Chingchieh Kao Architecture Portfolio

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E R U

T C E

IT H C

KAO CH

LIO PORTFO

ING CHIE H

AR

TURE

ITEC

ARCH AND

SELECTED

WORKS

GN

DESI 2012 - 2017 Chingchieh Kao Portfolio


Content

4

CV

6

Statement of Motivation

Architecture

10 18 20 28 36 44 50 60

Campus Installation Art

200 Dream

Historical Exhibition of Camera Street

Memory and Legacy Tamsui Cultural Center

Rediscovery

Enjoy Libirary of Urban by Nature

Freedom for Green

Kuo Chin-Chih Sculpture Museum

Landscape of Carving

Niujiao Village Public Space Renewal

The Big Living Room

Guandu Plain Development and City Renewal

Urban by Nature

Taiwan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum


Interior

62

NTUST Mountain Club Office

Film

64

Learning From Architecture, Learning From Life

Photography

66

Modern Architecture Classics

70

Guandu Plain Exploration

72

Beauty of Taiwan Mountains

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CV

Chingchieh Kao

(Justin)

13F., No.460, Daye Rd., Taipei City 112, Taiwan (R.O.C.) Birth: 1994/03/07 Nationality: Taiwan (R.O.C.) +886(0)978392730 justin8337@gmail.com

Education 2012 - 2018

2015

National Taiwan University of Science and Technology • Scholarship: NTUST Certificate of Achievement • Research: Sansui Aesthetics of Modern Chinese Architecture, selected works of College Student Participation in Research Projects for Ministry of Science and Technology • Thesis design: Selected works of honorary presentation in 2016 NTUST Architecture Thesis Design Exhibition • Academic project: Selected works of NTUST 9th Campus Installation Art Competition Harbin Institute of Technology (International Exchange Program) • Participated in 2015 China Revit Cup Competition

Work Experience 2013

2016 - 2017

2017 - present

Chang H-T Architects • AutoCAD, Photoshop drawing • Measuring Bio-architecture Formosana • Organized green building strategies • Space planing and Facade design • AutoCAD, Sketchup, Revit, Photoshop drawing, Atlantics rendering • Documents delivering 4 CUS Creative • Design thinking • Site planing • AutoCAD, Sketchup, Photoshop drawing

Language Chinese English

native speaker upper-intermediate (TOEFL IBT 92)


Activities 2013 - 2016 2016 - 2017 2016 2016 2016 2014 2015 2016 2012 - 2018

Teaching Assistant of NTUST Hiking and Mountaineering Course President of NTUST Mountaineering Club Volunteer team of NTUST International Volunteers Club, summer volunteer for Miaoli Cheng Chung Elementary School Exhibition - Taiwan Mountain Photography Group Exhibition Lecture - Beauty of Taiwan Mountains, lecturer in Taichung Wensun College, New Taipei Municipal Xin-Xing Elementary School Travel - Modern Architecture Classics Voyage in Europe Travel - Shansui Exploration in China Travel - Walking Around Taiwan Taiwan High Mountains Hiking

Skills Personal Skills

Computer Skills

Art

Design Mountaineering

Design Thinking Organization Presentation Communication

●●●●●●●●○○ ●●●●●●●●●○ ●●●●●●●○○○ ●●●●●●●●○○

AutoCAD Sketchup Revit Atlantics Photoshop Illustrator InDesign

●●●●●●●○○○ ●●●●●●●●●○ ●●●●●●○○○○ ●●●●●●●●●○ ●●●●●●●●○○ ●●●●●●●○○○ ●●●●●●●●●○

Architecture Photography, Landscape Photography, Event Photography, Film, Sketch, Watercolor, Comic Graphic Design, Web Design, Business Card Design Mountain Leadership, Guiding, Climbing, Winter Skills, Wilderness Survival, First Aid, Project Adventure(PA)

