Katerina Paletykina portfolio

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KATERINA PALETYKINA DESIGN PORTFOLIO


Katerina Paletykina Texas Tech University College of Architecture Bachelor of Science in Architecture 2012 kpaletyk@gmail.com 3213 Ridgelake Ln Plano TX 75074 214.460.3709


SLIPSTUDIO Professor Daniel Pruske

DETROIT RIVER FRONT Design Intern for Haecceitas Studio

HOUSTON INTERNATIONAL PROMENADE Professor Anton Sinkewich

WATER SPORTS PAVILION Professor Dustin White

SYMBIOSIS Professor Jeffrey Nesbit and Kuhn Park

TERRITORIAL COMPLEXITIES Professor Jeffrey Nesbit


SLIPSTUDIO 4


5 | Design Portfolio


SLIPSTUDIO RESTAURANT

BAR

BUSINESS

Professor Daniel Pruske

CO

NS

IS

TE

MULTI-USE

programmatic space that encompasses: an

FOOD TRUCKS

SLIPSTUDIO is a multi-layered NT

IN

urban climbing wall facility. The complex

GOVERNMENT HOUSING

HOTEL

advertising agency, loft living units and an CO NS IS TE NT

PARKING

programmatic needs generate a diverse

EMPTY

environment within the architecture that merges different programmatic events and interactions.

BUILDING TOPOLOGY

CONSISTENT | INCONSISTENT

SLIPSTUDIO is located on the intersection of 6th Street and I-35 in Austin, Texas. I-35 acts as a hard edge condition that clearly separates Austin to the west from the east economic urban conditions. The newly proposed sculpture

METRO BUS

becomes a blurring agent that connects 6th

TRANSIT CONDITIONS

E and 6th W street. This urban intervention creates a conversational opportunity between the two sides and sparks a connection point between

TRAILS DEDICATED LANES BICYCLE FRIENDLY ROADS

these two urban conditions. N LAMAR BLVD

BICYCLING CONDITIONS

The design strategy formulates directly from N

C

O

N

G

R

E

S

S

A

V

E

the site conditions and the project’s contextual

I T S R

E

D

R

I

V

T

E

R

R

I

N

S

I

A

of bringing 6th St W circulation into the site

T

N

Y

J

S

A

T

C

I

N

T

O

B

L

V

D

L

A

V

A

G

C

U

A

A

D

S

A

T

L

U

P

3

E

5

S

T

and programmatic immediacies. The concept becomes the primary driving force to resolve programmatic and contextual agendas. The

H

4T

site becomes a portal and an extension of

H

ST

7T

H

ST

6T

PRIMARY ST

H

5T ST

urban fabric that creates a link between two

SECONDARY

PRIMARY|SECONDARY ROAD CONDITIONS

distinct street conditions of 6th St. W and 6th St. E. The programmatic systems then become intersecting formal strategies that create a unique interrelation between programmatic spaces. The composition of the programmatic BUILDING DENSITY

spaces provides spatially diverse environments with both composed and chance interactions.

AUSTIN MAP

CONTEXT ANALYSIS 6


MASSING|PROGRAM BREAKDOWN

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

G 8 12

9

10

F

11

cork flooring 6

6

2

7

projection screen

E UP

11 6

5

D

1 4

5

8

C 2" topping slab with control joints 2" polycarbonate wall system

media wall 14 gauge stainless steel panel

3

2

2'x1' reinforced concrete column

UP

B

UP

3

A

1.SLIPSTUDIO reception desk 2.gallery hallway 3. staff office 4. administrative office 5. executive suites 6. conference room 7. viewing projection room 8. storage 9.lounge|break room 10. computer lab _ art|material library 11.creative design office 12.genetors closet 13. urban plaza 14.urban climbing entry 15. climbing wall 16. urban lobby|rest area

FLOOR PLAN| 01

7 | Design Portfolio

0’

25’

50’

75’


02

03

04

05

06

07

08

UP

01

14

G

13

F

15

E

D

16

C

UP

B

A

1.SLIPSTUDIO reception desk 2.gallery hallway 3. staff office 4. administrative office 5. executive suites 6. conference room 7. viewing projection room 8. storage 9.lounge|break room 10. computer lab _ art|material library 11.creative design office 12.genetors closet 13. urban plaza 14.urban climbing entry 15. climbing wall 16. urban lobby|rest area

FLOOR PLAN | 02

0’

02

03

04

05

06

50’

07

75’

08

UP

01

25’

G

13

F

15

E

D

C

16

UP

B

A

1.SLIPSTUDIO reception desk 2.gallery hallway 3. staff office 4. administrative office 5. executive suites 6. conference room 7. viewing projection room 8. storage 9.lounge|break room 10. computer lab _ art|material library 11.creative design office 12.genetors closet 13. urban plaza 14.urban climbing entry 15. climbing wall 16. urban lobby|rest area

