MArch I Academic Portfolio - Yale School of Architecture

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PROJECT LISTING 3rd Year Advanced Studio Gehry - Spring 2016

CONCERT HALL FOR MUNICH 3rd Year Advanced Studio Plattus - Fall 2015

PEOPLES-AMBITIOUS HAPPY LAND 2nd Year Design Studio - Spring 2015

BRIDGEPORT FAIRGROUNDS 2nd Year Design Studio - Fall 2014

BLANCHE-LEVY GOTHIC 1st Year Design Studio - Spring 2014

THE ACTIVATED HOUSE-WALL TEAM G - LAYER HOUSE 1st Year Design Studio - Fall 2013

TEMPLE TO HEDONISM LANDSCAPE OF PLAY UNDER PRESSURE Non-Studio Work

ORNAMENT THEORY & DESIGN FORMAL ANALYSIS VISUALIZATION II & III ROME: CONTINUITY & CHANGE WESTERN EUROPEAN LANDSCAPE



CONCERT HALL FOR MUNICH An Accessible Creature The Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra of Munich is one of the world’s premier orchestral groups, yet it lacks a permanent home, alternating between the compact mid-century Hercules Hall and the acoustically deficient Gasteig. It is by fortuitous chance that a promising site has now been found. The Werksviertel district in Munich is undergoing a post-industrial transformation. For decades after the relocation of the Pfanni potato processing factories to the city outskirts, the land belonging to the Pfanni food empire has existed in a seedy in-between state, home to makeshift informal music and nightlife venues. Today, heir to the Pfanni food empire Werner Eckart seeks to transform his property into an attractive new live-work urban center for Munich. Well-served by the Ostbahnhof railway station, the new concert hall serves as an important new urban anchor, its status as the city’s premier classical music venue cementing the district’s urban future. Under Gehry’s direction, the design of the building grew from within, with attention heaped upon the layout, circulation and articulation of building’s central space: the 1,800-seat concert hall. The building’s exterior presents itself as a “creature”, fluid and restless, emblematic of the drama of change washing over its surroundings.

M.Arch I 3rd Year Spring 2016 1115b Advanced Design Studio Critics: Frank Gehry, Craig Webb, Trattie Davies


Precedent size comparison


Site strategy and relationships

Werksviertel, Munich. Once a thriving potato processing factory, the site is now in the midst of renewal into Munich’s next urban hub.


3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


Iterative models of concert hall articulation from scrap wood

Study of concert hall interior atmosphere


Iteration 1: “Archway”

Iteration 2: “Shards”

Iteration 3: “Bowl”

Iteration 4: “Ember”


Development of seating spiral

View from orchestra stage

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


Seating spiral showing circulation ramps on perimeter

View from orchestra stage

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


A

B

B

A

PLAN OF CONCERT HALL 1/8” = 1’-0” 1849 SEATS

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


SECTION A-A 1/8” = 1’-0”

SECTION B-B 1/8” = 1’-0”

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


A

ORCHESTRA N OF CONCERT HALL 1/8” = 1’-0” FLOOR 1849 SEATS

235 SEATS

ORCHESTRA RING

LOWER SPIRAL

101 SEATS

729 SEATS

LOWER SPIRAL MEZZ.

UPPER SPIRAL

210 SEATS

371 SEATS

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

LOFT 203 SEATS

Chengqi John WAN


3D scan of exterior massing model

Rationalization of 3D scan

Concert hall volume nested within facade ribbons

3rd Year Studio - Concert Hall for Munich

Chengqi John WAN


GRAND PUBLIC PLAZA

PRE-CONCERT

CENTRAL EVENT SPACE

SMALL EVENT SPACE

CONCESSION

BOX OFFICE

COAT CHECK

CONNECTING ATRIUM

RECITAL HALL FOYER

AMPHITHEATRE

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

LEGEND

20

19

18

17

16

15

14

13

12

11

VENUES

VEHICLE DROP-OFF POINT

VIP LOBBY

LOADING/UNLOADING BAY

ARTISTS’ LOBBY

ARTISTS’ ENTRANCE

OUTDOOR EVENT SPACE

SHOP

RESTAURANT SHOW KITCHEN

RESTAURANT

SMALL PUBLIC PLAZA

EXISTING MU SIC

42

12

13

14

23

1

15

6

2

5

4

4

7

1/16” = 1’-0”

