Kevin M. Marino Portfolio

Page 1

TEN PROJECTS

KEVIN MICHAEL MARINO



HELLO.

LET’S GET STARTED.


ABOUT ME I AM A LEED GREEN ASSOCIATE AND NCARB IDP GRADUATE WITH 4+ YEARS OF professional EXPERIENCE INCLUDING COMMERCIAL, RESIDENTIAL, RETAIL, PRODUCT, AND interior DESIGN. WITH MASTER DEGREES IN ARCHITECTURE AND CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT, MY INTERESTS LIE AT THE integration OF ART AND BUILDING to become the MASTER BUILDER. I BELIEVE ARCHITECTURE MUST GO BEYOND THE WALLS OF ITS PROJECT TO CONSIDER THE ENVIRONMENT, ECONOMY, AND CULTURE OF THE COMMUNITY IT SERVES. IN THE END IT IS ABOUT HOLISTIC thinking. THANK YOU.

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS MASTERS OF ARCHITECTURE • MASTERS OF CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT •

GENSLER

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

INTERN ARCHITECT •

GENSLER INTERN ARCHITECT •

SK&I ARCHITECTURE DESIGN GROUP

WHO I AM

STAFF ARCHITECT •

A MOTIVATED, HARDWORKING INDIVIDUAL WITH A CURIOSITY FOR CONTINUAL LEARNING. I ENJOY CONNECTING WITH NEW PEOPLE AND BELIEVE I CAN ADAPT TO ANY ENVIRONMENT GIVEN TO ME.

WHY YOU MIGHT HIRE ME I COMBINE THE CREATIVE ASPECTS OF DESIGN WITH THE PRACTICAL SENSIBILITIES OF BUILDING TO HOLISTICALLY WORK THROUGH PROCESSES. WITH LITTLE GUIDANCE, I CAN SELF-LEAD MY WORK.

THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA

HOW I CAN HELP YOU

I KNOW EVERY MAJOR DESIGN SOFTWARE TOOL (AND HAVE TAUGHT MYSELF EACH ONE), EFFECTIVELY WORK ON ALL PHASES OF DESIGN, AND LEAD INITIATIVES TO SUPPLEMENT MY PEER’S growth..

5 THINGS YOU MIGHT ENJOY

• I stand for HELPING OTHERS THROUGH DESIGN, AND FIND THAT THE BEST KIND OF ARCHITECTURE MAKES A DIFFERENCE IN SOMEONE’S LIFE. • I LOVE TO TRAVEL AND BELIEVE THE GREATEST WAY TO CONNECT WITH OTHERS IS TO IMMERSE MYSELF IN THEIR CULTURE. • I DO NOT SMOKE OR DRINK COFFEE; WATER IS MY CAFFEINE. • IN SECOND GRADE, I WAS GIVEN THE AWARD FOR “MOST POLITE” AND STILL ATTEMPT TO LIVE UP TO IT TODAY. • I WAS BORN WITH AN EXTRA TOOTH ON THE ROOF OF MY MOUTH AND NICKNAMED IT THE “SHARK TOOTH.” IT IS NOW GONE.

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN ARCHITECTURE •

SK&I ARCHITECTURE DESIGN GROUP INTERN ARCHITECT •

GLUSZKO ARCHITECTS INTERN ARCHITECT •

HILLSIDE LANDSCAPING DESIGN ASSISTANT/LABORER •


GENSLER Led construction administration of major office interior, researched and developed energy neutral bank prototype, designed civic complex residential tower massing, projected innovations to firm-wide company intranet, and educated staff on global humanitarian design work.

SK&I ARCHITECTURE DESIGN GROUP Created LEED mixed-use residential and commercial developments, designed neighborhood townhomes, assembled residential and medical interior design packages, led weekly professional development presentations, AND COTAUGHT COMPANY’S FIRST LEED STUDY PROGRAM.

6

3.5

MONTHS

Ps Id

Ps Id

YEARS

SKILLSET autodesk revit rhinoceros 3d autodesk autocad trimble sketchup v-ray adobe photoshop Ps

GLUSZKO ARCHITECTS

HILLSIDE LANDSCAPING

Conducted pre-design analysis, documented residential and commercial existing conditions, created as-built drawings, coordinated permitting processes, developed retail marketing materials, and constructed office furniture.

ASSISTED IN DESIGN SCHEMES OF RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL PROJECTS, INSTALLED AND MAINTAINED LANDSCAPES OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE CLIENT BASE, AND MANAGED FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS WITH CONTRACTED INDIVIDUALS.

3

3

MONTHS

adobe illustrator

Ai

adobe indesign

Id

adobe lightroom

Lr

microsoft office microsoft project

P

primevera p6

MONTHS

hand craft hand drawing photography

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS completed two master degrees in architecture and construction management, graduating with honors. student leader in sam fox public lecture series, student monitor in digital fabrication laboratory, graduate dean travel grant recipient, and steedman fellowship finalist.

completed bachelor of science in architecture. leader in comprehensive building design final studio, member of american institute of architecture student chapter, and member of university club ice hockey team.

3

4

YEARS

Ps Ai Id Lr

LANGUAGES ENGLISH (FLUENT) GERMAN (BASIC)

28

YEARS

7

• I AM EUROPEAN UNION CITIZENSHIP ELIGIBLE.

YEARS

P

THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA

YEARS

Ps

PUBLICATIONS AND EXHIBITIONS cohabitive reflections. thesis research compilation. may, 2012. the arch: obstructed views through the city, PHOTOGRAPHY EXPLORATION. may, 2012. Approach 2010-2011, Featured: urban housing, december, 2010. EAST OF THE RIVER. SMITHSONIAN ANACOSTiA MUSEUM. FEATURED: WATERFRONT MAY, 2006.