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Statement of Motivation Sustainability is undoubtedly the most important issue in recent years since we have already faced lots of problems such as pollution, resource depletion, overdevelopment. To solve these problems, architecture becomes one of the crucial issues we must conscientiously handle. Since construction is always followed by destruction, architecture in regard to construction on the lands or reconstructing the buildings is definitely responsible for the environment. Although buildings with advanced clean technology may alleviate the negative effects to the environment, the attitudes toward architecture are much more essential. We can not avoid the condition that architecture affecting the environment no matter how positive or negative; however, with the concept of sustainability, we still have many possibilities to make our future become better. This optimistic thinking deeply influences me, originally shaped by my experience, embracing the nature. I love nature, not only I profoundly appreciate the beauty of nature, it is also influenced by my father, a traditional Chinese landscape painter. When I was a child, I usually went traveling and hiking with my father to draw from the beauty of my country, Taiwan, a beautiful island with ample spectacular high mountains. Accordingly, I had lots of experience of my life with nature and developing a wide range of interests such as drawing, photography, natural observation, mountain hiking. Since there are many chances to commune with nature, I realize the importance to conserve our environment, especially our distinctive natural property. Hence, sustainability becomes the most important issue I concern, and through taking part in the green building design competition in my high school, I figure out architecture, as one of the most influential art forms I attracted by, has a great impact on this issue. Eventually, with full understanding, architecture becomes my greatest ambition in whole life. During my undergraduate study at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (NTUST), I learned various ways to generate various concepts of architectural design by finding inspiration through site analysis, while I wanted to develop my design approach significantly. Therefore, apart from schoolwork, I held a study group with my friend named as NTUST Delirious Architecture Reading Club. We read lots of books, including Toward an Architecture by Le Corbusier, Defeated Architecture by Kengo Kuma, Why Architecture Matters by Paul Goldberger, to absorb a wide variety of thinkings from the global architectural trends and history. Through this process, by discussing the diverse architectural issue, I attempted to create my own perspective toward architecture, with the theme of natural and social environments, experimenting many different ways on every academic project. In my view, design is a method to solve problems, by giving them form and function. Architectural design particularly has the power to deal with a wide range of multiple values, even they are hardly compatible or contradictory. My academic projects, as an evolution, with the thinking to maintain the good relationship between building and environment. I started from pursuing the aesthetics of nature, manipulating organic shapes with natural orders, to gradually put more emphasis on diverse elements such as natural environment, history, social issue from every site, by integrating them into specific forms followed by previous practice. In the design


processes, with critical and philosophical thinking, I am always open-minded to any possibility and interested in challenging the prevalent cognition. Consequently, through thesis design, I asked a debatable question: could construction and conservation coexist together? Inspired by the cradle-to-cradle concept, by intellectually utilizing any resource to maximize the benefits of every aspect, the purpose of my thesis design is to respond to the issue that construction and conservation are inevitably contradictory. I choose Guandu Plain as the site, the largest green area consisted of farmland and wetland in Taipei, planned to develop as a new town by the government. As a design strategy, on the one hand, I substantially increase the natural environment on the new development as much as possible; on the other hand, I transfer some of the urban renewal regions of the old town into the natural areas and move floor areas of these regions into the new development. Therefore, with this process, besides the new development having more natural benefits rather than the original farmland, the old town has more green spaces to enhance the quality of living environment, creating the circumstance that development and nature interpenetrate each other within their boundary. For proactive thinking, my thesis design is selected as one of the honorary presentation in 2016 NTUST Architecture Thesis Design Exhibition. Although the final consequence of my thesis design does not completely reflect what I think, this experience clearly shapes my thinking for the future and lets me realize I need more professional training and practical practice. Admittedly, I was able to develop my own architectural thinking and approach due to lots of training from school and practices; however, since I was insufficient for practical skills, I leaped at the chance to the internship. Besides learning some basic skills for drawing graphics and measuring at Chang H-T Architects, at Bio-architecture Formosana, an architectural firm expert in green building design, I had plenty of beneficial experiences such as organizing the strategy of green building, designing facade, and competition. By doing these works, I understand how the architecture firm operates, and the most beneficial experience is the discussion of the design process, I realize how to put design concept into real situations. Recently, I work for 4CUS Creative, learning how to be a professional designer and approaching more practical works. For extracurricular activity, I joined International Volunteers Club, Pop Dance Club, Tennis Club, and Mountaineering Club in my college. For these experiences, especially as a president of Mountaineering Club, extensively improving my social skills such as effective communication and teamwork. Project Adventure course also influenced me a lot, by training as a professional mountain guide, I learned how to become a good leadership, from attentively listened to every opinion from teammates, to effectively organized the opinions, and to efficiently implement. In general, I think these skills not only to make my life be more meaningful but also to be the essential techniques for becoming an excellent architect. “As an architectural student, it is necessary to expand your horizonâ€? said by Taiwan architect Frank M. H. Wu, also an emeritus professor in my school, advising us aside from architecture, by absorbing diverse knowledge from life experience could advance design ability. After all, architecture is the art of life, interpreted as a container to satisfy human life and make it better. If we have abundant experiences from life, we will have fruitful inspirations to design. Therefore, for enriching life experience, I think traveling is an extraordinary way.