FLOOR PLAN | 03 8

0’

25’

50’

75’


02

03

04

05

06

07

08

UP

01

G

13

15

F

16

E

D

C

UP

B

A

1.SLIPSTUDIO reception desk 2.gallery hallway 3. staff office 4. administrative office 5. executive suites 6. conference room 7. viewing projection room 8. storage 9.lounge|break room 10. computer lab _ art|material library 11.creative design office 12.genetors closet 13. urban plaza 14.urban climbing entry 15. climbing wall 16. urban lobby|rest area

FLOOR PLAN | 04

0’

01

02

03

21'-0"

04

19'-0"

05

19'-0"

19'-0"

25’

06

19'-0"

07

10'-0"

50’

75’

08

21'-0"

15'-0"

G

4'-0"

20'-0" F

30'-0"

8'-6"

20'-0"

8'-6"

9'-4"

8'-0"

5'-0"

8'-7"

8'-4"

E

15'-6"

UP

15'-6"

D

30'-0"

C

B

14'-0"

UP

0’

25’

50’

75’

TYPICAL PARKING GARAGE 9 | Design Portfolio


01

1.light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2” 2. tapered rigid insulation 3. site cast concrete slab - 9” 4. structural steel beam member 5. 14 gauge stainless steel panel 6. site cast concrete column beyond - 2’x1’ 7. double panned glass 8. store front windows 9. site cast concrete two-way slab with drop panel 10. light fixture 11. topping concrete slab - 2” 12. rigid insulation 13. polycarbonate wall system 14. suspended ceiling

SECTION CUT 10

0’

10’

20’

30’

40’


03

02

05

04

06

07

08

2

57’-0”

D.01

14

1

6

LOFTS 11-15

3 42’-4”

LEVEL

D.02 5

7

1 5 14

11 12

LOFTS 6-10

3

LEVEL

4

5

28’-4”

9

URBAN CLIMBING

7

LOFTS 1-5

3

14’-4”

D.03

8

marketing public service

13

5 13

1

print broadcast

SLIPSTUDIO advertising

informercial billboard

6

D.06

6

D.05

D.04

11 12

10

0’-0”

LEVEL -10’-8”

LEVEL

9

-20’-0”

LEVEL -29’-4”

11 | Design Portfolio


14 gauge stainless steel panel connection bolt support clips and channels double paned glass aluminum mullion water proofing

DETAIL 02

14 gauge stainless steel panel continuous snap cover support clips and channels sheathing rigid insulation light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2” hanger wire

light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2”

cold rolled channel gypsum board

base flashing with roofing membrane DETAIL 03 store front window

tapered rigid insulation

topping concrete slab- 2” steel angle rigid insulation - 2” water proofing

site cast concrete slab - 9” site cast concrete two-way slab

structural steel beam member

drop panel

14 gauge stainless steel panel

site cast concrete column beyond - 2’x1’

sheathing continuous snap cover

DETAIL 04

site cast concrete column beyond - 2’x1’

light fixture polycarbonate wall system topping concrete slab- 2”

DETAIL 05

rigid insulation - 2” water proofing site cast concrete two-way slab

14 gauge stainless steel panel light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2” support clips and channels light fixture sheathing light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2”

DETAIL 01

topping concrete slab- 2” water proofing rigid insulation - 2”

site cast concrete column beyond - 2’x1’

structural steel beam member sheathing 14 gauge stainless steel panel connection bolt support clips and channels

DETAIL 06

water proofing site cast concrete two-way slab

double paned glass aluminum mullion water proofing

DETAIL 02

01. double panned glass 02. aluminum mullion 14 gauge stainless steel panel continuous snap cover support clips and channels sheathing rigid insulation light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2” hanger wire cold rolled channel gypsum board

03. light gauge steel framing - 2 1/2” 04. secondary structural system structural steel beam member 05. primary structural system site cast concrete column - 2’x1’ 06. connection bolts 07. support clips and channels 08. sheathing with water proofing

DETAIL 03

09. 14 gauge stainless steel panel store front window topping concrete slab- 2” steel angle rigid insulation - 2” water proofing

12

site cast concrete two-way slab drop panel site cast concrete column beyond - 2’x1’

10. continuous snap cover EXPLODED ISOMETRIC | FACADE


01 02

08 06|07 09 10

03 04 05

06 07

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14


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DETROIT RIVER FRONT 16


17 | Design Portfolio


DETROIT RIVER FRONT Design Intern for Haecceitas Studio Remembering to Forget This proposal is organized within a theoretical premise, which addresses the notorious voids of the City of Detroit. The urban fabric of the city is clearly populated by a multiplicity of independent fragments stitched between voids of synthetic surfaces such as parking lots, abandoned structures, new largescale autonomous developments, and residual milieus. By borrowing terminology from Lars Lerup, the “holey plane” condition of Detroit can be valued not as an issue requiring a series