REFERENCE “KEVIN IS A VERY DEDICATED STUDENT PASSIONATE ABOUT THE SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF DESIGN. HE HAS BEEN AN ACTIVE VOICE FOR THESE CONCERNS, HAS DEVELOPED HIS COURSE OF STUDY PROACTIVELY IN RELATIONSHIP TO THEM, AND DONE SO WITH GREAT COLLEGIALITY AND PERSONALITY. HE TAKES INITIATIVES WITHIN THE STRUCTURE OF THE SCHOOL AND I ADMIRE HIS ENGAGEMENT WITH EDUCATION. HIS PERSONAL DEMEANOR IS OPEN, INQUISITIVE, AND INFECTIOUS.” -bruce lindsey, DEAN, SAMFOX SCHOOL OF DESIGN AND VISUAL ARTS, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS, ST. LOUIS, MO .


CONTENTS 06

52

62

36

72


82

88

99

96

100


INTERDEPENDENT THRESHOLDS HOUSING HOMELESS AND LOW-INCOME FAMILIES


7


missouri

illinOIs

site location at the division line along delmar boulevard and washington avenue, which separates neighborhoods of social class, stemming from political policies dating back to twentieth century local governance.

property v a e lu

household

70K

e om nc

18K

i

bachelor’s d

98%

e lu

335K

african am e

household

i

e om nc

50K

an ric

property v a

ree eg

10%

situated at the unique bend of its division line, the site moves along north tucker, stitching together its four boundaries within the divide and creating a porous street front that pulls away from the alley.

bachelor’s d ree eg

70%

caucasian

73%

po pu

caucasian

43 % asian

ST. LOUIS DEMOGRAPHIC MAP

49% hispanic/ latino

94 19,2 n3 tio la

african american


1/4 m

ile r adiu s

B

martin luther king jr boulevard

B

lo we r

B

B

ns

ity

delmar boulevard

B

washington avenue

B B B

north tucker boulevard

B

edward jones dome

st patrick center

de

divide

B

convention center

hi

gh

er

de

ns

ity

B

B

B

B

M

B B

B

SITE PLAN M

9


building entry private court public court

building form

GATHER CONNECT

LEARN EAT

BAKE

MAKE

HEAL TALK

CARE

program distribution

DRESS

SAVE

SELL

CUT

INSPIRE

PLAY

REFLECT


privacy screen exposure glazing

building axis building circulation

social nodes

building axis section

11


UP

THE SECOND FLOOR includes a RESIDENT social zone THAT FLOWs FROM AN EXTERIOR TERRACE into AN INTERIOR room ABOVE THE BUILDING’S TWO STORY ENTRY. IT’S L-SHAPED GLASS VOID connects THE BUILDING’S TWO solid masses and reveals the shared Interactions between Pedestrians AND buildings.

DN

DN UP DN

DN UP DN UP

second floor

north 13th st. a-a

THE GROUND LEVEL, Comprised OF AN INNER AND OUTER LAYER, ADDRESSES THE BUILDING’S MORE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PROGRAMS. FACING NORTH TUCKER AVENUE, COMMUNITY AMENITIES SITUATE along OPEN COURTS, ALLOWING MORE PRIVATE PROGRAM TO CENTER around ENCLOSED COURTS. EVERY GROUND FLOOR AMENITY SERVES RESIDENT SELF-SUFFICIENCY NEEDS, CREATING OPPORTUNITY ON-SITE TO INCREASE PHYSICAL AND FINANCIAL WELL-BEING.

UP

4

9

8

2

3 UP

b-b

3 UP

UP

3 1

1 UP UP

5

8

first floor

7

10

north tucker blvd.

delmar blvd.

lucas ave. (alley)

6


DN

UP DN UP DN

DN UP

1 OPEN COURT 2 PRIVATE COURT 3 ENTRY 16 UP

4 Restaurant

UP

5 BRIDGE BREAD RESIDENT PROGRAM 11

6 RESIDENT DISPLAY UNITS 7 BARBER SHOP 2 8 LEARNING CENTER

15 17

9 DAYCARE

3 UP

10 SECOND-HAND CLOTHIER

3 UP

1 11 BANK

12

12 GROCERY UP

13 BUSINESS INCUBATOR

13

14 18

martin Luther kinG jr. dr..

6

14 HAIR SALON 15 MENTAL HEALtH CENTER 16 physical HEALTH CLINIC 17 GYM 18 CHAPEL 13


DN

MOST UNITS ARE DUPLEXes THAT ARRANGE SHARED, OPEN SPACE ALONG THE BUILDING’S SOUTHERN PUBLIC EDGE, ALLOWING PRIVATE AND INTIMATE ROOMS TO FORM ALONG ITS NORTHERN EDGE WHERE THE FACADE IS MORE PROTECTED FROM VIEW.

DN

DN DN DN DN

DN UP

DN

DN

DN UP

DN DN

DN DN

DN

DN

fourth and sixth floor (low-income buildings only)

UP DN

UP

UP UP UP UP UP

UP UP

UP UP UP

UP UP

UP

UP UP UP UP

third and fifth floor (low-income buildings only)

DN

UP

CENTERED AROUND THE FAMILY NUCLEUS, RESIDENCES COMPRISE TWO TO THREE BEDRoOM UNITS IN ADDITION TO STUDIO, ONE BEDROOM, AND LIVEIN UNITS. THE CORRIDOR DOUBLES AS A PLAY SPACE FOR RESIDENT CHILDREN, AND IN HOMELESS-SPECIFIC BUILDINGS, A COUNSELOR UNIT SITS AT THE CORNER OF EACH BUILDING, OVERLOOKING THE TERRACE BELOW AND HALLWAY BEYOND, PROVIDING IN-HOME SUPPORT SERVICES TO FAMILIES.