During my study, I planed three journeys. To start with, when I was sophomore, I traveled

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to Europe with three classmates on summer vacation. We spent forty days in eight countries, visited several cities and buildings, such as masterpieces designed by Le Corbusier, Mies Van Der Rohe, Carlo Scarpa, Antoni Gaudi, OMA, Frank Gehry. Furthermore, we visited the 2014 Biennale di Architettura di Venezia Fundamentals curated by Rem Koolhaas and the International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam Urban by Nature. The former with systematic information of architectural evolution fully let me learn the past of fundamental architecture. The later with insightful thinking let me learn the possible future of architecture, related to the sustainable issue what I concern. Secondly, in the second semester of junior year, I went to China as an exchange student, besides learning disparate attitudes toward design thinking and techniques, I studied my research project, as a topic of Sansui (Chinese landscape) Aesthetics of Modern Chinese Architecture, directed by professor Chih-Ming Shih, chairman of NTUST Department of Architecture. Similarly, after exchange program, I spent forty days traveling around the whole mainland China. Through visiting many Chinese famous landscapes and classical Chinese gardens, not only helps me to get some ideas about my research project but also influences my thinking a lot by absorbing the spirit of the thought how eastern traditional cultures interact with nature environment. Lastly, after my thesis design, for another forty days, I traveled around Taiwan island with my friend by only walking. It is a journey I carried a big backpack, and most of the nights we slept in a tent at elementary schools. Through my feet, I deeply experienced the life of my country, seeing many beautiful sceneries and gathering lots of impressive stories from different local cultures. These three journeys, from Europe to China, and finally to my hometown, Taiwan, truly expand my horizons and give me inspirations. Additionally, by comparison to other countries, I put more emphasis on my country for its precious values. I think as a responsible architect, it is necessary to show concern for self-culture and find the specialty from it, even making it new and taking to the world, such as Severe Fehn, RCR, Peter Zumthor did. Nevertheless, Taiwan is short of significant architectural reasoning, which many Taiwanese architects are still exploring. In my view, sustainability can be a broad definition. Besides environmental conservation, the way to inherit and develop existing characteristics is also important. For one thing, Taiwan has marvelous natural property including gorgeous landscapes, distinctive ecology, and endemic species, while not many people really attach importance to them. For another thing, Taiwan is filled with plenty of diverse cultural buildings, including aboriginal, traditional Chinese, and Japanese style, while most of them are facing the crisis such as replaced by the commercial development. Therefore, as far as I’m concerned, I also want to establish the distinguished thinking toward them, and try to create a chance to give them a new life. With ample experiences from my college, I entirely realize what I need. For my academic design, with the ability to generate intellectual thinking than precisely putting into practical practice, I need more professional training. Besides designing the space and shape, I want to learn delicately applying structures, materials, and details to the building. For work experience and extracurricular activities, I am good at social skills with effective communication, organization, and leadership, willing to have the more challenging issue in the future. For traveling and hiking, I want to show concern about my hometown, interested in responding to its complex environment by digging into the advanced approach.


In conclusion, with these three things I mention, to seize the opportunity, I’m eagerly looking forward your programs, which attracts me the most is architectural design involved in art, anthropology, society, ecology, and practical approach with hands-on, on-the-ground engagements. Therefore, if I were admitted, in the future, I hope I could fulfill what I concern and employ this extraordinary experience to contribute toward my country. Now, with high enthusiasm for architecture and well-prepared attitude, I am waiting to engage in the next great step.