32

33

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

3

20

39

11

16

8

17

35

40

34

10

18

9

41

19

TOWARDS OSTBAHNHOF

VEHICULAR ACCESS ROAD


AMPHITHEATRE

10

DRESSING ROOMS

39

AUDIENCE BREAKOUT AUDIENCE LOBBY EDUCATION CENTER AUDIENCE BREAKOUT AUDIENCE BREAKOUT EDUCATION CENTER ARTISTS’ COMMON AREA AUDIENCE BREAKOUT CHORAL HALL ARTISTS’ COMMON AREA PRACTICE ROOMS CHORAL HALL VIP LOBBY PRACTICE ROOMS

VIP LOBBY

51 50 52 51 53 52 54 53 55 54 56 55 57 56

57

LEGEND 50 AUDIENCE LOBBY LEGEND

AUDIENCE LOBBY CONCERT HALL C. HALL BACKSTAGE AUDIENCE LOBBY COMMON BACKSTAGE C. HALL BACKSTAGE RECITAL HALL COMMON BACKSTAGE R. HALL BACKSTAGE RECITAL HALL AUDIENCE LOBBY R. HALL BACKSTAGE CONCESSION AUDIENCE LOBBY ARTISTS’ TERRACE CONCESSION DRESSING ROOMS ARTISTS’ TERRACE

31 30 32 31 33 32 34 33 35 34 36 35 37 36 38 37 39 38

LEGEND 30 CONCERT HALL LEGEND

RECITAL HALL FOYER CONNECTING ATRIUM AMPHITHEATRE RECITAL HALL FOYER

9 8 10 9

VIP LOBBY ARTISTS’ LOUNGE FUNCTION ROOMS VIP LOBBY RESTAURANT UPPER FLOOR FUNCTION ROOMS

RESTAURANT UPPER FLOOR

43

ARTISTS’ LOUNGE

VEHICLE DROP-OFF POINT

VIP LOBBY LOADING/UNLOADING BAY VEHICLE DROP-OFF POINT VIP LOBBY

41 40 42 41 43 42

40

20

19 18 20 19

43

43

42

42

52

52

51

51

50

50

31

31

32

32

33 33

1/16” = 1’-0”

SECOND FLOOR PLAN = 1’-0” SECOND1/16” FLOOR PLAN

1/16” = 1’-0”

FIRST FLOOR PLAN = 1’-0” PLAN FIRST 1/16” FLOOR

30

30

1/16” = 1’-0”

GROUND FLOOR PLAN 1/16” = 1’-0” GROUND FLOOR PLAN

39

39

38

38

55

56 56

54 54

53 53

36 36

37

55

34 34

37

35

35

40 40

57

57

41

41

TOWARDS OSTBAHNHOF


Final concert hall model, showing waffle structure

Final concert hall model, showing waffle structure


LONGITUDINAL SECTION 1/16” = 1’-0”

NORTHEAST ELEVATION 1/16” = 1’-0”

SOUTHEAST ELEVATION 1/16” = 1’-0”


Exploded isometric of concert hall


Plaza landscaping

Public programme

Concert hall

Envelope


View from public plaza

View on approach from Ostbahnhof train station


View skywards from grand plaza


Section through concert hall (unoccupied)


Section through concert hall (occupied)


Site visit with landowner Werner Eckart

Berlin Philharmonic

Walt Disney Hall


Yacht excursion on the Foggy II

Visit to DZ Bank

Visit to DZ Bank



PEOPLES-AMBITIOUS HAPPY LAND Insurgent Urbanism What if urban design straddles both local and regional ambitions, yet remains meaningful and relevant to the communities it serves? The Tonghui riverfront in central Beijing is a difficult, forgotten post-industrial railway landscape, only because its latent potential has not been realized. These places can be the foundations for insurgent public spaces; self-made urban spaces that range from reclaimed and re-appropriated sites, to temporary events and informal gathering places. We approach the question of city-healing not through a singular top-down strategy, but instead through the analysis of sitespecific, unique situations. This produces urban experiments which address both the problems and opportunities of found urban sites. We see programme not as a singular, unyielding thing, but as a limitless list of possibilities generating a continuous urban laboratory in which both public and private are engaged in the process of urban development, represented through narratives that capture the intricacies of human inhabitation.

