Portfolio Kubat Ai

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PORTFOLIO

KUBAT AIUPOV

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KUBAT AIUPOV Staedelschule Architecture Class (SAC) Master of Art in Architecture

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LOOSE FIT CONTIGUITY/ «STUDENT HOUSING» individual project / SAC First and Second semester project/ /International Competition professor: Johan Bettum tutors: Damjan Jovanovic, Adil Bokhari project title: University Island Competition location: Poveglia, Venice Lagoon Poveglia, called ‘Devil’s island’, is a fascinating, uninhabited, deserted island located a couple of kilometers from Venice. A place of many stories, most of them disturbing, this island has been chosen as a site for the international competition to design an new, polished and shiny University Campus. According to the organizers, projects must aim to ‘transform Poveglia into a dream university campus’. As it is now, the island is completely overtaken by wild, uncontrolled vegetation, and visits are not allowed. Within the competition brief, a clear tendency emerges: transforming the island will inevitably mean gentrification and taming of the wild nature, as well as preservation of existing structures and their inclusion into the new project. The given brief, as we see it, is an example of a standardised, run-of-the-mill architectural ‘realism’ where the status quo is being mindlessly reproduced, complete with stock images of buildings, to give us an idea of how the world looks like. We believe this is a wrong way to think about a location like this, and especially, about what architecture can or should do in this case. That is why our aim is a bit different. This project of housing was conceived as a structure on the platform floating on the sea. According to the brief, it must accommodate students from different countries and satisfy all needs and demands of residents. The main proposal runs around basic principles of the housing. Presented architecture is the way of developing specific issues such as typology, style and fiction. The concept derives from previous speculative modeling and drawings (following further). 3

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

VILLA DALL’ AVA BY REM KOOLHAAS The specific interest in selecting this building lies in the ideaology of Rem Koolhaas, where he designed the Villa Da llava based on idea of studing and close reading precedent examples (Villa Savoye by Le Corbusier and Glass House by Philip Johnson). In terms of it’s make up of elements, each building tolerates the extremes of polarity and plays with the idea of dualtiy and equlibrum.

Building elements Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Massing iterations using gaming software Sandbox (D. Jovanovic)

Original vernacular elements The study of traditional vernacular architecture and envoirmental conditions were conducted in Venice and Poveglia island. The cultural history found in this amazing part of Italy’s architecture and nature, traditions foods, textile, urban fabric show the wide range of visual sensations inherent to the region. Bright colors and patterns coexists with wealthy ornamentation; baroque detailing in ornate materials reside next to funtional dwellings. Tons of photographs of these elements were taken and then composited together. The result of combinig these photographs is a decontextualization of the vernacular which allows it ti be understood in an abstract manner rather than in terms of its initial typological, tectonic or architectural logic. decontextualizing is reiterated through the project’s dislocation from the Coastal envoirnment. As this dislocated vernacular adjusts to its surroundings the ground is the means with which the contemporary vernacular is esteblished and where the foreign entity begins to reintegrate with, assimilate to and influence its new contextual envoirnment. A contemporary vernacular works towards an understanding of the role of the ground in creating place and the site while also challenging current idealistic notions of perfection and control by saturating contemporary architecture with characteristic of unusualness, irregularity and imperfection.

Chosen final iteration 5

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Plan

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Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

3D visualization

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Section

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Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Elevation of the Student Housing

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Appartments type 1 Appartments type 2 Appartments type 3 Appartments type 4 Kitchen Common room Auditorium( library, study room) Circulation 3D model of the Student Housing 11

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Public platform (meetings, social activities, sport) Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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A contiguity is a continuous mass, or series of things in contact or in proximity, or the state of being such a mass or series ( Wikipedia) By being adjacent to each other interacting bodies precisely produce the void between them. That is supposed to be heterogeneous space which can be defined as contiguity. Opposing to continuity , contiguity argue for discontinuous ,fragmented, heterogeneous formal strategy based on the incongruities, juxtapositions and oppositions within specific sites. -Discontinuity of parts -Independence in articulation -Spatial tension -Interplay of mass and void(gap) These iterations aim to discover the possible ways in creating and testing approaches to construct the idea of contiguity through modeling, texturing and drawing. 15

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Textured model

The set of speculative drawings and modeling iterations. In this drawings my intention was to construct the idea of contiguity. This achieves when more than two figures are composed in way where these parts start interacting. This interacting means that there are tension, contradiction and juxtoposition. The space or gap among them clearly highlights and connects them.