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Architecture

Campus Installation Art

200 Dream subject year site type work

academic project fall 2012 - spring 2013 Taipei, Taiwan Installation team collaboration

Chingchieh Kao: concept, site analysis, 3D model construction Wang Ihsiang: form design, site analysis, construction Yang Shuyun: site analysis, mode, construction Chen Wenju: site analysis, mode, construction Lu Techen, Liao Ichieh, Yang Chihhung, Yang Chunkai, Yang Chihpo assist to construct

Selected works of NTUST 9th Campus Installation Art Competition . 200 dream as a theme from Taiwanese baker Wu Pao-Chun's quote "100 dream comes from 200 preparation". We apply this thinking to encourage us to fulfill our dream by design the space which is optimistic, delightful, colorful.

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/200 分的夢

Team logo


Original concept sketch

Site Observation 10 11


Evolution from square to triangle, the symbol as 100 area become 200 area

3D Model to simulate connected frames

4 side elevation


12 13



14 15


Architecture

Historical Exhibition of Camera Street

Memory and Legacy subject year site type work

academic project spring 2013 Taipei, Taiwan history individual

This is a pavilion as a theme of Camera Street (Hankou street) by organizing the space to tell the history of it.

Entrance

Spaces for experience the historical evolution of Camera Street


random view as the symbol of exploring new direction

The old photo of Camera Street opposite to the current view of it

Camera Evolution vantages of market

e symbolize losing ad

Deconstructive spac

Before & After

Prosperous Early Period Dark room without light

Recession period

AA' SECTION

A

current view

Before & After

Prosperous Early Period

Camera Evolution

FIRST FLOOR

SECOND FLOOR A' experience circulation

16 17


Architecture

Tamsui Cultural Center

Rediscovery subject year site type work

academic project spring 2014 Taipei, Taiwan tourist center/ exhibition individual

Tamsui Cultural Center is designed as an exhibition for tourist to get information by "rediscovering" the traditional Tamsui culture and history.

space

environment context of terrain small scale village

rediscovery

time

history development war


big scale

destroy environment

vs

small scale

vs harmony with environment

tourism development

vs

traditional development

historical buildings

vs

historical events

ferry

vs

battle ships

missionary

vs

persecution

construction

vs

war destruction

historical figures

vs

folk hero

IMPRESSION VS REDISCOVERY

18 19


exhibition area covered history

exhibit entrance meeting room

staff entrance

exhibition area

office

information center

SITE PLAN / FIRST FLOOR PLAN

N


bright future

bombard abyss Qing dynasty period

castle abyss

colonial period prehistory

equipment room

media room

organic order

cultural elements

up & down history

historical pain

BASEMENT FLOOR PLAN

20 21


gift shop information center

office

media room

meeting room

prehistory

castle abyss

bombard abyss bright future

FRONT SIDE ELEVATION

RIGHT SIDE ELEVATION


restaurant

exhibition

exhibition

toilet

toilet

colonial period Qing dynasty period

BACK SIDE ELEVATION

LEFT SIDE ELEVATION

22 23



DEEP INTO THE GROUND 1884, Tamsui was attacked by France. During the war, since French Army bombarded Tamsui for a long time, Tamsui suffered heavy casualties. On the underground, I create a space as scar, with one narrow corridor and several fractured light from the top, to let visitors experience the horror of the war.

24 25


Architecture

Enjoy Libirary of Urban by Nature

Freedom for Green subject year site type work

academic project fall 2014 Taipei, Taiwan library individual

The green library responds to the natural and cultural environment.

Dig the courtyard from top to underground to create the closed space for nature

Optimise. Natural organic shapes against the declining history of Guling street

Toward Chung Ching S. Rd the facade was pulled back from two edges to decrease the offense by the cusp

shape a curve to make facade connect to National 228 Memorial Museum

Promenade of slope to experience the courtyard of nature

Extend the hill from National 228 Memorial Museum

Create the circulation connecting to Jianguo High School and Guling street

Welcoming curve toward entrance


CONCEPT & ISSUE Since the site surroundings is the context that urban filled with nature, especially the largest green area, Taipei Botanical Garden, I try to create the GREEN space in this library. In addition, I choose Taipei Botanical Garden and Guling street as nature and cultural element to apply their characteristics. GREEN ORGANIC ISOLATED

COORRESPOND DECLINING RESTRICTED COMPELLED

COUNTER

SITE ANALYSIS & ENVIRONMENT ANALYSIS Chu

Taipei Botanical Garden

ng C

228 museum view

hing

way to main entrance Gu

S. R d

CTION

CONNE

et

ISTORY

tre

site

MAKE H

gS

Jianguo High School

small hill view

way to link two sides

lin

2 2 8 Museum

sidewalk trees view

students cars

block the sound from Chung Ching S. Rd

According to temperature analysis, the facade of the curves According to wind analysis, most of the wind comes from the north, and flow out caved in building mass and the courtyard is cooler than the from the west and south side. Acccodingly, I put the windows on the south side, others. It's appropriate to put reading area around them. west side, and east side to let the wind cross over buildings to take off the heat. 228 Museum

hing

ng C

St.

