Kevin I Porter Design Portfolio 2012
Table of Contents Studio 804 - Galileo Pavilion Design+Build Studio Troost Ave. Community Center Democratizing Education & the Chance Encounter CBS 2 Chicago - Phase III Communicating a Culture Reweaving the Neighborhood Fabric MOD2 Shorewood Community Center Moments in Space and Time Professional Work Interior Architects Supplemental Projects Photography, Sketches
lounge classroom
operable windows
daylighting and views
reclaimed slate chalkboards
living green wall
diffused light through frosted glass louvers
fiberoptic and LED lighting
stack ventilation and daylighting
Studio 804 - Galileo Pavilion
exterior: south east
reclaimed slate chalkboards
rooftop photovoltaics
vegitated roof
southern orientation
exst. solar sculpture
Design+Build Studio, University of Kansas
floor plan
4 4
3
4 1
2
1. lounge 2. classroom 3. display space 4. mech. & support
2
As the the lates campus building, it is not simply one among many, but an icon that will lead the rest of the campus by example. The interior spaces function as classrooms, student lounge, and special event space. The facade of the pavilion is clad in slate panels which are reclaimed chalkboards from regional school districts. Other design features include the use of passive heating and cooling systems such as thermal mass, rainwater harvesting, living wall and green roof trays in addition to active systems such as photovoltaics and a wind turbine. The Galileo Pavilion is expected to be Studio 804’s fifth LEED Platinum building.
[expected]
LEED PLATINUM New Construction
STATED PROGRAM EDUCATION STO
CLA RO SSOM
RA
GE
CO
MM RO UN OM ITY
CLA RO SSOM
R.
LL
LO
STA
CO
MM RO UN OM ITY
IR
ME
NS
STA
IR
ME E RO TING OM
WO
RK
OP
STA
IR
. STA
IR
#2
#4
#3
#1
WO
NS
UR TY AR
D
CIRC UL AT IO
2ND FLOOR 8125SF
CO
LO BE BBY LO W
TE PA RIO TIO R
CORE
ME
EX
N
MEETI NG CORE
ST ORA GE ST ORA GE KITC HEN
ON ATI UL RC CI
CL RO ASS CL OM RO ASS OM
PA NT RY
CL AS SR OO M
ST OR. ST OR.
ST OR. GAR AG E LO UN GE
CO MPU LA TER B
DN
UP
SE AT ING
ST AIR #2
CO UR TY AR D
LO UN GE MTG .
MTG .
BODY
MEET
MEANS
• DEMOCORIZING EDUCATION LIFE SKILLS JOB SKILLS POLITICS HEALTH SOCIAL AWARENESS COMMUNICATION
COMPLEX SOCIAL / PROGROMATIC INTERACTIONS
MEETING
GE
ME / E CHA LE CTRNICA ICA L L
GE STA
SE RV ICE STA IR #2
IR
#4
STO
STO
R.
CIRCUL ATI ON
LOWER LEVEL 8650SF
RA
R.
ORDER AND FLEXIBILITY
NECESSITATE
RA
STO
• INFORMAL CONGREGATION +GATHERING 3RD PLACE (NEUTRAL GROUND) COMMUNITY ACTIVITY (LIVELINESS)
SE RV ICE
MTG . MTG .
STO
LEARN
DE-FORMALIZATION OF SPACIAL REQUIREMENTS
PROGRAM INTERACTION
AD OFF MIN. ICE
PL AZ A
HOME
LEARN
LO BB Y
LO UN GE
N
COMMONS
CORE
2ND FLOOR 13825SF
G TIN EE M
DN
EDUCATE WORKSHOP
UP
ST AIR #3
CORE
MEE RO TING OM
CONNECT COMMUNITY
ST AIR #4
UP
WO MEN S
ST AIR #1
PROGRAM INTERPERTATION
JC . MEC H.