Feldman Prize Nominee M.Arch I 3rd Year Fall 2015 1106a Advanced Design Studio Critics: Alan Plattus, Andrei Harwell In conjunction with Anne Ma


CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT (CHAOYANG)

TONGHUI RIVER

SHUANGJING RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT

2ND RING ROAD Site location within Beijing

3RD RING ROAD


4TH RING ROAD


Municipal zoning plans overlook the fragmented Tonghui River site

A working past: the railyards juxtapose working tracks with isolated developments

At the post-industrial railyards of the Tonghui River, current paradigms of top-down urban development are out of sync with everyday realities. Dotted with illegal urban villages, abandoned warehouses, empty speculative developments, and water pollution, the district’s preconditions necessitate a more sympathetic methodology for urban regeneration.


We propose a continuous urban laboratory in which we engage both public and private interests in the process of urban development, represented through narratives that capture the intricacies of human inhabitation.


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3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN

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BALANCED URBANISM 9

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN



Site 1 “Food Emporium”: Plan of stabilized condition

Site 1 “Food Emporium”: Existing condition

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Site 1 “Food Emporium”: Intervention and improvement

Chengqi John WAN



FOOD EMPORIUM SITE 1 /// SCALE ‘S’ In this insurgent district, the focus is on the “pinch point” in the existing rail tracks running through a majority of the extended Tonghui River site. The tracks are a major barrier between north and south, and even amongst extant building “islands” within the railyards. We imagine communities on both sides of the railway tracks coming together to improve North-South connectivity from the southern Shuanghuayuan residential community and the northern Chaoyang district, spurring the city planners and railway company to invest in the repurposing and linkage of existing railyard buildings.

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN



Site 2 “Egg Plaza & Circle Campus”: Plan of stabilized condition

Site 2 “Egg Plaza & Circle Campus”: Existing condition

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Site 2 “Egg Plaza & Circle Campus”: Intervention and improvement

Chengqi John WAN



EGG PLAZA & CIRCLE CAMPUS SITE 2 /// SCALE ‘M’ With the goal of revitalizing an under-utilized plot of land, “Egg Plaza” and its neighboring circular railway test track was imagined as a vibrant mixed-use campus intimately tied to its railyard heritage, which includes a collaboration between the extant Beijing Railway Museum and the Urban Planning Museum.

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN



EGG PLAZA & CIRCLE CAMPUS SITE 2 /// SCALE ‘M’ In this narrative, a temporary festival on an empty lot owned by the national railway company evolves into a formal amusement park over the span of a decade, its content and nomenclature assisted by crowd-sourced community initiatives. An industrial landscape, vacant and under-utilized, is transformed into a cultural destination.

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN



Site 3 “Keeper of the Ring”: Plan of stabilized condition

Site 3 “Keeper of the Ring”: Existing condition

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Site 3 “Keeper of the Ring”: Intervention and improvement

Chengqi John WAN



KEEPER OF THE 4TH RING SITE 3 /// SCALE ‘L’ In the largest urban experiment site, we looked at the space underneath and surrounding the 4th Ring Road’s intersection with the Tonghui riverfront. The intersection’s most pressing problem was traffic congestion, and this served as the starting point for revitalizing the site.

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN



KEEPER OF THE 4TH RING SITE 3 /// SCALE ‘L’ The river is expanded into a bay with a “community island” for nearby residents. The island and its roadway, beginning as acts of intervention by the authorities, then act as a node and central hub for activity that spills over beyond the site’s extents, attracting new private development along the Ring Road, furniture market and open lots.

3rd Year Studio - Peoples-Ambitious Happy Land

Chengqi John WAN


Tonghui River urban planning kit

Tonghui River urban planning activity table


Presentation model of developed Egg Plaza site

Slice models of the three urban laboratory sites


“Urban Laboratory� model of all three sites Shades of grey denote passage of time




BRIDGEPORT FAIRGROUNDS Resilient Event Urbanism The blighted ex-industrial city of Bridgeport in Connecticut was once an important manufacturing hub. Concurrently, it was the home of famed circus entrepreneur P.T. Barnum. Today, it struggles with under-employment and a dwindling tax base. Hurricane Sandy in 2012 exposed another urgent problem: threat from flooding and storm surge. This scheme proposes a combination of mixed-use new structures, event urbanism, and water resilience as the basis of a culturally referential urban intervention in an under-utilized neighborhood of the city: Cedar Creek. A system of constructed wetlands, berms, and stormwater runoff ponds is unified under a dazzlingly colorful landscaping scheme, promising an optimistic new urban heart for the troubled city.

