Justine Do | Architectural Portfolio 2019-2022

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justine do


Justine C Do

University of Texas at Austin Bachelor of Architecture justine.do@utexas.edu 925-997-1030


TABLE OF CONTENTS

04 MISSION ROAD AQUA CENTER Design V | Fall 2021

16 PLANE FOREST

Design IV | Spring 2021

32 AUSTONIAN GRID Design III | Fall 2020

38 EAST AUSTIN CULINARY CENTER Design V | Fall 2021

50 ADDITIONAL WORKS 2017 - 2021


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MISSION ROAD AQUA CENTER San Antonio, TX

Design V Professor Jen Wong +Professor Andrew Fulcher

Fall 2021

To explore the increasingly popular and critical architectural strategy of adaptive reuse, the decommissioned Mission Road Power Plant proposal is to be reenvisioned as a community leisure center. Located along the San Antonio River Walk, the Mission Road Aqua Center provides the community with a wide variety of water based leisure activities that cater to all ages. The complex features a leisure pool and lap pool, as well as a sprinkler park which repurposes the boiler frame of the decommissioned Mission Road Power Plant. Additionally, the center offers a unique amenity, a public bathhouse with baths and saunas of varying temperatures and humidity.

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nity with a wide to all ages. The ell as a sprinkler ecommissioned offers a unique unas of varying

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Site Plan


Concept Collage (left) The collage explores the bathhouse typology, including Roman, Turkish, and Korean, as well as their relationships to modern Neoclassical architectural style.

Rhythm Diagram (below) The diagram demonstrates the relationship between the irregular spacing of the original structural bays and the varying size of the arches: the primary formal intervention.

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2nd floor plan scale: 1/32” = 1’

2nd floor plan scale: 1/32” = 1’

Second Floor Plan: Bathhouse + Saunas 1st floor plan scale: 1/32” = 1’

perspective section

section b

section c

perspective section

section b

section c

1st floor plan scale: 1/32” = 1’

section a

section a

Ground Floor Plan: Public Pools perspective section

exterior & interior render

perspective section

exterior & interior render

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section a a section scale: 1/32” = 1’ scale: 1/32” = 1’

section b b section scale: 1/32” = 1’ scale: 1/32” = 1’

Section B section c c section scale: 1/32” = 1’ scale: 1/32” = 1’

section a scale: 1/32” = 1’

section b scale: 1/32” = 1’

section c scale: 1/32” = 1’

Section C 12

axonometric diagram diagram axonometric axonometric diagram


perspective section

e

Section A

Perspective Section 13


axonometric diagram

gradient of temperatures throughout conditioned spaces.

design intervention within the turbine hall and extending onto the site.

the boiler frame and skin of the turbine hall were kept and integrated into the design intervention.

Axonometric Diagram: Existing vs Interventions + Temperature Gradients 14


Exterior Render: Entrance

Interior Render: Baths

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PLANE FOREST

Austin, TX Design V | Professor Mike McCall Spring 2021

Plane Forest is a communal residence for families in West Campus. Students or faculty at the university with children, parents, or spouses to care for and live with can enjoy a unique living experience where a familylike community may thrive. The center is inspired by Japanese and Korean courtyard centric architecture. Featuring an open-air, central courtyard the complex encourages outdoor study, play, and relaxation with proximity to nature. The residence acts as a mediator between the newly developed high rises and older, single story homes in West Campus beside the University of Texas at Austin.

