Portfolio YANG, Kaiwen
Selected Work from 2019-2022 Master of Architecture I, UCLA
About Me Education University of California, Los Angeles | Sept. 2019 - June 2022 Master of Architecture (M. Arch l) | NAAB-Accredited Program
Tongji University, Shanghai, China | Sept. 2015 - July 2019 Bachelor of Landscape Architecture | CAUP Experimental Program
Professional Experience Architectural Design Intern HKS, Los Angeles| Jan.2022- Present
○ UCSD Theatre District Living and Learning Neighborhood| Model Making
Architectural Design Intern SmithGroup, San Francisco (Healthcare Studio)| June 2021 - August 2021 ○ UC Davis Health California Tower | Schematic Design, Patient Room Research ○ John Muir Health Outpatient Specialty Center| Construction Documentation ○ Sutter/Stanford JV Oakland Cancer Center| Concept Design, Facade Research
Marketing & Design Intern Creative Housing Associates, Los Angeles | June 2020 - Sept. 2020
○ Proposed the marketing document to show concepts and development trend ○ Assisted in design and document production for deliverables of TOD projects ○ Research on sites along metro lines to explore potential development focus
Architectural Intern B+H Architects, Shanghai | July 2019 - August 2019
○ Huawei Qingpu Research Center | Concept design, 3D modelling ○ Renovation Design for Xincang Road Alley | Presentation Document Deliverables ○ Sijiazhuang Botanical Garden Resort | Technical drawings, graphic design
Urban Design Intern SOM, Shanghai | Feb. 2019 - May 2019
○ Jinan Balcony Urban Design | 3D modeling, digital presentation ○ Xiong'an District Urban | 3D modeling, technical drawings, graphic design
Interior Architectural Intern AECOM, Shanghai| August 2017-Sept. 2017 ○ No.1111 Yuanshen Road | Concept studies, 3D modeling ○ Pudong renovation project of the APPLE Inc. | Technical drawings
Content
01 Landscape Hill
03
Jabbar Cultural Arts Center
02 Bubble Connector
08
LADWP Water Learning Center
03 Inter[Block]
12
Affordable Housing Community
OUR MISSION 04 Y Shape Figure
Gym & Parking Structure
TOWNBUILDERS CHA is a townbuilding company. We challenge the status-quo. We are socially-conscious and sustainably-minded.
15
Conventional wisdom is not accepted, as our present-day issues are the by-products of commonly held beliefs. Our ethos grows out of a commitment to improving the quality of life of residents and patrons of the communities we build in. We work to add value for future generations and invest in people and place resiliency with positive social & economic outcomes as our benchmarks for success. CHA’S projects articulate the pressing need for a massive shift away from real estate business as usual. Our solutions unify the enactment of real-world results with attractive, profit-minded vehicles for investment.
05 - 10 Professional Work
20
Architectural Practice
DISTRICTS to Live, Create and Commune
CREATE A Sense of Place
RESPECT Local Communities 7
02
1
Landscape Hill Jabbar Cultural Arts Center Academic Individual Work Location: UCLA Broad Art Center 403 Advanced Topic Studio October - December, 2021
The site is a natural hill facing the crowded Strathmore Avenue with the Tom Bradly center as the background. Activities like gathering, running on the hill could be witnessed occasionally but lots of people just passes by. In order to create a landscape park and cultural center for the campus as well as for the neighborhood nearby, the design embeds the whole building into the ground with the skylight on the hill as a trigger to create a folly garden.Through a direct underground arcade with programs along the way, a flexible wandering path with follies scattering around and a courtyard connecting the hill and the underground cultural center, the design's goal is to create a unique light and natural experience. .