LO UN GE
MEN S
UP
DETAILS • ADULT “LIFE-CRAFT” LEARNING • 30,000 - 40,000 S.F.
LEARNING
SH
.
CH
GE
CORE
R.
JC ME
UN
COMMUNITY
HAND
STO
STO
R.
WE
MIND
STO
SITE DEVELOPMENT
Troost Ave. Community Center Democratizing Education and the Chance Encounter
TROOST AVE.
The community center is a combination of a community gathering and a life-craft learning center. Its blend of education and social awareness respond to the needs of the community through providing learning opportunities of life skills and providing open connectivity and an educational awareness to the community. Education of adults is a conversation where the student and teacher view themselves as equals. The center will focus on educating the home, body, means, and social awareness.
BRUSH CREEK BLVD
.
Community connectivity is facilitated through openness and flexibility of the built environment. It encourages the chance encounter, it aspires to be the neutral ground where people can meet, talk and learn from one another.
N
PROJECT SITE EXISTING BUILDING - COMMERCIAL EXISTING BUILDING - RESIDENTIAL FUTURE DEVELOPMENT - COMMERCIAL FUTURE DEVELOPMENT - RESIDENTIAL
STO
CLA RO SSOM
RA
GE
CO
MM RO UN OM ITY
CLA RO SSOM
STO
R.
STO
R.
STO
R.
WE
LL
LO
STA
MM RO UN OM ITY
IR
ME
NS
STA
IR
RK
SH
OP
. STA
CH
GE
CO
ME E RO TING OM
WO
JC ME
UN
IR
. STA
IR
#2
#4
#3
#1
WO
ME
NS
CO
UR TY AR
LO BE BBY LO W
EX
D
A
TE PA RIO TIO R
ST ORA GE ST ORA GE KITC HEN
CL RO ASS CL OM RO ASS OM
PA NT RY
CL AS SR OO M
ST OR. ST OR.
ST OR. GAR AG E LO UN GE
CO MPU LA TER B
JC . MEC H.
LO UN GE
DN
UP
b SE AT ING UP
MEE RO TING OM
DN
UP
ST AIR #3
exterior elevation: east
WO MEN S
ST AIR #1
AD OFF MIN. ICE
LO BB Y CO UR TY AR D
LO UN GE
N
ST AIR #4
UP
ST AIR #2
MEN S
LO UN GE
A
MTG . PL AZ A
MTG .
SE RV ICE
MTG . MTG .
b
STO
RA
GE
ME / E CHA LE CTRNICA ICA L L
STO
RA
GE STA
SE RV ICE STA IR #2
IR
#4
STO
R.
STO
R.
exterior elevation: south
perspective • troost ave. & brushcreek blvd
section a-a
perspective• courtyard
section b-b aerial• troost ave. & brushcreek blvd
USER GROUP ANALYSIS
Public/ Shared Staff
20-25 minutes to re-task after visual distraction. Provide seperation of work stations and traffic flow.
Finance, Community affairs, Production, Technical Operations
Jeff Rochelle - Haworth Workplace Strategies
Reduction in Physical Boundaries Breakdown in barriers to improve communication between groups. Support spontaneous meetings. Becker/Steele - Workplace by Design (pg65)
Lobby/ Waiting Station Manager
Jeff Rochelle - Haworth Workplace Strategies
ENTER
Priv Toilet
Executive Conference rm.
RESEARCH REFERENCE AND CITATION
Exec. Asst.