Chu

zhou Quan

S. R d

Jianguo High School

N

SITE PLAN

26 27


MAIN READING ROOM

DN

UP

UP

DN

THIRD FLOOR PLAN

UP

DN

MAIN READING ROOM

UP

SECOND FLOOR PLAN

DN

AUDITORIUM


DN

READING PLAZA UP

ENTRANCE HALL UP

DN

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

MAGAZINE READING AREA UP

EXTERIOR READING AREA

COURTYARD

CONFERENCE ADMINISTRATION

UP

DN

EQUIPMENT ROOM

BASEMENT FLOOR PLAN 28 29


MAIN READING ROOM

ENTRANCE HALL

EQUIPMENT ROOM

ARCHIVE READING ROOM

BOOKS OUT/TREES IN

CLOSE TO OPEN

CENTER OF NATURE

NATURE PROMENADE

EXTERIOR READING AREA

FREE TO FLOW

NATURE FEEDBACK

ORGANIC

CHAIR

STRUCTURE

DESK

DAYLIGHTING

SHELVES

INTERACT WITH 228 MUSEUM

INTERACT WITH SMALL HILL OF 228 MUSEUM

INSTANT POWER

CONNECT TO NATURE


30 31


EAST SIDE ELEVATION

SOUTH SIDE ELEVATION A

A'

AA' SECTION


WEST SIDE ELEVATION

NORTH SIDE ELEVATION

B

B'

BB' SECTION 32 33


Architecture

Kuo Chin-Chih Sculpture Museum

Landscape of Carving subject year site type work

academic project fall 2014 Taipei, Taiwan art museum individual Kuo Chin-Chih design inspiration

The sculpture museum is to display the works of Taiwanese artist, Kuo Chin-Chih. The museum contains two parts: temporary exhibition and main exhibition. The main exhibition displays the works of Kuo Chin-Chih from the early period to present. FOR OUTSIDE-IN: The site is surrounded by nature, especially the largest green area, Taipei Botanical Garden. I try to create a "GREEN" space in the city. FOR INSIDE-OUT: Combination of multiple units and shapes, in response to Kuo Ching-Chih's successful works, stone and stainless series.


N

+

=

mulitiple units and shapes

plaza extension promenade extension education area

public area

structure of L stainless steel

circulation condition natural area public area extension

228 um Muse

Quan zhou St.

Jianguo High School

hing gC

n Chu d S. R

SITE PLAN

34 35


M A I N EXHIBIT OUTDOOR

There are four parts of main exhibition, based on the process of Kuo Chin-Chih's works. These four parts are "Portrait Expression", "Space of Finding Nature", "Exploration of Abstract Form" and "Mature Series - Stone and Stainless Steel"

PORTRAIT EXPRESSION

4

10

9

5

17

EXPLORATION OF ABSTRACT FORM

11

6

12

3 7

2

8

15

N

BASEMENT FLOOR PLAN red granite

guanyin stone white marble black granite

bronze

texture of box (related to sculpture)

6

17

18

17

N

SECOND FLOOR PLAN

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

ENTRANCE GREEN PROMENADE INFORMATION CLOAKROOM FILM MAIN EXHIBITION TEMPORARY EXHIBITION RESTAURANT STORE EDUCATION WORKSHOP EQUIPMENT ROOM PARKING AUDITORIUM SERVICE SCULPTURE PARK REFLECTION PROMENADE ADMINISTRATION STORAGE


MATURE SERIES - STONE AND STAINLESS STEEL

A'