DN

DN

UP

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

DN

UP

DN

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

DN

UP

UP

UP

15


SIGHTLINES THROUGH THE UNIT INTO THE HALLWAY AND BEYOND ALLOW PARENTAL FIGURES TO KEEP WATCH ON THEIR CHILDREN WHILE REMAINING IN THEIR HOME. A SHARED BALCONY ENABLES SOCIAL INTERACTION BETWEEN NEIGHBORS AND EXTENDS THE LIVING/DINING AREA TO THE OUTSIDE. AN OPEN RUN STAIR CREATES A VISUAL CONNECTION THROUGH THE BUILDING, GREATER CONNECTING VIEWS TO THE EXTERIOR..

UP

UP CROSS VENTILATION THROUGH THE UNIT CREATES NATURAL air flow through SPACES ON THE LOWER AND UPPER LEVELS. sight line air flow connection

unit plan-lower level

unit plan-upper level

DN

DN


unit section

17


buildings closer to the street front are protected by a more private facade, as those set back reveal floor to ceiling GLAZING. this repeating pattern flips at each building, as lower height RESIDENCES cater to homeless families.

north 13th st. elevation

l-shaped windows mimic the larger building forms. an interactive wall by artist candy chang engages the community with social empowerment statements along north tucker blvd.

north tucker blvd. elevation


19


the facades are clad with charred wood shingles that resist fire, rot, and pests, due to a thermal treatment process during production. the scale of the material relates to the unit dimension of brick found in the neighborhood and the shingle itself evokes a natural expression of wood that is commonly used in residential applications.,

south facades- exposure glazing

north facades- privacy screen

south elevation

north elevation


CLT PANEL RIGID INSULATION

WOOD SHINGLE DRAINAGE MAT BUILDING PAPER 1/2” PLYWOOD CLT PANEL RIGID INSULATION BENT STEEL ANGLE 2 ROWS ANNULAR RINGED NAILS DAMP-PROOF COURSE ON NON-SHRINK GROUT ANCHOR BOLT CONCRETE PODIUM

d-01 exterior wall at foundation

THREADED ROD W/ WASHER

RIGID INSULATION SELF TAPPING SCREW 6” O.C. CLT PANEL

d-02 floor to wall assembly

d-03 floor to floor assembly

d-03

d-02

d-01

section a-a

section b-b

21



23



25



27


MINDFUL OF THE PRACTICALI ‘‘INTERDEPENDENT THRESHO HOLISTIC DESIGN APPROACH OF CONSTRUCTABILITY THRO INCLUDING COST, SCHEDULE, METHODS. THE BUILDING’S M ,A SPAN, LIGHTER LOAD, QUICKE COST THAN ITS TRADITIONAL CONCRETE AND STEEL.

THE FOLLOWING OUTLINES C


ITIES BEHIND THE PROJECT, OLDS” MAINTAINED A H, CONSIDERING ELEMENTS OUGHOUT ITS PROCESS, , PHASING, MEANS, AND MAIN STRUCTURAL ELEMENT, ALLOWED FOR A LONGER ER ASSEMBLY, AND LOWER COUNTERPARTS IN

CONSTRUCTION PROCESSES IN THE PROJECT: 29


the abbreviated timeline shows A schedule INCORPORATING TWO LABOR CREWS SIMULTANEOUSLY WORKING ON SEPARATE BLOCKS TO MAXIMIZE TIME EFFICIENCY AND RESOURCE SHARING.

B7

3

B6

B5

CREW 1 BUILDS THE LARGER, OUTER BUILDINGS FIRST TO UTILIZE SITE SPACE IN THE MIDDLE FOR EQUIPMENT AND STORAGE. CREW 2 WORKS NORTH THROUGH THE SITE, FINISHING RESIDENT BUILDINGS BEFORE CONTINUING TO COMMUNITY AMENITIES. IT ALSO PROVIDES CONVENIENCES IN EQUIPMENT MOVEMENT AND STORAGE.

2.5 2

B4

1

B3

2

B2

3 B1

1

CREW 2 CREW 1


31


CLASSIFICATION SUBSTRUCTURE

ASSEMBLY NUMBER

DESCRIPTION

A10000000000 A101011000000 A101001101900 A101011103100 A10102106400 A10102102800 A10103100000 a10103101000 A10103200800 A10103201800 A10301200000 A10301202220 A20101102000 A20101102220 A20202200800 A20202202110

FOUNDATIONS STANDARD FOUNDATIONS STRIP FOOTINGS LOAD 14.8 KLF, 32” WIDE X 12” DEEP, REINFORCED SPREAD FOOTINGS 5’ SQ. X 12” DEEP, 2 SKF SOIL CAPACITY, 62K LOAD FOUNDATION UNDER-DRAIN UNDER-DRAIN, OUTSIDE ONLY, PVC, 4” DIAMETER FOUNDATION DAMPPROOFING DAMPPROOFING, BITUMINOUS, 1 COAT, 12’ HIGH SLAB ON GRADE

B10000000000 B10102011001 B1010203500 B10102160801 B10102161400 B10102660800 B10102660800 B10102661000 B10201020000

SUPERSTRUCTURE FLOOR CONSTRUCTION C,I.P. COLUMN- SQUARE TIED WOOD BEAMS 2X14 FLOOR CONSTRUCTION WOOD DECK DOUGLAS FIR ROOF CONSTRUCTION C.L.T. PREFABRICATED ROOF CONST., 6 IN EXTERIOR WALLS CONCRETE BLOCK WALL- LIGHTWEIGHT, NO FILL C.L.T. PREFABRICATED FLOOR CONST., 6 IN EXTERIOR WALLS C.L.T PREFABRICATED SHEAR WALLS, 6 IN PANEL, SHINGLE, & LAP SIDING CHARRED WOOD PANEL EXTERIOR WINDOWS WOOD DOUBLE HUNG STD. GLASS CURTAIN WALL PANELS

SHELL

B20101010000 B20101103250 B20101480000 B20101481350 B20101481450 B2020220000 B20201023000 B20202200050 B20202201000 B20301100000 B2030110076500 B203011008250 B20302305995 B20302306200 B30000000000 B30101250000 B30101051000 B30101051200 B30101052000 B30104300000 B30104300020 B30104300040 INTERIORS C10000000000 C101010200000

SLAB ON GRADE, 4” THICK, NON INDUSTRIAL, REINFORCED

BUILDING EXCAVATION & BACKFILL EXCAV. & FILL, 1000 S.F., 4’ SAND, GRAVEL, ON SITE STORAGE

SUBDRAINAGE PIPING 3” DIAMETER PIPING, PVC, PERFORATED

UNIT

MATERIAL INSTALL TOTAL

AMOUNT

COST

L.F.