Site
Design Prototype
Topography +7.200
+0.000
15' +0.000
+1.500
+3.700
+5.500
+7.200
Form Strategy
Ramp & Program
Light Well on Hill
Flexible Circulation 03
Site Plan
N
0
III
II
I
15'
30'
6
N
60'
I| Front Street View
II| Park Path
III| Lightwell Garden 04
Plan 15’
15’
25’
1. Lobby 2. Multi- Purpose Hall 3. Office 4. Library 5. Restroom 6. Chair Storage 7. Equipment Storage 8. Archive 9. Efficiency Kitchen 10. Staff toilets 11. Printing / storage 12. Mechanical
15’
25’ +9.100
+7.200
1
+7.200
20’
10 7
6
5
+5.500
+5.500
10
3
5
11
+5.500
9 +3.700
21’
+5.500
A +3.700
21’
+3.700
2
+3.700 B
+3.700
4 C
21’
+3.700
20’
8
12
1 +1.500
+1.500
1
+1.500
N
+0.000
0
8’
16’
32’
Interior Render A
Interior Render B
Interior Render C
05
Courtyard When wandering on the hill, people could accidently enter this courtyard and find there is another world beneath it. They could start their journey form the courtyard and surrounding programs.
Section B-B
B
A
A
B
Arcade The arcade directly connects the campus facilities and residential neighborhood through a ADA ramp. With glass along the way, people could still enjoy the programs while quickly passing though it.
Section A-A
06
2
Bubble Connector LADWP Water Learning Center Academic Individual Work Location: Los Angeles Headworks Reservoir 414 Major Building Design March - June, 2021 From the research of reservoir types, dam structures and other related facilities like intake tower, water tower and fish passengers, it is shown that they all function as a connective tissue to manipulate the water activities and the whole eco system. Then the interest of this project lies in how the architecture can be situated as a connective infrastructure on the way the river enters the reservoir and how each program could relate to each other through the wall thickness, circulation, and function organization.
Reservoir Type
A. Shallow, “U” shaped
Dam
Reservoir Dam Type B. Deep, “V” shaped
I. On Stream
Water Tower
Weir
Fish Passage
Division Channel
C. Deep, regular
Embark D. Shallow, regular Reservoir Shape Profile
ll. Off Stream
Intake Tower
Hydroelectric Dam
07
Ground Floor Plan
1
Relationship with Water
(a) Cafe
(b) Lab
(c) Workshop i
(d) Lobby
(e) Black Box Auditorium
(f ) Workshop ii
1. Cafe 2. Office 3. Black Box Adutioet 4. Gift Shop 5. Exhibition Hall 6. Lab
7. Workshop I 8. Workshop II 9. Office 10. Operation Center 11. Lobby 12. Restroom
Water Flow
Section
Master Plan
Function Organization N
0
10’
20’
40’
Figure Ground
(d) Office
(h) Exhibtion Hall 08
A| Lab + Office
C| Exhibition Hall + Gift Shop
E|Office + Operation Center
B| Wo
orkshop i+ii
D| Cafe + Office
09
A
B
B
C
C
A
Section A-A
Section B-B
Section C-C 010
3
Inter[block] Affordable Housing Community Academic Individual Work Location: Los Angeles Baldwin Village 413 Building Design with Landscape Studio October - December, 2020 The project starts from the idea of hinge, occupying the whole site. Taken the consideration of texture in the surrounding, each block is in the courtyard form with the concept of interlock. Not only the building itself interlock between layers, but also the landscape is intermingled into each courtyard. Seven courtyards are situationed on the site with its own courtyard and roof garden. The courtyards are connected edge-to-edge and the layered landscape trails are introcudctioned to connect the courtyards so that people from different blocks could visit each other conveniently.