17 6

N

A

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

5

5

5

1

6

4

3

5

8

AA' SECTION 1 2 3 4 5

ENTRANCE GREEN PROMENADE INFORMATION CLOAKROOM MAIN EXHIBITION

6 7 8 9 10

TEMPORARY EXHIBITION EDUCATION WORKSHOP PARKING SCULPTURE PARK REFLECTION PROMENADE

36 37


L stainless steel structure

office conference

auditorium

reflection promenade curve center

service restroom for the disabled storage cloakroom temporary exhibition film main exhibition entrance information restaurant green promenade

store education workshop equipment room exit of main exhibition parking

sculpture park big stairs


Night View

Portrait Expression

Space of Finding Nature

Exploration of Abstract Form

Curve Center

End of Curve Center

Re f l e ction Promenade

Sculpture Park

38 39


Architecture

Niujiao Village Public Space Renewal

The Big Living Room subject academic project (exhange program) spring 2015 year Matsu, Taiwan site public space / restaurant / hostel / exhibition type team collaboration work Chingchieh Kao: concept, form design, 3D model Feng Yifeng: site analysis, diagram Hong Mingjuin: diagram, hostel planning, render

Redefine the function by deeply observating the life of Matsu to renew Niujiao Village. 1

Concept

To reproduce local cultural fearures

Local Life ďź‹ Tourism

→ Become part of it


2

Site Location

Fuxing Vil., Nangan Township, Lienchiang County

Past The biggest town, center of politics, economics and population. Now Decline, as a retirement village without distinct feature n iwa g pin

ship

a oT

te t

rou

airl

ine

fro

mT aiw an

3

spring

summer

fall

winter

Site Issue

1. Landscape Changes

Modern style buildings inserted into the village

2. Politics and Economics

Government in village move to another village.

3. Population and Industry

tourist circulation

site

1950 Matsu became the front line of Chinese Civil War, army compulsorily reform the village, the refugees also affected the market, the first time emigration. 1970 Taiwan new economical policy made a lot of employment opportunities, second time emigration. 1980 dominant military power retreated from Matsu, the market relying on milirary declined, the third time emigration. 1990 still have a few people emigrated.

population change

Militar y and political power changed the village, leading to the population emigration, governemnt location change.

Po p u l a t i o n d e c r e a s e d f o r e m i g r a t i o n , population aging, traditional culture face the crsis for inherit. Niujiao village becomes a retirement village without distinct featureďźŒNow is doing industry transformation through tourism. 40 41


4

Site Analysis

5

Design Thinking

Negative Space

1. Organic roads 2. Small trails for villagers 3. Without specific public space

1. Create effective public space 2. Link with the existing circulations

Positive Space

Traditional Settlement Development

Create space along the slope to respond to the existing village

Buildings follow the order of the traditional settlement development, to create the space by piling the crossing along the terrain, to link with the existing circulations, and to make these circulations aggregate together.

1. Buildings on the slope 2. Buildings along the contour line. 3. High density of the buildings near the coastline

Since settlement developed from bay to the hill without main road and axis, having many crossing trails and random orientation.

Circulation

Only one main road, 10 meters wide, entering the village by small trails

Through aggregation to reproduce the spirit of traditional culture

Create the new circulations to link with the main road, levee, trails

Attraction

Most of the attractions are near by the main road

To increase the development of the site by linking to the attraction with the new circulations

Green Area

Contrary to the outskirts of the village, green areas scatter in the vullage

Remain several green areas within the new building.

Order

Concept Form

traditional techniques for wall consisted of stones and woods Skin

Strcture

Platform for Interaction

Restaurant for chatting and enjoying fresh seafood is the way local people interact together.

Wind

Culture Studio

The occasional monsoons strongly affects the village

Work Exchange Block the cold wind by buildings

Function

Combin with the surrounding hostels to let volunteers experience local life.

Preserve local culture and inherit traditional culture by learning from practical experience.

Roof


Hostel Units

7

6

+ + + 10 11 3 9

5 5

5M FLOOR PLAN

3

4

N

3

5 8

6

N

17M FLOOR PLAN

7

2

1 2

1. the big living room 2. kitchen 3. bedroom of hostel 4. living room of hostel 5. tea area 6. wharf 7. fishing area 8. brewery 9. cultural and creative studio 10. fisheries exhibition 11. cultural corridor 12. toilet

3

11 10 10

42 43


plan 平面

section 剖面

A

虛空間界定 實空間界定 negative space positive space

戶外空間界定 outdoor space

Through several walls to make spaces aggregate together like roots.