17.78

25.8

43.58

2893

126,076.94

EA.

135.39

20.58

395.97

43

17,026.71

L.F.

3.67

5

8.67

2893

25,082.31

L.F.

2.54

14.24

16.78

2893

48,544.54

S.F.

1.85

2.76

4.61

41635

191,937.35

S.F.

1

1.04

1.04

84627

88,012.08

L.F.

1.47

4.1

5.57

2893

16,114.01

L.F.

3.93

6.48

10.41

2592

26,982.72

S.F.

5.28

3.59

8.87

26469

234,780.03

S.F.

27.26

14.86

42.12

21000

884,520.00

S.F. S.F.

2.49 27.26

6.49 14.86

8.98 42.12

34716 64300

311,749.68 2,708,316.00

S.F.

27.26

14.86

42.12

38300

1,613,196.00

S.F.

4.5

6.15

10.65

92102

980,886.30

EA

250.49

270.96

521.45

397

207,015.65

10.66

12.48

23.14

34932

808,326.48

OPNG. OPNG.

3596.45 1835.95

2624.93 6221.38 25 312.73 2148.68 70

155,534.50 150,407.60

OPNG.

2992.85

835.46

3828.31 17

65,081.27

S.F.

1.11

1.89

2.89

22647

65,449.83

L.F.

12.5

16.65

29.15

3906

113,859.90

GLAZING PANEL, INSULATING, 1/2” THICK, 2 LITES 1/8” FLOAT, CLEAR S.F.

EXTERIOR DOORS FULL VISION DBL DOOR HDWRE SLIDING PATIO ALUMINUM DOORS ALUM & FRBGLS OVERHEAD ROOFING ROOF COVERINGS BUILT-UP

ASPHALT FLOOD COAT W/ GRAVEL; NO INSUL,FLASH, NAILERS

4 PLIES #15 ASPHALT FELT, MOPPED, ON NAILABLE DECK ROOF COVERINGS FLASHING ALUMINUM INTERIOR CONSTRUCTION PARTITIONS


C10101265000 C10101265200 C101012800000 C10101280040 C10101280300 C10201140001 C10201140800 C102011410000 C10201200000 C10201200800 C10201201600 C10301100000 C10301100300 C10301100400 C10303100010 C10303100200 C10307100010 C10307100180 C10307100200 C2000000000 C20101100000 C20101100460 C20101100550 C20101101150 C3000000000 C3010230000 C30102300040 C30102300060 C30102300260 C30204100001 C30204100060

DRYWALL PARTITIONS/METAL STUD FRAMING 5/8” FR DRYWALL PARTITIONS DRYWALL COMPONENTS NON LOAD BEARING, 25 GAUGE, 1-5/8” INTERIOR DOORS METAL DOOR/METAL FRAME FLUSH-HOLLOW 20 GA. FULL PANEL INTERIOR DOORS WOOD DOOR/WOOD FRAME HOLLOW CORE/FLUSH 3’-7’ FITTINGS TOILET PARTITIONS PAINTED METAL STORAGE SPECIALTIES, EACH LOCKERS BATH AND TOILET ACCESSORIES, EACH TOWEL BAR

D10000000000 D101011000000 D10101101100 D10101101700 D20000000000 D201011000000 D20101101920 D20107101560 D20103101440 D2010310600 D20104100000 D20104101800 D20105101800 D20105102000 D20202500000 D2020501780 D20402100000 D20402107720 D20400101880 D3000000000 D30105100000 D30105302000 D30106301960 D303011000000

CONVEYING ELEVATORS AND LIFTS HYDRAULIC 2000 LB, 5 FLOORS, 100 FPM PLUMBING PLUMBING FIXTURES WATER CLOSET, FLOOR MOUNT SHOWER, STALL, 30” SQUARE LAVATORY SYSTEMS LAVATORY W/ TRIM, VANITY TOP, 20”X 18” KITCHEN SINK SYSTEMS 32” X 21”, DOUBLE BOWL BATHTUB SYSTEMS BATHTUB, RECESSED, 48” X 42” DOMESTIC WATER DISTRIBUTION 75.5 MBH INPUT, 63 GPH RAIN WATER DRAINAGE ROOF DRAIN SYSTEMS ROOF DRAIN, DWV PVC 2” DIAM. PIPING, 10” HIGH HVAC ENERGY SUPPLY

SERVICES

S.F.

2.34

8.99

11.31

175838

1,988,727.78

S.F.

0.21

0.76

0.97

175838

170,562.86

EA

1249.2

394.44

1643.64 156

256,407.84

EA

348.74

253.27

602.01

451

271,506.51

UNIT

588.17

287.53

875.7

12,259.80

EA.

178.01

48.27

226.28

14 . 162

EA.

47.89

24.91

72.8

5 20

364.00

FLIGHT FLIGHT

1119.08 2212.13

2430.4 477.48

3549.48 72 2689.61 60

255,562.56 161,376.60

S.F. S.F.

0.14 0.15

0.74 1.2

0.88 0.88

175838 4000

154,737.44 3,520.00

S.F.

3.7

0.7

4.4

41635

183,194.00

EACH

91492

47467

138959

3

416,877.00

EA. EA.

1538.73 1790

804.08 872.85

2342.81 217 2662.85 4

508,389.77 10,651.40

EA.

807.2

756.47

1563.67 211

329,934.37

EA.

877.83

894.01

1771.84 51

90,363.84

EA.