Remembering to forget the fragmentations of urban organizing patterns, the voids remind citizens of Detroit and park visitors to forget the negative implications of a broken past. The performance of the Riverfront will continue to provide multivalent opportunities and flexible event, space-making outcomes.

of monumental infill development projects but rather as an opportunity of core and periphery strategies as well as enhancing connectivity. Two fundamental characteristics of site behavior are present; first, the site is not a terminus, and secondly the events on and off the plaza are unmistakably disjointed. By responsibly recognizing the Detroit Riverfront systems, the analysis strategically identifies a series of voids and existing circulation paths. Performing more as a filter of information, the proposal allows for the circulation to continue through the site and into disparate urban moments. voids

Through processes of exchange, the primary

path manipulation (by void)

paths, as tissues of connection, are intensely manipulated in order to allow for the voids to operate as independent environments. These isolated uninterrupted voids now can ‘breathe’ as local ecology emerges and oscillates pattern recognition

throughout the seasons of the year. The void has been maintained as an isolated condition but now within an active fluctuating evolution.

ORDERING SYSTEMS 18

thickening of path


SITE PLAN 19 | Design Portfolio


20


21 | Design Portfolio


HOUSTON INTERNATIONAL PROMENADE 22


23 | Design Portfolio


HOUSTON INTERNATIONAL PROMENADE Professor Anton Sinkewich The Houston International Promenade is an opportunistic revitalization project for the East Downtown district. The Promenade acts as a strong visual axis for the new community and has the potential to become a new iconic image to the visitors. The design strategy recognizes the strong linear component of the program and the need to create flexibility within the designed space. BBVA Stadium is the threshold to the promenade and it holds a strong iconic image for the district. Carrying the same design language as the stadium, the Promenade focuses on geometry and creating a strong character for the space. Geometrical forms are used to define the path and the nodes for the proposed programmatic spaces. The proposed geometry breaks the linear axis of the promenade and develops a flexible nonlinear path. The highly active zones are placed on the end of the promenade to create a constant pedestrian flow in order to activate the space. In addition, new mixed-use and residential developments are proposed to recognize the future possibilities for the adjacent city blocks. Houston International Promenade is a continuation towards developing and defining an image for the East Downtown district that concentrates on present and future needs.

Design influence were used to establish the design language and elements that would be implemented within the promenade.

24


ALLAS ST

PROPOSED MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT

2

5 1

FLEXIBLE PUBLIC SPACE

B-CYCLE STATION

3 4 2

A

Promenade Site Plan | Zoomed Design features that are implemented within the Promenade 1. 2. 3.

distinctive form vibrant ecology shade canopy

4. 5.

water feature integrated sitting

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

COMMUNITY GARDEN

MMUNITY GARDEN CHILDREN PLAYGROUND

3

1 VOLLEYBALL COURT

4

VOLLEYBALL COURT

2 WATER FOUNTAIN

6

5

5

Promenade Site Plan | Zoomed Programmatic features that are implemented within the Promenade 1. 2. 3.

6

community garden shade canopy children’s playground

4. 5. 6.

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

water feature for children dog park volleyball court

A’

25 | Design Portfolio


PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

A

COMMUNITY GARDEN

COMMUNITY GARDEN

WATER FEATURE

PROPOSED MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT

CHILDREN PLAYGROUND VOLLEYBALL COURT

VOLLEYBALL COURT

WATER FOUNTAIN

BASTROP ST

FLEXIBLE PUBLIC SPACE B-CYCLE

B-CYCLE STATION

DOG PARK ENTRANCE SMALL DOG

LARGE DOG

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

A’

26

DALLAS ST

POLK ST

BELL ST

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES


PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

B

PROPOSED TOWNHOUSES

WALKER ST

MCKINNEY ST

LAMAR ST

PROPOSED MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT

TOWARDS BBVA COMPASS STADIUM

FLEXIBLE PUBLIC SPACE

PERFORMANCE STAGE

FRANCISCO’S STUDIOS

B’

N

SCALE 1”=25’ 0’

27 | Design Portfolio

25’

50’

100’


WATER SPORTS PAVILION 28


29 | Design Portfolio


WATER SPORTS PAVILION Professor Dustin White new circulation

WATER SPORTS PAVILION is enclosed in a

push

new vegetation

semi-rural site located by Lake Lewisville outside

new entrance push

of Dallas, Texas. Unique contextual conditions

re-active zone push

and the location of the site regulate the design

active

agenda and approaches. push

new vegetation

active

Site conditions and the basis of human skin were the design drivers for the WATER

push

active

SPORTS PAVILION. The site provided the basis of the push/pull condition, in the same relation to flexibility of the human skin which can be pushed or pulled elastically. The ground plane of the site revealed a fold within its water edge, which became an extension into the water with the placement of the programmatic space. The

pore

new vegetation

pore

new circulation pore

augmented ground plane became the canopy

pore

system which unites the site landscape condition to the programmatic space.