M.Arch I 2nd Year Spring 2015 1022b Architectural Design Studio Critic: Alan Plattus In conjunction with Dima Srouji






Sectional slices through scheme


2nd Year Studio - Bridgeport Fairgrounds

Chengqi John WAN


Iranistan Hotel development with flood adaptability




BLANCHE-LEVY GOTHIC U.Penn School of Design An architecture school building should be a village; it should also be a teacher. In the design for the new home of the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Design, this scheme examines interpretative conservationism in the crafting of a major academic building. Named for the Blanche P. Levy Park of the building’s site, the formal language of existing monumental Collegiate Gothic buildings are re-composed into a new school for design, one providing spaces of gathering, intimacy, creativity and exchange.

M.Arch I 2nd Year Fall 2014 1021a Architectural Design Studio Critic: Emily Abruzzo


Transposition (Design Generator) Familiar buildings on Blanche-Levy Park are transposed onto the site in a formal arrangement that references their original position, creating a “ghosted� fascimile.


1

2

3

4

Iterations of Detail 1/ Fragments: The Gothic facades provide contextuality, “clothing� new programme. 2/ Column Grid: A thin grid of columns provide three-dimensionality to form. 3/ Curtain Wall: Aligned to the column grid is a protective curtain wall with chrome mullions. 4/ Programme: Floorslabs are then scaled according to the needs of programme.


1st Floor Plan Open-air public plaza

2nd Year Studio - Blanche-Levy Gothic

Chengqi John WAN


2nd Floor Plan Ring of assembly spaces and faculty offices

2nd Year Studio - Blanche-Levy Gothic

Chengqi John WAN


4th Floor Plan Studios nested within assembly spaces

2nd Year Studio - Blanche-Levy Gothic

Chengqi John WAN


6th Floor Plan Rooftops of masses adjoining studios become roof terraces

2nd Year Studio - Blanche-Levy Gothic

Chengqi John WAN


South Elevation

West Elevation


Short Section

Long Section


Site Massing

View from courtyard

View into courtyard

Internal corridor


View from Blanche-Levy Park


Model with site context

Evolution of concept




THE ACTIVATED HOUSE-WALL Minimal Dwelling for New Haven The contemporary house assembles a plethora of human needs under one roof. Tasked to conceive a minimal dwelling for a sleepy neighborhood in New Haven, the services and needs of basic dwelling were taken apart and examined. The solution: a single wall hosting all essential services, utility rooms, and circulation, which constitutes a grand spine that runs down the center of the two-family home. Built from a sequence of cross-laminated timber (CLT) members, the spine is customizable, adapting to the evolving needs of its inhabitants.

M.Arch I 1st Year Spring 2014 1012b Architectural Design Studio Critic: Alan Organschi


1st Year Studio - The Activated House-Wall

Chengqi John WAN


1st Year Studio - The Activated House-Wall

Chengqi John WAN





Model of Scheme 1/8” = 1’-0”

Model of Activated Wall 1/4” = 1’-0”





TEAM G - LAYER HOUSE Jim Vlock Building Project A house shelters one from the harshness of environment and the turbulence of the exterior - but to be deemed a home, it must transcend the mere desire for protection to take on qualities of comfort and psychological ease. Given the challenge to design a micro-house in an urban neighborhood, the demand for spatial compactness might imbue a house with the characteristics of a confined fortress rather than those of a comfortable home. Without mediation, an abrupt transition from exterior to interior can carry with it unresolved anxieties of the outside. Our design mediates these concerns by considering the house not as an object upon a lot but instead as a landscape. Through a layering of gardens, inner courts, and differing elevations, the site becomes the house, and the house, the site. The scheme meanders through a shifting exterior landscape to arrive within an interior that in turn borrows exterior views in the creation of perceived spaciousness. Walls perform all the functions of enclosure, all the while unexpectedly expanding space rather than defining boundaries.

M.Arch I 1st Year Spring 2014 1012b Architectural Design Studio Critics: Alan Organschi, et al. In conjunction with Anne Householder, Dov Feinmesser, Kiana Hosseini, Jean Chen, Michelle Chen, Eugene Tan, and Winny Tan


1st Year Studio - Team G - Layer House

Chengqi John WAN


1st Year Studio - Team G - Layer House

Chengqi John WAN



LAYERS OF INHABITATION

ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL

PLANTINGS


Street Perspective

Daytime Street Frontage

Nighttime Street Frontage


Owner’s Bedroom

Owner’s Kitchen



TEMPLE TO HEDONISM Dance Hall for the Meatpacking District On a site abutting the High Line in New York, this scheme for a dance hall embodies a physical allegory of stratified urban life. In contrast to the myriad anonymous commercial developments in an increasingly gentrified Meatpacking District, the rich and powerful party hedonistically in a gilded dance hall high above the masses, while the person on the street is granted only the meagre underbelly of the brooding High Line park.