3455.83

941.62

4397.45 120

527,694.00

EA.

5019.78

1904.4

6924.18 58

401,602.44

EA.

269.4

714.15

983.55

35

34,424.25

S.F.

18.16

15.55

33.71

63104

2,127,235.84

TOILET TISSUE DISPENSER, SRFC MOUNTED, SINGLE ROLL

STAIRS STAIRS CONSTRUCTION STAIRS STAIRS, C.I.P. CONCRETE W/ LANDING, W/O NOSING WOOD PREFAB BOX TYPE, OAK TREADS, WOOD RAILS, 42” WIDE

INTERIOR FINISHES WALL FINISHES PAINT & COVERING PAINTING, PRIMER AND 2 COATS CABINETS AND CASEWORK, PRIMER 1 COAT FLOOR FINISHES CARPET TILE, NYLON

36,657.36

HEATING SYSTEMS, TERMINAL UNIT HEATERS, FORCED HOT WATER

100000 SF, FIVE FLOORS COOLING GENERATING SYSTEMS

33


D3031101120 D303011101240 D30402600000 D30402601010 D30402601020 D30516090000 D30501651320 D40000000000 D40103100500 D40103101080 D40103100220

CHILLED WATER, AIR COOLED CONDENSER SYSTEMS CHILLER AIR, W/ FAN COIL UNIT, APARTMENT CORRIDORS CONTROLS AND INSTRUMENTATION KITCHEN EXHAUST/MAKE UP AIR COMMERCIAL KITCHEN 3000 CFM COMPONENTS OF DUCTWORK, PER TON OF COOLING APARTMENT CORRIDORS, 500 SF .92 TON FIRE PROTECTION SPRINKLERS ORDINARY HAZARD, ONE FLOOR, 10000 SF EACH ADDITIONAL FLOOR

E10000000000 E10100000000 E10101100010 E10101100300 E10105100010 E1010510015 E10105100040 E10902100160 E10903500110 E10903500130 E10903500200 E10903500200 E109036000010 E10903600110 E10904100010 E10904100110 E10904100120 E10904100170 E10904100210

EQUIPMENT COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT SECURITY VAULT SAFE, OFFICE TYPE, 1 HR RATING MERCANTILE EQUIPMENT BARBER EQUIPMENT, ECONOMY SINK, HAIR WASHING BASIN FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT KITCHEN EQUIPMENT, BAKE OVEN, SINGLE DECK COMMERCIAL DISH WASHER, SEMI AUTOMATIC RANGE, BURNERS, 2 OVENS RANGE HOOD FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT REFRIGERATORS, PREFAB, WALK IN RESIDENTIAL EQUIPMENT RANGE, COOK TOP, 4 BURNER BUILT IN, SINGLE OVEN, 30” WIDE DISHWASHER, BUILT IN, ECONOMY REFRIGERATOR, NO FROST, 10-12 CF, ECONOMY

G10101220000 G10102214000 G1030105000 G1030105080 G10301051000 G10308050000 G10308051300 G10308051320 G20301500000 G20301500800 G20301503550 G20409200000 G20409200999 G20409207600 G25091000000 G20509100800 G20509101620 G40200110000 G40201102720

SITE CLEARING

S.F.

8.27

8.78

17.05

9582

163,373.10

E.A.

20785.4

10315.5

31100.9

3

93,302.70

S.F.

4.74

4.23

8.97

95802

859,343.94

S.F. S.F.

2.53 1.8

2.75 2.17

5.28 3.97

41635 98047

219,832.80 389,246.59

EA.

2570

2570

1

2,570.00

E.A. E.A.

549.95 503.72

23.76 86.77

573.71 590.49

9 9

5,163.39 5,314.41

E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A.

5705.4 8686.6 4831.6 5911

155.98 960.69 208.67 418.37

5861.38 9647.29 5040.27 6329.37

1 3 4 4

5,861.38 28,941.87 20,161.08 25,317.48

S.F.

174.76

20.66

195.42

2

390.84

E.A. E.A. E.A. E.A.

313.54 837.82 255.97 442.04

108.47 108.47 335.73 90.39

422.01 946.29 591.7 532.43

58 58 58 58

24,476.58 54,884.82 34,318.60 30,880.94

S.Y.

2.46

2.46

102858

253,030.68

GRAVEL CUT & FILL, 80 HP DOZER & ROLLER COMPACT, 2 PASSES C.Y.

5.04

5.04

714

3,598.56

SITE EARTHWORK TRENCHING COMMON EARTH TRENCHING, NO SLOPE, 3’ DEEP, 3/8: CY. BUCKET PEDESTRIAN PAVING BRICK & TILE PLAZAS

2.49

2.49

2893

7,203.57

7.99

43002

343,585.98

EQUIPMENT

BUILDING SITE WORK STRIP TOP SOIL & STOCKPILE 6” DEEP, 200’; HAUL, BY DOZER

SITE EARTHWORK CUT & FILL GRAVEL

CONCRETE PAVING STONE, GRAVEL BASE, SAND BEDDING

SITE DEVELOPMENT SWIMMING POOLS CONCRETE WALLS, TILE FINISH, 60’X 82.5’ LANDSCAPING TREE PITS 8’-10’ TREE, DECIDUOUS, 2.5’X2.5’ PIT, CLAY SOIL SITE LIGHTING STEEL POLE, 20’ HIGH

CONSTRUCTION TOTAL GENERAL CONDITIONS 1050101040

PERMIT FEES (.3%) INSURANCE (1.25%) PROJECT SUPERINTENDENT

L.F. S.F.

4.02

3.97

E.A.

275913

236012.5 511925.5 1

E.A.

60.85

98.81

159.66

10

1,596.60

E.A.

