses on the need

for new pumping stations and providing a series of new urban spaces. The project focuses on the need for the new pumping stations and fresh water by creating pumping station parks located in the most vulnerable areas in Miami that would hold water during flooding and provide recreation areas by incorporating social infrastructure unique to the neighborhood it occupies.

55


M.Arch Design Studio at Univ. of Florida

10. THE NEXUS BUILDING

56


57


11. RUBBING SPACE Unlike drawings or photographs, rubbing is the exact index of the object being represented, strange but pure two dimensional records. Doho Suh stated “Rubbing is a different interpretation of space. It is quite sensuous... you have to very carefully caress the suface and try to understand what’s there.” (Wall Street Journal, Nov 6th 2013) Megan Lykins Reich, a deputy director of Program, Planning, and Engagement, said that from a practical standpoint, rubbings also provide precise information that is very useful to someone creating, say, a life-sized sculpture of a particular environment. I attached vellum paper to a part of surface in my apartment and carefully rubbed the space using blue color pencil. I then removed the textured rubbings and pinned on the wall. The works read like peculiar blueprints. It’s like the monumental sculpture. It’s simultaneously literal and enigmatic. Although it was like a performance, producing nothing from something, while I was rubbing my spaces, I gained a great opportunity to interact with time, space, and memory.

58


59


12. PROJECT SHOWCASE (2007 - 2012) Project Designer at HEERIM Architects & Planners

60

SK ECO-HUB, 2012 (502,000sf)

Me Lihn Hospital, 2011 (725,000sf)

Incheon Hotel, 2012 (346,000sf)

Busan Port Passenger Terminal, 2010 (1,000,000sf)

Man Min Church, 2011 (1,244,000sf)

Korea South-East Power HQ, 2010 (255,800sf)


Rural Development Admin Office, 2010 (102,400sm)

Pastel Tower, 2008 (655,000sf)

YTN Media Center, 2009 (650,000sf)

The National Assembly Members Office, 2007 (825,000sf)

Korea Power Exchange HQ, 2009 (218,000sf)

Song-do Science Village, 2007 (52Acre)

61


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.