Traffic Sales
General Manager
Executive Suite
Urban Planning and the design of Civic Plazas Interior “main street� mixes typologies of travel and content creation, becomes destination, chance encounters. Good Plazas have; relation to their surroundings, open centers, porous enclosure, often irregular shape due to evolution over time, proportional sizing of volume relates to human comfort. Becker/Steele - Workplace by Design (pg65) Witzling - Arch533 Urban Planning Lecture 2007
[1]
Defining the Work Settings Work happens all day long, regardless of where the person is. A person can use multiple spaces at one time. Work and collaboration can be grouped into Contemporary, Chance encounter, External, Virtual. Becker/Steele - Workplace by Design (pg25) Schermer/Content Analysis - Arch586 Architectural Programming
CBS 2 Chicago
Phase III - Communicating a Culture a collaborative project
Plaza de Santa Ana
congregation, collaboration
Piazza del Duomo
Relocation of a corporate headquarters gives companies a great chance to reinvent themselves not only in the eye of the public but also redefine the working atmosphere within the company. In recognizing that work can happen anywhere CBS will redefine their work environment to capitalize on a more mobile and OPEN CONFERENCING ever changing workforce. Where fixed seating TRAINING CENTER is preferred, user groups are opened up and located around central utilities to foster interdisciplinary interaction and efficiency within the company by means of rapid information sharing.
interstitial, transient, chance encounter dedicated work zone Piazza san Marco
The ‘office’ has changed from the desk and chair to the laptop and internet. Evolution in technology will continue to foster the use of a virtual desk, all but making the traditional newsroom pit a thing of the past. The most important function of the pit was the collaboration and sharing of resources between journalist, reporters, and newscasters. Through the use of informal and adaptive meeting spaces this collaboration will continue stronger than ever.
PRELIMINARY CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
ReweavingtheNeighborhoodFabric
How Modular Housing Can Build Affordable and Dignified Communities
MOD2 a collaborative project STREET PERSPECTIVE
The AIA Milwaukee initiative strives to knit together inner-city neighborhoods by infusing creatively designed affordable housing in the blighted gaps between existing housing. Providing secure, sustainable and vibrant housing in already-established neighborhoods with existing infrastructure will revive a sense of community here. “All eyes on the street� is a phrase that speaks to housing with wide front porches and inviting facades. The initiative will feature this type of housing. Located near bus lines and family-supporting manufacturing, service and professional jobs, these dwellings will afford their residents an opportunity to realize a dignified standard of living. Walkable, pedestrian-scaled neighborhoods with parks, amenities and ser vices nearby are achievable through the thoughtful integration of owneroccupied housing in critical mass.
COST ESTIMATION $23,392.74
EXTERIOR WALL TYPE 1
$116.14
EXTERIOR WALL TYPE 2
$9,093.90
EXTERIOR WALL TYPE 3
$320.48
INTERIOR WALL TYPE 1
$1,693.07
INTERIOR WALL TYPE 2
$2,712.50
INTERIOR WALL TYPE 3
$506.36
INTERIOR WALL TYPE 4
$133.38
INTERIOR WALL TYPE 5
$4,871.63
FLOORING
$8,515.00
FLOOR FINISHES
$1,655.82
CEILING
$9,612.48
ROOF
$6,680.00
DOORS
$10,312.00 $4,832.00
WINDOWS STAIRS
$2,556.00
MILLWORK
$16,952.80
CONCRETE
$2,828.52 $2,832.93 $109,622.25
GREEN ROOF KITCHEN CONSTRUCTION
$3,780.00
PLUMBING
$2,721.00
ELECTRICAL
$3,780.00
HVAC
$119,903.85 $11,990.39 $9,232.60 $141,126.83 $91.00
TOTAL CONSTRUCTION 10% CONTINGENCY 1.07 LOCATION ADJUSTMENT TOTAL PER SQUARE FOOT
FEATURES