1765.1

1413.88

3178.98

50

158,949.00 20,024,219.97

0.003 0.0125 120,000

158,949.00

476.85

% % YEAR

511,925.50

20,024,219.97 250,302.75

1.4

168000


1050101040 1050101120 1570101040 1570101120 1500101120 1500102040 1500102120 1500102120

CONSTR. + G.C. TOTAL CONTINGENCY FINAL TOTAL COST/SF ALTERNATES

GENERAL CONTINGENCY

B30101251000 B30101256000 B30101251400 EXCLUSIONS

GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT PROJECT ENGINEER TEMP CONST. SIGNS (2’X4’) TEMP CONST. SIGNS (4’X8’) TEMP. FENCING TRAILER (OFFICE USE) TRAILER DELIVERY/PICK UP CREW CHANGE TRAILER STORAGE SPACE TRAILER AND STORAGE DELIVERY/PICK UP TRASH CHUTES (3 @ 300/MONTH) CHUTE SET-UP AND BREAK DOWN TRASH DISPOSAL CONTAINER TRASH DISPOSAL TRIPS (4 @ 400/MONTH) PORTABLE TOILETS (3@200/MONTH) TELEPHONE/CABLE ELECTRICITY (BEFORE CLOSURE COMPLETE) ELECTRICITY (AFTER CLOSURE COMPLETE) CLEANUP (8 TIMES @ 0.10/SF) FINAL CLEANUP

YEAR YEAR EACH EACH L.F MONTH

110000 100000 78 175

MONTH MONTH MONTH MONTH MONTH MONTH S.F. S.F.

500 400 130 130 200 900 100 600 1600 600 400 1000 2500 0.8 0.15

1.4 1.4 6 4 8 16 1 16 16 1 16 1 16 16 16 16 16 16 84627 84627

%

20,954,923.22

0.025

10.52

38304

INSTANCE

MONTH MONTH INSTANCE

MONTH INSTANCE

GREEN ROOF GREEN ROOF, WD EDGING, SOIL, SEDUM PLANTS, 6 STRS. S.F. 4” SOIL

6.25

4.27

154000 140000 468 700 1900 8000 400 2080 2080 200 14400 100 9600 25600 9600 6400 16000 40000 67,701.60 12,694.05 20,954,923.22 523,873.08 21,478,796.30 118.87

402,958.08

ESTIMATE DOES NOT INCLUDE DEMO OF EXISTING SITE, FURNISHINGS, SITE FIXTURES, ALL ELECTRICAL EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR WIRING, AND CORRESPONDING RECEPTACLES. UTILITY HOOK UP AND INSTALL TO BE PROVIDED FOR ADDITIONAL SERVICE.

by eliminating concrete as a main structural element, the project Is able to save cost on forms, labor, and cast-in-place materials, yielding a net difference of over 6 million dollars, or about 28% of the total construction budget USING cross laminated timber.

*rs means online and smartwoods manufacturer were used to calculate the cost estimate. 35


MUSEO DE TANGO EXHIBIT AND DANCE HALL


37


+

embraced

+

hooked

opened

forms create access

subtlety yields clarity

concepts

folds define space

principles


1

+

2

+

+

3

4

=

TOTAL

CONCEPTO MASSING

estrategia 1

X H I B I T I O

R A C E

EXHIBITION

GALLERY CIRCULATE HISTORY OF TANGO ARTI 100-200m2 FACTS DISP LAY CASES CONTEMPORARY 50m2 EVOLUTION CULTURAL 1350-1500m2 ADAPTATIONS VERTICAL CIRC ULATION CORE MAIN CELEBRAT TORY SPACE STAIR OVERL0OK FAMOUS DANCERS TEMPORARY EXHIBITS INTERACTIVITIES T E MUSEUM PROGRAM SEPERATED FUNC MULTI-PURPOSE TIONS TICKET THEATRE COUNTER LOBBY RANT BOOK S U DANCE PRIVATE FUNCTION ENTRANCE AGIFTS BOOKS TOR E EXHIBIT PUBLIC GATHER city TAPES CDS OFFICE ADM beacon IN TEACH LEARN SEE SHOW CAFE TABLES SEATING

50-100m2

R

cafe admin.

N

700-1200 m2

L O N G A M I

E

C

milonga LIBRARY

RE S T

E P UBLI

O

MOR

RE P R I V A T M

1

P

R

O G R A M P R

O G R A M

2

E

estrategia 2

total

PROGRAM

39


+

column/beam

+

slab

=

shell

total

STRUCTURE

+

ENTRY

CIRCULATION

+

stair

=

elevator

total


the fluid concrete form creates a perforated cover from the building’s interior and outlines the east and west glass facades, which allow daylight into the building at morning and evening. the tower volume sits to the south, preventing shadows from casting onto the public terrace below, as sun angles shine from the north in the southern hemisphere.

site plan

41


1 MUSEUM ENTRANCE 2 MILONGA ENTRANCE 26.1m

3 CAFE ENTRANCE 4 MILONGA 5 BOOKSTORE

7 TEMPORARY GALLERY

14.2m

12.5m

7.4m

6 RECEPTION/ADMIN..

8

2.0m

8 PATIO

1

FFE +0.0M

9 TERRACE 10 STAGE

UP

28.0m

FFE +0.0M

1

5

5.5m

7

10.4m

5 a-a

FFE +0.0M

4

28.0m

5.5m

6

4

FFE +0.0M

3

5.5m

17.6m

2

FFE +0.0M

5.5m

UP

11 EXHIBITION

14.9m 41.5m

24.1m

FFE +0.0M

c-c 3

b-b

first floor

2.2m

6

5.0m

FFE +0.0M

2


second floor .5M

5.7M

6

6

5

10.4M

5

10.4m

7.4m

22.4m

4

21.8M

4

5.5m

28.0M

28.0M

28.0m

11

2.4M

2.2m

8.5m

6.4m

FFE +0.0M

FFE +5.0M

5.5m

9

8.6M

41.5m

17.7m

6.5m

5.0m

10 3

3

13.5m

5.5m

17.6M

17.6m

2

FFE +32.5M

2

UP

FFE +10.0M UP

6.2M

4.0m FFE +10.0M

FFE +8.0M

5.7m

5.5m

11

typical floor

43

1

1

15.5m

2.5M

6.1M

24.6m

13.5m

9.0m

15.2m

3.6m

8.6M

40.2m


a public terrace is accessible from the street and used as both an urban escape from below and an impromptu concert stage. the eastern facade reveals the form of its building with a glass and louver system outlined by the building’s two volumes.