Plan Layout Transformation Concept| Hinge
Texture| Courtyard
Form| Interlock
Landscape Loop
Landscape Across the Building Landscape Pedestrian Loop
Ground Floor Circulation
Landscape Loop Public Function Courtyard Staircase Along Landscape Loop Staircase Below Cover/ Within Courtyard
Roof Graden Circulation
Staircase Leading to Roof Garden Public Function Roof Garden
011
Site P
F
E G
Typ
A| Climbing
B| Lounge
C| Ball Court
D| Children Pla
Plan
B
C
D
A
pe
ayground
E| Lounge
F| Gathering Performance
G| Exercise 012
A
B
N
0
40'
80'
160'
Ground Floor
N
0
Third Floor
40'
80'
160'
Typical Interlock Prototype
Prototype A | L-L
Unfolded Diagram
Residence Public Green Staircase Gap
Unfolded Elevation
Prototype B | C-C
Residence Public Green Staircase Gap
Unfolded Diagram
Unfolded Elevation
013
Scene A
Scene B
Activity & Courtyard Each courtyard has its own feature on the ground level under the covering of the massings and the roof garden. Due to the connection of the landscape loop, people living in the different courtyards can visit other conveniently and enjoy different activities and landscape to create a more integrated and united community.
A| Exercise
B| Climbing & Ball
C| Performance
D| Lounge
E|Roof Agriculture
F|Roof Sitting
G| Swing
H|Play Ground 014
Short Section Different courtyard is in different angle to fit the site with various features, so that each is unique.
Long Section People on the landscape loop could easily get access to each courtyard to enjoy the unique activity provided.
015
4
Y Shape Figure Gym & Parking Structure Academic Individual Work Location: Los Angeles Downtown 401 Tech Core Studio April - June, 2020 The Y shape section is achieved by the combination of the helical ramps, the cylinder and a long slow ramp, responsive to the infill site and circulation mode. The slabs deform in ways specific to the program's requirements. In order to reveal the Y figure, a thin pleated skin, is draped across elevation. Depth of pleats come different contextual concerns of the infill site.This sectionally-derived Y-figure becomes the idea and mechanism that integrates circulation, program, elevation and structure in a differentiated yet unified whole.
Concept How does the Y shape come from?
?
Residential Building
Infill Building
Public Parking
Site Context
Cylinder
Long Ramp
Pleats
Helical Ramp
Let the light and air to go through
Most efficient for car parking
Form an order towards the residential building, avoid direct interface
Most efficient for car circulation
Responsive Element
Pedestrian
Car
Pedestrian + Car
Circulation 016
Program How does the slabs deform to fit the program Parking+
Program Property Mode
The relationship between the slabs and the
Parking+ Pedestrian Track
Parking+ Exercise Machine
Parking+ Skate Board
Vertical Lightwell
Large Swimming Pool / SPA
Ball Court Parking
Exerc
Introverted Lobby, Event Spacae Median Activity Room ( Dancing)
Push Outside
Push Inside
Program in Building
e cylinder
Program Relationship In a three-dimensional way
Swimming
SPA Exercise Studio Dancing Room
Ball Court
Gift Shop
cise Studio
Skateboarding
Gym
Pedestrian Pedestrian + Car Car
Extroverted
Enclosed
Offset
Unfolded Circulation 017
Pleats System
Facade with Y
Different scales of pleats create various visual effects
How facade deformation highlighting th
Transparent
Big
Rotation
Oblique Small
he inside Y structure?
Elevation and Structure How they relate to the Y shape form?
Elevation
Structure
Slab Explosive System
Unfolded Elevation 018
Ground Floor
Second Floor (Skateboarding)
4th Floor (Lobby)
6th Floor (Sports Court)
7th Floor (Dancing )
8th Floor (Exercise Studio)
9th Floor (Spa)
Top Floor
Y Shape Figure - Front Perspective In order to reveal (and sometimes conceal) the Y figure central to the building’s organization and identity, a thin pleated skin, like a veil, is draped across each elevation. Depth of pleats come different contextual concerns around the edges of the infill site. Deepest pleats are found at the elevation facing the residential building in order to create a spatial buffer for increased privacy. The pleats perform very differently as they near the helical ramp, parting and folding away to emphasize its figural role in the project.