M.Arch I 1st Year Fall 2013 1011a Architectural Design Studio Critic: Joyce Hsiang


Cultural References Spirit of New York

1st Year Studio - Temple to Hedonism

Chengqi John WAN


Circulation Sequence From Crypt to Ballroom

1st Year Studio - Temple to Hedonism

Chengqi John WAN


Floor Plans

Early Section: A Mirrored Building


Developed Section: Temple to Hedonism





LANDSCAPE OF PLAY Pavilion for the Eli Whitney Museum The Eli Whitney Museum in New Haven runs unique day workshops that allow children to be in touch with nature. Its current outdoor play zone contains rustic exhibits that allow children to interact informally with the world around them. In the design for a new pavilion and visitor centre, this essential function of the site was retained and articulated into an undulating, looping playscape. It introduces an intervention that builds upon the existing phenomenological logic of its site to create an entirely new environment upon which children roam unhindered.

M.Arch I 1st Year Fall 2013 1011a Architectural Design Studio Critic: Joyce Hsiang


Fuji Kindergarten, by Tezuka Architects

Mobius Climber, by Landscape Structures

Concept Sketches - Continuous Wheel

Concept Sketches - Mobius Strip layout

1st Year Studio - Landscape of Play

Chengqi John WAN


1st Year Studio - Landscape of Play

Chengqi John WAN


Perspective view of approach

Ground Floor Plan 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Approach Walkway Vestibule Tree Activity Foci Ramp Up to Roof Playscape Steps to River Surface Servery Indoor Exhibition Space Café / Amphitheatre Amphitheatre Seating Restroom

Longitudinal Section 1 2 3 4 5

Vestibule Servery Indoor Exhibition Space Ramp Up to Roof Playscape Roof Playscape




UNDER PRESSURE A Sculpted Solarscape This spatial exercise arose from diagrams of solar movement. The representation of the sun’s march across the sky is extrapolated to generate raw physical enclosure etched upon an abstract landscape, fragmenting as it marches down a gentle slope.

M.Arch I 1st Year Fall 2013 1011a Architectural Design Studio Critic: Joyce Hsiang


Model Photograph




HUMANIZING EDWARD P. EVANS HALL Ornament for the Yale School of Management The Foster+Partners-designed Edward P. Evans Hall for the Yale School of Management (SOM) has polarized critics and neighbors over its stark departure in both scale and articulation from its genteel surroundings. This ornamental scheme for Edward P. Evans Hall builds upon the ruthless ambiguity of Lord Foster’s design while returning the building to its spiritual roots - Yale SOM and New Haven. A lightweight stainless steel lattice activates the colonnade and curtain wall, blossoming upwards into a shimmering canopy of elm leaves, a figural motif inseparable from New Haven. The fractal subdivision of tree branches are analogous to the continued and cumulative acquisition of knowledge through generations, and the heritage of a proud institution.

M.Arch I 1st Year Spring 2015 1216b Ornament Theory and Design Critic: Kent Bloomer


Detail of arch canopy

Abstraction of elm leaves

Sketch of elevation

Final elevation



FORMAL ANALYSIS M.Arch I 1st Year Fall 2013 1018a Formal Analysis Critic: Peter Eisenman

San Giorgio Maggiore and Il Redentore (Venice, Italy) Modular Expansion

Heterogeneity Today (Free Drawing) An Individual’s Perception

Nolli Plan and Campo Marzio (Rome, Italy) Instauratio Urbis versus Empiricism


VISUALIZATION II & III M.Arch I 1st Year Fall 2013 / Spring 2014 1015a Visualization II 1016b Visualization III Critics: Sunil Bald, Kent Bloomer, Ben Pell, John Eberhart

Collapsed Ornament

Interstitial Spaces

Tryptophobic Panel


OF MONSTERS & MEN M.Arch I 3rd Year Summer 2015 1291c Rome: Continuity & Change Critics: Alexander Purves, Stephen Harby, Joyce Hsiang, Bimal Mendis

Capitoline Museum statuary Turbine Hall, Centrale Montemartini

Statue of Athena Turbine Hall, Centrale Montemartini


RENAISSANCE GARDEN AXES M.Arch I 3rd Year Fall 2015 4222a History of Western European Landscape Critic: Bryan Fuermann

Villa Lante

Villa Farnese


Villa Farnese detail


ARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO Chengqi John Wan


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