ROOF +37.5 M

7TH +32.5 M

6TH +28.0 M

3RD +10.0 M

2ND +5.0 M

1ST +0.0 M

41.4 M

elevation

SAM FOX SCHOOL OF DESIGN AND VISUAL ARTS

4TH +15.0 M

KEVIN MARINO

37.5 M

museo del tango SAN TELMO. BUENOS AIRES

5TH +23.0 M

fachada oeste Esc. 1:100

08


WOOD piso deFLOORING madera sub piso SUBSTRATE

CONCRETE BEAM AND FLOOR viga y piso de concreto barras de refuerzo (tip) REBAR (TYP.)

0.22m

the building section distinguishes spatial relationships between the milonga, stair, and museum. the structure is exposed to the interior of both volumes, and a suspended ceiling in the tower supports additional lighting for the exhibition spaces.

HVAC UNIT hvac unidad

1.0m

T5 FLUORESCENT T5 luz fluorescente techo suspendidio SUSPENDED TILE 0.1m

0.4m

d-02 exhibition floor assembly

SKYLIGHT 0.22m GUARD RAIL SMOOTH SURFACE STONE WATERPROOF MEMBRANE RIGID INSULATION 1.0m

0.4 m

CONCRETE BEAM

1.2m

0.1m

d-02 0.5m

1.1m

0.4m

1.0m 0.3m

37.5 M

SMOOTH SURFACE STONE HVAC UNIT SUN CANOPY STORE FRONT WINDOW WINDOW JAMB WATER MEMBRANE DRAINAGE TUBE RIGID INSULATION REBAR (TYP.) CONCRETE SLAB 41.4 M

section

b-b

d-01

exterior wall assembly at

foundation

45

0


1

2

3

4

5

6

28.0 M

ROOF +37.5 M

7TH +32.5 M

6TH +28.0 M

5TH +23.0 M

37.5 M

4TH +15.0 M

3RD +10.0 M

2ND +5.0 M

1ST +0.0 M

d-01 1

section

2

b-b

3

4

5

6


47



49



51


SOCIAL (FOREST) PARK

COMMUNITY GARAGE AND MARKET


53


exploring forms of continuous motion, the car park forms a sinuous circle around a public green space that utilizes the volume and position of vehicles to illuminate its event centerpiece.

pulling its landscape underneath and into its center, the project draws visitors up into its space along a ground level perimeter market. three means of vertical circulation act as microcosmic systems of the larger circle, creating a small stage around its opening, in which people may gather.

CONCEPTS


3

1

2

CONCEPT

CIRCULATION

ACCESS

MARKET

55


the site sits along highway 64/40 within forest park. an existing road feeds into the vehicular entry and a bike path passes by the south pedestrian entrance.

vehicle entrance

1

pedestrian entrance

2

market

3

bathroom

4

circulation

5

1 0’

5

0’

-.2’

a

a-

5

.4’

b

2

b-

4

2 13’ 13’ 13.2’

4

3

5 13’ 13’

100

site plan

first floor

50

25

5

0


25’

25’

25.1’

25.1’

5

5 25’

25’

25’

25’

25.1’

25.1’ 25’

5

25’

5

13’

13’

37’ 13’

13’

13.2’

13.2’

5

5 13’

13’ 13’

100 100

50

second floor

25

5

50

25

5

0

0

third floor

57


angled parking spaces sit behind a porous wall that filters light from the car onto the site below. stadium seating provides a dedicated viewing platform for dwellers as they watch performances from above.

section of vehicular seating 20

10

2

100

50

25

0

5

0

section b-b

100

section a-a

50

25

5

0


59



61


INTERACTIVE REFLECTIONS

DIGITAL MUSEUM AND DATA CENTER RE-USE


63


creating a dialogue kit-of-parts is the central idea behind the brewery’s re-use. the relationship of the person to its art, the existing to the new, and the interior to its exterior dictates space formation throughout the building.

VIRTUAL/ PHYSICAL

U S

INTERIOR/ EXTERIOR

WITHIN/ WITHOUT

X

E R DIALOGUE THROUGH

2

3

4

ART & MATERIAL (1)

CIRCULATION

OLD/NEW

1

(2)

PROGRAM & TRANSPARENCY

(3)

ACCESS & MOVEMENT

(4)

Y

principles


entry 1

a

c

d

g

f

h

i

j

a-a

reception/lobby 2 shop 3

a-a

live/work 4 storage 5

1

data center 6 retail 7

2

7 3

7

7

7

4

7 5

7 6

+6.5’

1

1

7

2 3 8

+0’

3

9

4

10

6 b-b

b-b

4

5

11

3

b

e

first floor

65


a

c

d

f

g

h

i

j

the main program in the silos feature two artist live-in units, a data center, and digital gallery, the building adjacent to the silos provides leasable retail space on the ground level and a third story bridge connection to a private event space for the museum..

1

2

3

4

5

+ 21’ 6

7

7

7

8

8

8

+ 33’

+ 18’

9

+ 89’

9

+ 16’

9

+ 39’

+ 23’ 10

10

10

+ 28’

11

11

11

+ 16’

b

second floor

e

b

typical floor

e

b

penthouse floor

e


corridor light study

a HANGING glass volume attaches to the silo exterior, PRESERVING the building’s historical form AND creating a flow of circulation visible to the outside. the diffused glass REVEALS a moving transparency of blurry OBJECTS during the day and projects A SCATTERED PATTERN OF light from within THE silo walls at night.