019
Professional Work Selected The selected professional work demonstrates my internships at various companies as different roles in the design department. It includes assisting with the concept framework, strengthening the design into practical construction and marketing demonstration, through which I earned knowledge of practical design standards, became proficient in software, and developed the ability to better collaborate in a team, which equipped me to be a professional architect.
05 UCSD Theatre District Neighborhood HKS Architectural Intern Work
21
06 Healthcare Studio
22
07 Community Development
23
08 Huawei Qingpu Research District
24
09 Jinan City Balcony
25
10 No.1111 Yushan Road Office
26
Smithgroup Architectural Summer Intern work
CHA Marketing & Design Intern work
B+H Architectural Intern Work
SOM Urban Design Intern Work
AECOM Interior Architectural Intern
020
5
UCSD Theatre District Neighborhood HKS, Los Angeles, January - Present, 2022 Professional Work Location: La Jolla Village Drive, San Diego, CA Supervisor: Yoosang Ahn, Diana Tang Role: 3D Model printing
The design is aimed to achieve the naturally ventilated student housing dependent on prevailing ocean breezes while also maximizing ocean views. The massing is rotated to be perpendicular to the ocean which allows the project to capture the ocean breeze. Ocean views are maximized through the saw-tooth geometry on the skin, which orients the student windows to the Pacific Ocean beyond.
Ultimaker 3D Printing
Building I
Building II
Building III
Building IV
021
6
Healthcare Studio
Smithgroup, San Francisco , June- Augest, 2021 Professional Work Supervisor: Jackie Lee, Rui Luo, Elisa Jue Role: Interior Concept Design, Documentation, Facade Pattern Design
Wood Panel
John Muir Health Specialty Center
Wood Panel Module A
Wood Panel Module B
UC Davis Health California Tower Interior Deisgn - Elevator Lobby & Guest Lobby
John Muir Health Specialty Center Material Boards
Sutter/Standford Oakland Cancer Center Facade Pattern Design
l
r
022
7
Community Development
CHA, Los Angeles, June- September, 2020 Professional Work in Consulting Location: Inland Empire, California Supervisor: Jorge Loor Role: Marketing, Design Delivery lnland Empire, located on the east of the Los Angeles Downtown, has the potential to attract millennials to live in the Inland Empire with lower rents while enjoying high quality life with diverse institutions, leading to the eastward direction development trend. Ontario International Airport is the fastest growing airport in the country, quickly becoming a hub, increasingly attractive Inland Empire.
COVID-19 STRATEGIES
CHA is a townbuilding company. We challenge the status-quo. We are socially-conscious and sustainably-minded. Conventional wisdom is not accepted, as our present-day issues are the by-products of commonly held beliefs. Our ethos grows out of a commitment to improving the quality of life of residents and patrons of the communities we build in. We work to add value for future generations and invest in people and place resiliency with positive social & economic outcomes as our benchmarks for success. CHA’S projects articulate the pressing need for a massive shift away from real estate business as usual. Our solutions unify the enactment of real-world results with attractive, profit-minded vehicles for investment.
As Covid-19 keeps looming in the present, it’s clear that it will leave a longing impact, forcing us to adapt and reevaluate the current circumstances. Apart from rethinking the office model, housing densities have been impacted, lower interacting circulations are now the norm, and Working from Home has become a new way of living.
Marketing Presentation- Eastward Development Our Mission - Town Builder
COVID-19 Strategies
CREATE A Sense of Place How to build a strong TOWN?
DISTRICTS to Live, Create and Commune
RESPECT Local Communities
Millennials Eastward Migration
How to build a strong town?
Phased Neighborhoods Development 2-5 acres per phase
4
3
1
2
7
IE Snapshot Inland Empire Snapshot
Remote Working
Design Oriented Proof
No more need for comSeveral entrances to keep air Millennials have the intention to migrateEDUCATIONAL, eastmuteTECHNOLOGICAL or urban life, office & HEALTHCARE and circulationINSTITUTIONS flowing, no direct ward due to cheaper rent, more living spaces, space is moving online contact - sensors, open corridors, TOD equipment and more public-transit infraand remote working keep social 6 feet distance. structure and facilities to enjoy high quality life. mode is adopted.