A' N

SITE PLAN

3 granite walls 1 wood wall

4 granite walls

2 3

3 4

2 7

1. the big living room 2. bedroom of hostel 3. living room of hostel 4. tea area

5. wharf 6. fishing area 7. brewery 8. cultural corridor

8 1

6 5

AA' SECTION


The Big Living Room for Eating / Chatting / Fishing

T h e B i g L i v i n g R o o m To w a r d t h e S e a

Cultural Circulation

Cultural Exhibition - Back to the Sea

Tr a d i t i o n a l To w n R e b o r n

44 45


Architecture

Guandu Plain Development and City Renewal

URBAN BY NATURE subject year site type work

academic project (thesis design) fall 2015 - spring 2016 Taipei, Taiwan city planning / apartment individual

Through construction and conservation to make Guandu Plain have more green.

Honorary presentation in 2016 NTUST Architecture Thesis Design Exhibition.


01

ISSUE Environmental Problems Caused by Cities As humans development, humans exploit the natural resources for survival, causing the environmental changes. Recently, with advanced technology and medical improvement, fast population growth make cities substantially expand, which makes lots of environmental problems such as global warming, traffic congestion, air pollution, and resources depletion.

EVO LUTI O N & REV O L U T I O N O F H U M A N E N V I R O N M E N T

EVO LUTI O N & REV O L U T I O N O F C I T Y E N V I R O N M E N T

Problems of City

Resource Overuse

Pollution

Overdevelopment

Inappropriate City Development For inappropriate urban planning, the city has caused several problems such as ecological damage, controversial land distribution, and bad quality of the living environment. To solve these problems, many countries have put emphasis on the natural environment in the city, while the cities are still considered as merely the living environment for human in Taiwan, which lands are only used for building and road construction. Therefore, city development conflicts with nature conservation.

V.S.

EUROPE

TAIWAN

46 47


02

SITE Location Guandu Plain, the largest green land consisted of farmland and wetland in Taipei, facing the confliction between development and nature.

Guandu Plain 500 Ha

Tams

ui Riv er

Guandu Plain Mountains Park

History

1959

Now

Old Houses

Plain

New Apartments

03

CONCEPT NATURE

URBAN

BOUNDARY

MIX

Future ï¼&#x;


04

URBAN Development + Destroy green buildings

Strategy PAST

NATURE

URBAN

NATURE

URBAN

NOW

plain for development house for renew

compensate

more green benefit

URBAN = NATURE

URBAN < NATURE

FUTURE

URBAN > NATURE

SELECTED REGION

住宅 交通

保存 農業

48 49


Site Planning

MORE GREEN? New Floor Area:44000m² Urban Renewal Area:49000m² Green Area of Urban Renewal:34000m²

Ditch Increase Ecoclogical Benefis

Paddy Field

Water Multiple Shades Vertical Green Ecological Belt

Forest

Edible Landscaping

N 50M

Renewal Region for Transfer

Residential Tower

Renewal Region

Ecological Pond

Building Capacity Transfer Now

Green Recovery

Floor Area Transfer

Mass Operation

TOWER BRIDGE

Tower

+

block

road

green corridor

GREEN PODIUM

Podium

green tower

city out

green in plain

green area


05

ARCHITECTURE A'

Pond

Green Bridge

Guandu Plain Courtyard

A

B'

N

SITE PLAN

N

5

4

6

9

UP DN

UP

10 8

DN

7

2 1 3

N

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

1. one-bedroom 2. semi-outdoor corridor 3. semi-outdoor terrace 4. multi function hall 5. bicycle parking

6. guardroom 7. retail 8. elevator 9. emergency staircase 10. exhaust room

50 51


NATURE

Nature

N

Form

Function

Nature defines space

PEOPLE

BUILDING

NATURE vs BUILDING

Form

space material color light

DN

12TH FLOOR PLAN

Nature

Function

program structure facilities

UP DN

UP

9 Frank Lloyd Wright: Form and function are one.

10 8

STRCTURE

AA' SECTION

7

truss load-bearing wall slab-colume System 2

1. one-bedroom 2. two-bedroom 3. three-bedroom 4. semi-outdoor corridor 5. semi-outdoor terrace 6. plant platform 7. pond 8. elevator 9. emergency staircase 10. exhaust room

tower

podium

4

podium no enough light

1

without light

enough light but too separeate

too separate

5 6 3 sunlight

green

green

sunlight

TWIST FOR ORGANIC & MORE VIEW

sunlight

organic

MATERIAL wood handrail green cement translucent glass glass exposed concrete steel column

