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The Edgewater Initiative

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Location: Lockart, Florida

Program: Affordable Housing and Community Center designed in collaboration with Daniel Trent

This project is a community located in Lockhart, Florida adjacent to Lockhart Elementary school. Lockhart has an average of 3 people per home and 49% of families have children under the age of 18, therefore living at home and in the school system. Due to these statistics and the proximity of the site to Lockhart Elementary, this community is aimed towards providing housing that accommodates families with multiple children that attend school in the area. A centralized community design was utilized with all 12 units revolving around a private, common green space for residents. Also on site is a Student Outreach and Development Center offering after school activities for residents as well as all the children of Lockhart.

Of the 12 units, 6 are 3 bedroom/2 bath and 6 and 4 bedroom/2 bath. Units are arranged in duplexes, creating 6 buildings total with a passage in between each unit leading to the central green space. There is a standard first floor with the kitchen and common areas as well as the master bedroom.

Lockhart Elementary has reported its testing proficiency scores as lower than the national average, leading it to be in the bottom 50% of schools in Florida. Because of these low ratings, Florida Statutes require the school board to implement School wide improvement plans, or SIPs, and enable progress. These initiatives include culturally responsive education, social and emotional interaction, and increased proficiency in math, science, and reading.

This site, which is across the street from Lockhart Elementary, includes the abandoned Lions Club Fire Station. This building presents the opportunity to be repurposed and revitalize the site for not only the residents on site but all children of Lockhart. With a student population of 450, 65% of students attending Lockhart Elementary are economically disadvantaged. This building has been repurposed into a Student Outreach and Development Center offering after school activities due to its proximity to Lockhart Elementary. This program would offer tutoring, physical activities, and artistic expression in order to satisfy the SIPs initiative and to serve the school.

The duplexes revolve around a private, common green space for residents establshing a centralized community design. With structures facing inwards, a shared backyard and sense of community is established. Here, children can play with others from the neighborhood while families keep an eye from their homes.

Due to the presence of children in this family community the road is along the perimeter of the site, allowing the inner, central greenery to be a safe space for children and play. Pedestrian paths become the primary system of circulation in the area. These paths lead residents from their doors to communal spaces and greens, such as the central greenery, the green space for the renovated lions club, and the mural walls to the West.

The mural walls at the student outreach center create a boundary between the forestry and the built environment while also functioning as an interactive installation for Lockhart. The art panels can be removed to be exhibited elsewhere, such as Lockhart Elementary, and replaced with new surfaces for other students to contribute to.

OASIS - The Retreat

Location: Joshua Tree, California

Program: Artist’s Retreat and Performance Center

OASIS at Joshua Tree serves as an introspective space for artists to escape from the city, reflect and create. Hours from Los Angeles, the site provides accommodation for artists and their teams, performance and studio spaces, common areas, and moments for relaxation. The two main programs are chapel - spaces for contemplation and studio - spaces for creation.

Two distinct desert ecosystems, the Mojave and the Colorado, come together in Joshua Tree National Park, a land sculpted by strong winds and occasional torrents of rain. The area is home to sand dunes, dry lakes, flat valleys, mountains, granitic monoliths, and oases. The site is in a Basin and Range Province, a landscape of alternating mountain ranges and their adjacent basins. The collision of plates forming the rugged terrain inspired the planes and shifting levels of the OASIS, inviting the outside in. Located on top of the Morongo groundwater basin, water is drawn to the surface creating spas for guests.

A retreat within the isolation of 800,000 acres of land to foster artists and accommodate various installations: musical and artistic.

Joshua Tree’sclose proximity to Los Angeles, an artistic hub, allows it be to be accessible to artists. Although only 130 miles away, roughly a three hour trip, Joshua Tree seems like a different world. The urban context of LA contrasts heavily with the desert oasis. Minimal visual invasion to surrounding environment allows visitors to respond to the landscape and nature. A programmatic journey is evident in the form, beginning with ones stay in the chapel-contemplation portion of the structure before leading to the spaces for creation and display.

Spa Spatial Analysis

Chapel Contemplation

Spaces for comfort, mental health, and artistic growth. A home, although temporary, to retreat and reconnect with art and ones team. Allows one to focus on things that we often do not prioritize in our normal lives or simply do not have, or make, the time for.

-Baths/Spa -Workshop areas -Meditation room

-Outdoor nature path and garden -Personal rooms

Studio Creation

Spaces for artistic growth, creation and presentation symbolizing the accumulation of the retreat.

-Recording studio -Backstage

-Performance/Installation Pavilion

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