PORCH -Majority of houses in the Merril Park neighborhood have full frontal porches and are frequently used by residents. -Side approach provides for future accessible ramp. -Rear porch created by offset of housing modules. FLARE IN ROOF PROFILE -Visually addresses the corner lot condition. -Allows for hot air ventilation in the summer. -Creates a light well to bring in the soft northern light that filters into the office/study and flows down the stairwell. SPACIAL DIVISION BY MODULE -Service: Circulation, bathrooms, Storage, and the office are set into the northern pods. -Served: Living spaces such as the Kitchen, Dining, Living room, and Bedrooms are in the souther pods, maximizing exposure to natural sunlight and summer breeze. OPEN FLOOR PLAN -Kitchen, Dining, Living, and front porch blend together allowing for continued family/social interaction. -Flexibility allows for ease of use from one owner to the next. MATERIALITY -Concrete board siding is akin to use of traditional hardwood lap siding, strips away revealing modular construction and use of larger panels. Use of multiple materials is prevalent and appreciated in existing neighborhood houses. -Gray water collection from steel roof runoff. -Modular green roof over front porch. -Energy star appliances/low-flow plumbing
EXISTING TYPOLOGIES
PROGRAMMATIC STUDY
SECTION
BRICOLAGE
PATHWAY PERSPECTIVE
The essence of bricolage was to construct a The organizing community center through creation of individualform and anatomy is derived through analysis istic elements tailored specifically for their use. As the understanding of the project requirements of the existing walking and evolved so did essence of what could happen. bicycling paths that intersect Taking cue from the miles of riverfront paththe site. The structure is further ways the original elements were organized broken down in to individualized to address the transitional nature of elements by functional needs how people move through and interact and contextual interpretation. within the park. The existing pathways were maintained and the building elements are nestled amongst the topography. The user experience the park as they always have, a journey.
Shorewood Community Center moments in time and space
1. DINNER CLUB 2. MEETING/CLASSROOMS 3. ATHLETIC FACILITY 4. SEATING 5. EXTERIOR STAGE 6. ARTIST STUDIO+GALLERY 7. PATHWAYS
M
i kee R ilwau
7
ver
ISTI 1 EX
2 4 3 EXISTING
4
4
5
7 6 7
7
7
7
NG
MATERIALITY
SITE SECTION
EXISTING BIKE PATH
PATHWAY
ATHLETIC FACILITY
MEETING ROOMS
EXISTING WALKING TRAIL
ARTIST STUDIO AND GALLERY
ATHLETIC FACILITY SECTION
MESIROW FINANCIAL
Corporate Headquarters, Chicago, IL
Focusing on the organization of “one brand, one company� the headquarters team was able to balance flexibility and standardization with the individuality and entrepreneur spirit that embodies how the numerous business Reception groups operate on a daily basis. The IA research and design process touched 28 departments and over 752 staff members, a 90% end user response rate. Stats 350,000 SF [13 Floors] Office, Conferencing, Auditorium Published: Eco-Structure Magazine May 2011
LEED GOLD
Commercial Interiors
Conferencing Breakout
Professional Work
IA - Interior Architects
all images Š2010 IA-Interior Architects
South Oasis [Pantry] all floors
South Oasis [copy/fax] all floors
Technology Company Chicago Office
Pantry Lounge
Open Office Seating
Professional Work
IA - Interior Architects
all images Š2010 IA-Interior Architects
Open Office
Lobby Seating
Escape
Untitled
Chicago Love
Photography
Portals
Kiley’s Oasis
Closing of the Prairie
Les Halles d’Avignon / 2011 / Pen+Watercolor on Paper
Sketches
travel documentation
Facade Detail at Opera d’Avignon / 2011 / Pen on Paper
La Tourette by Le Corbusier / 2011 / Pen on Paper
Sketches
travel documentation
Villa Savoye by Le Corbusier / 2011 / Pen on Paper
Alfama district (the old Moorish city) / 2011 / Pen on Paper
Sketches
travel documentation
Museu Paula Rego by Eduardo Souto de Moura / 2011 / Pen+Marker on Paper
Parthenon / 2011 / Pen on Paper
Sketches
travel documentation
Monastiraki Square + The Acropolis / 2011 / Pen on Paper
KEVIN I PORTER 116 West 15th Street Lawrence, KS 66044
608 ‑ 577 - 5828 kevin.porter.inbox@gmail.com www.keviniporter.com