RIGHT ELEVATION


STRCTURE truss load-bearing wall slab-colume system

1. dwelling unit 2. semi-outdoor corridor 3. outdoor track 4. bridge 5. plant platform 6. multi function hall 7. courtyard 8. retail

4 3 3

2

1

5

8

7

6

light daylighting condition

green connection

green connection

view view

sunlight

green

sunlight sunlight

ventilate ventilation

organic organic

daylighting daylighting

green green

green connection

green green

daylighting daylighting

ventilate ventilation

STRUCTURE CONDITIONS

green

daylighting

ventilate

twis to tilt

load-bearing wall shirnk floors

truss

extend podium

PEOPLE vs BUILDING

interaction

NATURE vs PEOPLE static living

dynamic moving

BACK ELEVATION

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54 55


Architecture

Taiwan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum subject year site type work

professional project (intership of Bio-architecture Formosana) 2016 Taoyuan, Taiwan museum / hotel individual: facade design, render


hotel terrace

entrance

food court dining area

56 57


Interior

NTUST Mountain Club Office subject year site type work

personal project 2016 Taipei, Taiwan interior team collaboration (Chingchieh Kao, Wenshan Lin)

BEFORE


AFTER

58 59


Film

Learning From Architecture Learning From Life subject year site type work

film of 2016 NTUST Architecture Thesis Design Exhibition 2016 Taiwan short film team collaboration (2.8 Studio)

director / editor Chingchieh Kao camera operator Chingchieh Kao, Lu Techen, Carl Lee, Feng Yifeng, Jiang Qifeng This is a film to portrait architectural life, during four years learning in college, to show what we think about architecture, coming from not only the life experience but also the concern to our environment. Although this process is not smooth, it is necessary for us to have confidence so as to face the challenge of the future. Link: https://vimeo.com/170294577


Sketching

Life

Studio

Past and Future

Presentation

Learning from History

Up to the Hill

Experiencing Architecture

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Photography

Modern Architecture Classics subject year site type work

personal work 2014 Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal architecture photography individual


Notre Dame du Haut

C o u v e nt Sa in t e -Ma r ie d e L a To u r e t t e

Castelvecchio Museum

Paula Rego Museum

Negozio Olivetti

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao

Sagrada Familia

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CaixaForum Madrid

Jewish Museum Berlin

Messe Basel

Reichstag

MAXXI Museum


Olympiastadion

B e r l in P hil ha r mo nic

Centre Georges Pompidou

Casa da MĂşsica

Stuttgart City Library

Shell-Haus

Ruhr Museum

Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe

64 65


Photography

Guandu Plain Exploration subject year site type work director

academic project 2014 Taiwan photo-essay individual Shen Chao-Liang, Taiwan professional photographer

Guandu Plain, the largest green land consisted of farmland and wetland in Taipei. This photo series shows the beauty of the plain with the first-person perspective to portrait charms of the natural and cultural environment.


66 67


Photography

Beauty of Taiwan Mountains subject year site type work website

personal work 2013 - 2017 Taiwan landscape photography individual http://justin8337.wixsite.com/taiwanmountains


Mt. Jade

Mt . Syl v ia o f X u e jia n Tr a il

Sunrise of Qilai Mountain South Peak

Sunset view from 369 Hut

Kaheer Mountain

Night of Beidawu Mountain with Pingtung County

Qilai South Peak

Humble to Nature

68 69


Dabajian Mountain

C hia ming L a k e

Shoucheng Mountain and Cingjing Farm

Nanhu Mountains

Nanhu Cirque

Nightfall of Holy Ridge

Up to Mt. Sylvia

Jiayang Mountain


Photo authorization for movie Love Wall (2018), collaborated by French and Taiwanese film production companies.

Photo authorization for interior design of Loft, the hostel located in Kuching, Malaysia.

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Photo authorization and web design for Taiwan Alpine Mountaineering School web (http://www.alpine-club.com.tw/)


Thank you for your consideration. +886(0)978392730 justin8337@gmail.com

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