7

8

9

10

11

7TH 0’

6TH 89’

5TH

69’

4TH

51’

3RD

33’

2ND

+18’

1ST

+0’

SUB -25’

section a-a

67


heat build-up FROM within the data center exhausts through openings in the silo floors, WHICH EXIT outside VIA hatches on the roof. fresh air DRAWS INTO THE circulation volume FROM below AND HELPS COOL THE SPACE DURING THERMALLY APPROPRIATE TIMES, PUSHING WARMER AIR OUT..

7TH 119’

b

e

6TH 89’

5TH

69’

4TH

51’

d-01

3RD

33’

2ND

+18’

1ST

+0’

SUB -25’

d-01 corridor at silo wall assembly

section b-b


69



71


PATTERNED CONNECTIONS MODULAR URBAN HOUSING


73


building off OF a single unit, the modular pattern repeats itself, easily accommodating future growth north of the site where ADDITIONAL urban voids exist. circulation through And perpendicular TO the courts encourage cross interaction among residents on all three floors. recesses in the facade delineate A CHANGE IN material and highlight social access NODES on each level.

1

2

3

4

5

continuous repeated form

circulatory and climatic flow

principles

layered solid/void relationship


site plan

75


retail 1 live/work units 2

3

3

3

3

social pods 3

second floor

b-b

site sf: 30,000 building sf: 16,100 unit total: 48 studio- 11 1

live/work- 06 one bed- 12 two bed- 15 retail- 04 a-a

2

2

first floor

2

1

2

1

2

1

2


AN ACCENT WALL BISECTS THE UNIT FROM ITS RETAIL SPACE, CREATING A TRANSPARENT BUFFER ALONG THE TWO STORY SPACE.

unit plans upper level

live/work unit model

third floor units include dedicated outdoor patio and lawn areas, as well as 360 degree views to maximize interior sun and wind exposure. additional terraceS provide resident access to the roof.

3

unit plans

lower level

3

third floor

77


ROOF +33’-0”

3RD FL +23’-0”

2ND FL +13’-0”

1ST FL +0’-0”

south elevation

section a-a

west elevation

east elevation

north elevation


79



81


WASHINGTON GATEWAY MIXED-USE HOUSING AND HOTEL


83


an underground garage joins the site’s apartment, hotel, retail, and office towers BELOW GRADE. the apartment and hotel IS separated by an expansion joint at the inside corner of the building’s “t” shaped form, though connections remain at the ground level and sixteenth floor pool deck. residential

hotel

office towers by other

site plan with first floor


LIVING / DINING 11'-3''x 17'-0'' A01 548SF

BEDROOM 8'-11''x9'-11'' KITCHEN

WIC AHU L. BATH W/D

hotel unit one bedroom

typical floor

S01 467 GSF

residential unit one bedroom

second floor

85



87


PNC-NET ZERO FLAGSHIP SUSTAINABLE RETAIL BANK


89


Site Location:

brand

City of Weston, Florida

Gensler April 2010

100% ASHRAE 90.1-2004 BASELINE

adapt

Welcome to PNC Bank Branch & Drive-Thru Hours Mon-Fri 8am-6pm Sat 9am- 5pm

Exterior Elevation - Drive-Thru Side

utilize

©2010 Gensler

Site Location:

PROTOTYPE PNC

the building achieves its netzero energy status by reducing its ashrae baseline STANDARDS by fifty percent and matching that amount with fifty percent on-site renewable resources.

City of Weston, Florida

Gensler April 2010

Site Location:

Exterior Elevation - Front Side ©2010 Gensler

City of Weston, Florida

Gensler April 2010

Exterior Elevation - Office Side ©2010 Gensler

Welcome to PNC Bank Branch & Drive-Thru Hours Mon-Fri 8am-6pm Sat 9am- 5pm

Site Location:

City of Weston, Florida

PNC NORTHEAST SIGNATURE

northeast branch

Gensler April 2010

PNC FLORIDA SIGNATURE

Exterior Elevation - Office Side

southeast branch

©2010 Gensler

Gensler

branding adaptation

the project’s roof slopes down its facade and forms a canopy that reaches out to the parking surface beyond and provides shaded cover to its visitors, the system also acts as a display for the photovoltaic panels installed above the walkway.

NERGY REDUCTI ON %E 50

50%

©2010 Gensler

Gensler

PNC NETZERO

East Exterior Elevation - Entranc

Gensler

NORTHEAST REGION SIGNATURE BRANCH

60 kw solar array

indirect lighting

OF ASHRAE 90.1-2004 BASELINE

net-zero

East Exterior Elevation - Entrance at Sidewalk

led lighting system shading

high efficiency it systems re-engineered thermal envelope

integrated glass unit thermally optimized curtain wall led signage

50 %

E IT energy strategy

Y RENEWABLE ERG ON EN -S

0.0% OF ASHRAE 90.1-2004 BASELINE

ultra efficient hvac rainwater recovery for passive irrigation

building technology


photo by turner construction

ENVIRONMENTALLY DRIVEN KINETIC SCULPTURE

PHOTOVOLTAICS DIFFUSED DAYLIGHTING

BUILDING PERFORMANCE DEMONSTRATION

RAINWATER HARVESTING/ SOLAR THERMAN POTENTIAL

ENERGY RECOVERY UNIT

LED LIGHTING

VEGETATIVE EDUCATIONAL WALL

ALTERNATIVE TRANSPORTATION AMENITIES PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AMENITIES

ULTRA-EFFICIENT IT SYSTEMS

LOW FLOW FIXTURES section diagram

91



93


ARTISTIC DEMONSTRATIONS FURNITURE, DRAWING, AND PHOTOGRAPHY


95


FINALIZING THE FINISH

FORMING INTO PLACE

ALVAR AALTO CHAIR 42 HEAT TREATING WOOD


section diagram

97



99


LEt’s talk kevin.marino1@gmail.com +1.717.648.0870 @kevinmmarino 46 hawthorne drive hershey pa, 17033


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