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Site Plan 18


Transect Analysis: Traffic

Transect Analysis: Building Heights

Transect Analysis: Adjacent Usage 19


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Initial Concept Diagram


Northeast Axonometric

Southeast Axonometric

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Program Diagram

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Roof Plan


Second Floor Plan: Loft + Residential Units

First Floor Plan: Communal Spaces + Residential Units

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Site Perspective

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Courtyard Section A


Interior Section

Courtyard Section B

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East Elevation: Entrance

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West Elevation: Main Staircase


North Elevation: Residential Balconies

South Elevation: Clerestory Windows

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Exterior Render: from entrance, looking through sliding doors into the study room

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Interior Render: Living room


Interior Render: Living room

Interior Render: Upper breezeway

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AUSTONIAN GRID

Austin, TX Design III | Professor Aleksandra Jaeschke Collaboration with Eleanor Musier Fall 2020

The Austonian Grid is a community center in downtown Austin based on a grid logic and design strategies inspired by TALLER architects: Rocha and Carrillo. The center utilizes concepts of perforation and transparency in the wooden slat skin and features a variety of spaces that can be arranged to host public and private gatherings. The amount of privacy increases going towards the upper levels with small balcony outlooks, gardens, and study spaces. The larger spaces can be used to host community events such as farmers markets and concerts.

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Roof Plan

Third Floor Plan

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Ground Floor Plan


Northwest (Back) Elevation

Southwest Elevation without skin

Southwest Elevation: Facade

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Circulation Diagram Vertical circulation is facilitated through a series of modular, switchback staircases

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Modular Furniture The furniture designed for the project can be combined and rearranged, allowing the spaces to be transformed for a range of private to public gatherings.

Floor Panels The different styles of floor panels installed in the grid system notate the levels of privacy. The material options include glass, wood, and a combination of the two.

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EAST AUSTIN CULINARY CENTER Austin, TX

Design V Professor Jen Wong +Professor Andrew Fulcher Collaboration with Abigail Rader

Fall 2021

In a fast growing cityscape, young adults in Austin are squished into small apartments, lacking areas for hosting larger gatherings. This leisure center is an adaptive reuse project from two houses in downtown Austin that would be split and arranged for a new public program: a center for cooking, gathering, and enjoying food with friends. The center features a large communal kitchen and a variety of dining rooms for varying levels of privacy and types of gatherings. The site also incorporates public gardens for fruits and vegetables to encourage the users to engage in all aspects of the process of food preparation.

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Concept Collage The collage synthesizes programs for the leisure center as well as the cultural and historical significance of the site and original houses.

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Site Plan

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Ground Floor Plan: Bistro, Patio, and Gardens

Second Floor Plan: Kitchen and Dining

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Section A

Section B

Wall Sections: Existing vs New 44


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Before: East 6th Front Facade

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After: Preserved Front Facade with Surrounding Interventions


Before: Taylor Gaines Garage

After: Taylor Gaines Garage - Dining Hall

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ADDITIONAL WORKS 2017-2021

Artistic works of a variety of mediums and scales.

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justine do EDUCATION

justine.do@utexas.edu 925-997-1030

WORK EXPERIENCE

The University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture | 2019 - 2024 Bachelor of Architecture Minor in Art History

SKILLS Rhino

Hand Drafting

Grasshopper

Model Making

Enscape

Painting

Indesign

Woodwork

Illustrator

Sculpting

Photoshop

Graphic Design

INVOLVEMENT American Institute of Architecture Students President | May 2021 - Present Graphics Coordinator | May 2020 - May 2021 - Provide students with information and preparation for professional development. ACE Mentor Program Program Mentor June - July 2020 - Mentor High School students with an interest in architecture, and guided them in design projects.

UT RecSports Facility Supervisor | Aug 2021 - Present Facility Assistant | Jan 2021 - Aug 2021 - Maintain the facility and ensure the safety of informal recreation and events. - Field patron concerns and questions and verify and authorize entrants. - Coordinate staff activities and responsibilities. Air Force Research Laboratory Summer Intern - Research Assistant June - July 2020 - Assisted with investigations and literature reviews to drive initiatives. - Summarized researched materials in weekly progress reports. - Presented gathered information to the research team. CaMootz Landscaping July 2021 - Present - Implemented landscaping renovations according to residential client needs

REFERENCE Michael McCall Adjunct Professor University of Texas mjmccall@utexas.edu 415-990-3813

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