Mixed-use Communities
9
Necessary retail and entertainment Outside the front door
Public Support
Convenient Connection
Strong Demographics
Multi-model transit-intergreated neighborhoods Walk, bike, scooter, uber /lyft
Population, income, infrastructure, investment growth
GROWING HUB Ontario International Airport is the fastest growing airport in the country, quickly becoming a hub, increasingly attractive Inland Empire.
DEVELOPMENT TREND It has the potential to attract millennials to live in the Inland Empire with lower rents while enjoying high quality life with diverse institutions, leading to the eastward direction development trend.
PANDEMIC CONCERN During the COVID-19 pandemic period, it arouses great concern towards the high-density urban lifestyle. Living in the low-density town maybe a more suitable choice. 12
8
School House, South Pasadena
Packing House, Azusa
Pioneer Square, San Dimas
SPADRA, Pomona
Empire Station, Rancho Cucamonga
University Village, Redlands
Empire Station, Rancho Cucamonga Empire Station
PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP INFRASTRUCTURE
Subterranean Parking & Building
4 Stories Residentials Apartments With First Floor as offices and retail
Pedestrian Bridge
Entrance Plaza Retail
Partnership with the private ownership and the city council to organize the project development, so there is no need to buy the land, avoiding risks. 4 Stories Residentials Apartments inserting a part as the parking structure
Four Stories Parking Structure
ENTITLEMENTS
4 Stories Residentials Apartments
Four Stories Parking Structure
Subterranean Podium Parking Requirement of additional parking spots
Public funding available for transit-oriented development and sustainable, low impact communities. Continued public investment in system rail expansion, service and future rail electrification.
Density bonuses, reduce parking ratios & maximum FAR allowance
Activity Platform
Subterranean Parking
Retail
16
Activity Platform
Parking Structure Existing Office Building
Subterranean Parking
Office
Empire Station
Subterranean Parking & Building
Pioneer Square, San Dimas
Site Context
Vroman’s Bookstore
2
023
8
Huawei Qingpu Research District B+H, Shanghai Office, Summer, 2019 Professional Work Location: Qingpu, Shanghai Supervisor: Jun Yin Role: 3D Modelling, Render, Presentation
Huawei Qingpu Research Institute uses the Featured Canadian Towns like Whistler and Lunenburg and landscapes like forests, ravine and courtyards as the prototypes to develop the design. Unlike the humanalienated and large research buildings , This project is trying to create a town-form research park, showing warmth, welcoming and humanity care.
Facade Sketch
Site Plan
024
9
Jinan City Balcony
SOM, Shanghai Office, February-June, 2019 Professional Work Location: Jinan Prior Zone city Balcony Area Supervisor: Zhou Yinying Role: Diagram presentation, 3D modelling Jinan city Balcony area attempts to achieve the goal- leading the way for 100% self-sufficient and renewable energy, formulates a complete living structure to link the city to the life of the mother river and its ecological diversity, celebrates local culture heritage with respect on local traditions and urban forms and builds small and compact blocks to shape pedestrian-friendly communities.
Neighborhoon Types
Local Culture Community
Village Campus
Knowledge Community
Central Community
025
10
No.1111 Yushan Road Office
AECOM, Shanghai Office, Summer, 2017 Professional Work Location: No.1111 Yushan Road, Shanghai Supervisor: Ni Wensi Role: Concept design, 3D Modelling, Render The lobby uses line element to show the geometry and order in the interior design, which comes from the façade decoration. Meanwhile, taking advantage of the green garden on the southern perspective, there will be the café and resting lobby with trees responding to the landscape view and showing the relationship towards outside.
Concept Sketch
Coffee & Resting
Guest Lobby
Elevator Lobby
026