pore bulge

program bulge

extension

The concept of pore, its function to the relation of skin and how it defines the geometry of the skin surface, became the designing principle and influence for the development

CONTEXT ANALYSIS

of the program space. Pore became a spatially defining node that regulated the placement of pores or openings in relation to the

pore opening

structural frame

programmatic spaces. The pore within the canopy system began to define social places and the spatial conditions within the designed space. Pores develop into the ground and water treatment that defines a new planted ecology to the waterscape, which once again unites the site

pore geometry

with the programmatic space.

surface topology

canopy structure

DESIGN STRATEGY 30


SITE PLAN 31 | Design Portfolio


1

2

7

3

6

4 5

8

EXPLODED STRUCTURAL SYSTEM 32


AXONOMETRIC 33 | Design Portfolio


34


35 | Design Portfolio


SYMBIOSIS 36


37 | Design Portfolio


SYMBIOSIS Professor Jeffrey Nesbit and Kuhn Park Professor Jeffrey Nesbit and Kuhn Park Collaboration project with Savanah Dunaway and Allie Stobart during 5 week stay in Seoul, South Korea. Haptic registration and vigorous contextual analysis of Seoul city urban fabric was the generative factor of the architectural ideas. The inquiries from the field measure translate into analytical studies of composition, form, sectional and spatial qualities. The learned qualities are then applied to the design of the public, in-

PUBLIC SPACE GARDENS/PARKS/VEGETATION 100m

N 50m

200m

between space which is a much more responsive and responsible design approach. The investigation of threshold, public spaces and textures of Seoul was the ordering system for the analysis. The findings were later translated into a conversation between these three elements and how they emerge as an architectural design language. “Parasitic Texture” became the investigative idea that established a conversation about how to create public|private sectors and thresholds in the design of public space. PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION

The parasite generates a secondary texture

100m

N 50m

200m

which begins to condition the host site. The strips show the symbiotic control over the program, but also reveal the dependency on the host. The parasitic texture begins to blur the boundary between the city and site while also obscuring the distinction between place and path.

The larger roads create a boundary that defines neighborhoods and the smaller streets become the primary path to the site which is located towards the center of the barriers.

HIERARCHY OF STREETS 100m

N 50m

38

200m


PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION 100m

N 50m

200m

The larger roads create a boundary that defines neighborhoods and the smaller streets become the primary path to the site which is located towards the center of the barriers.

HIERARCHY OF STREETS 100m

N 50m

200m

SITE ACCESS

CONTEXT ANALYSIS

10m

N 5m

20m

39 | Design Portfolio


t1 t2

madang

threshold

1. existing

texture

2. new texture

3. insert program

4. extend into site

Design strategies investigation in relation to the design agenda, where madang, threshold, and texture become main driving forces. Madang - traditional Korean inner court.

D1 MESH

D2 WOOD

VEGETATION

GRAVEL

place

maru path

40

madang


A B

Cold Noodle & Bakery kitchenette bathrooms

covered seating

maru playground

garden

madang

C’

vegetation

vegetation outdoor seating

bike racks

C A’

B’

N 0m

2m

4m

8m

SITE PLAN

41 | Design Portfolio


42


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TERRITORIAL COMPLEXITIES 44


45 | Design Portfolio


TERRITORIAL COMPLEXITIES Professor Jeffrey Nesbit TERRITORIAL COMPLEXITIES is a research project that focuses vigorously on the investigation of site specific contextual systems. These investigation focus on the field conditions, mapping, data extraction, patter recognition and conceptual idea development. Ransom Canyon Lake in Lubbock ,Texas was used to investigate complex field conditions that would create self-generating architectural constructs and agendas. The ecological interpretive center is based on extraction of information and conditions from the existing site influences. The revealed information defines organizing principles and determines potential for orientation, location, and circulation patterns. Upon development of the program, formal articulations engage from the same ‘field’ conditions of the constructed landscape.

DIGITAL PAINTING

MODEL ITERATIONS 46


glass solid panel glass solid panel mesh panel mesh panel concrete

mesh panel

solid panel with aluminum frame concrete

concrete

AXANOMETRIC 47 | Design Portfolio


cultural event space

114

lobby 36.07°

restroom UP

outdoor learning gallery restroom °

90

4 108

11

offices 84

2811

68.96°

48

374

114

ancillary

offices

302

358

employee restroom

offices

main gallery

8”


to main land

initial volume

public

private

community park

division of public and private

natural ecology

extension to the landscape

constructed terrain

primary system extraction

49 | Design Portfolio


50


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52


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