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Modeling and texturing experiments

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Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

Academic project/ Staedelschule/Frankfurt/Germany/2015-2016

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HEX/01 ROTATING MINIMAL HOUSING Professional project/(Competition) Future Living 2016 Advisor: Boris Banozic

Today, 54 per cent of the world’s population lives in urban areas, a proportion that is expected to increase to 66 per cent by 2050.“ United Nations „The city dwellers of the future will no longer need cars. Bikes and more efficient public transport will be the norm.“ The Guardian There are not enough affordable homes available in most European countries to meet the increasing demand.“ Housing Europe

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Competition/Banozic Architecture/2016

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Future scenarios like deserted car parks due to more public/sharingtransport and vacant buildings offer temporary space in inner-cities for occupation with small transportable capsules. For the roaming urban professional, ever seeking affordable inner-city housing in the densifying urban landscape, HEX/01 takes the concept of minimal housing one step further. Our key question: how could overhead space become attainable - and utilized efficiently? Our answer is a hexagonal pod which dissolves the ordinary idea of ceiling, wall and floor in favour of a sectioning by personal needs: sleep, store, relax, eat and work. The desired zone is moved into reach through mechanical rotation. Furniture is minimized and integrated into the structure while the hexagonal shape makes the most efficient use of space. The flexible unit is complemented by a kitchenette and bathroom. The entire capsule‘s footprint amounts to a slender 14m², whereas the interior floor space reaches 24m². HEX/01 is an adaptable living space that replaces the ordinary notion of housing by setting up an interplay between the object, the user and the environment that constantly drives a reoccurance of a moment of creation. With an insulated, strong and lightweight zinc sheet exterior, the unit can be placed in a variety of untenanted pitches such as roof tops, deserted warehouses, parking decks or vacant office buildings. The use of solar panels and water tanks is as possible as is sourcing water and electricity through a given infrastructure. Its flexibility and minimalized size make both homeownership and transportation of the HEX/01 easy for the modern nomad. 25

Competition/Banozic Architecture/2016

Competition/Banozic Architecture/2016

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UTICA PAVILION Professional project/(Competition) The Pavilion @ Utica Junction. USA 2017 Collaborator: Rohit Ragh Singkh

The propoal is to formulate mulitple pavilions, which opens up the possibility of having multiple actvites at the same time. The authors of the spaces and these open pavilions are the public. The project also addresses the Initial spacial organization, where the organizations deal with the interrelationships of the occupants typology. The only built multiple level pavilion has varying scaled surfaces, the lowest level has a skeleton framework, which gives structural stability.The other floors consits of a transulant surface volume and filtered surface, creating different experience for the users.bility.The other floors consits of a transulant surface volume and filtered surface, creating different experience for the users.

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Pavilions Situational plan

Multiple entry points

Site

Site plan

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Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

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Surface-volume

Exterior massing

Skeleton framework

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Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

“All architecture has a public nature, I believe, so I would like to make public spaces�. These words by Tadao Ando show us how building blocks are not the only body of an architecture. The depth of any structure is only visible by vast open spaces. Traditionally and functionally most of our public spaces revolve around the need to gather, interact and socialise. The objective of this design was no different theoretically but far from the usual, in terms of conceptualising the design. Contrary to one public space opening into multiple blocks, this design splits the public spaces to have its own function and behaviour. The seamless flow between the inside and outside blend the whole space into one yet create different skins for each interior. The idea here was to shy away from the conventional public space or a pavilion and have multiple modules of pavilions.with differnt scale and volume. This idea opens up the possibility of having varying activities at one place. The scale of these activites also can vary with the varing slace of the pavilion. Multiple pavilions can merge to act as one single pavilion, or act as individual autonomous pavilions. The site boundary is an extention the the pathway along the road. The project exploers the relationship between built and open volumes transmi ting these into a space. The ground level is transperant with min visual barrior this opens up the project furthermore. Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

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Elevation

0.00

+6.00

+3.00

Ground floor plan

4769 .91

Second floor plan

First floor plan 33

Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

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WHO CARES Professional project/(Competition) Rethinking of the row housing in Netherlands 2017 Team ÂŤTekton Architekten : Chief architect: Bert Tjhie Architects: Nils Molen,Juliette Liautaud, Kubat Aiupov

Split section

+6.00

6.00+

+3.00

0.00

0.00

Section

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Competition/Utica Pavilion/2017

Competition/Who Cares/2017

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Netherlands housing stock

23% freestanding houses

Flevoland’s housing stock

The row housing: the most successful and at the same time the strongest plummeted housing product from the Netherlands is allowed to transform

15% appartments

42 % row houses

= 120m2 60 % row houses

postwar society

The social and technical preservation of the terraced house Besides families, there is also room for disables, seniors and singles.

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+ HUB = Heel Uw Buurt (All Your Neighborhood) Concentration of neighboring activities being in charge with health point, self-esteem café, self-catering restaurant, exchange library, course, package point, service point, circular store, laundry,tool box, garden tools, garden market, care center and crèche. Competition/Who Cares/2017

nowadays society

small-scale collective fittings

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+ live provided with accompaniment, care and behavioral regulation сare time: 15-24.5 hours enclosed space precise structuring

live provided with assisting and care

сare time: 10.5-20 hours safe envoirmnent with common space

live with somebody accompanimenting

сare time: 5-9.5 hours autonomous with joint сooking area.

The huge numbers can be simply adapted to the needs of the future society in social and technical view. Small-scale, in small numbers with local elements or in large numbers with modular systems 40 Competition/Who Cares/2017


The city building inside out turnabout and activate.

“Doctor I visited you at the HUB. I would like to see you soon ”

“Even I am not home delivery is dropped at the HUB”

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Use what there is: low-tech, high impact “Rerading together is more funny”

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“I will join you as a pediatrician”

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Many row houses in Almere Haven 4 formed and groupped together. We clean up and We make functional optimization and visual characteristic. Seniors, disables and singles support each other. A caring society is a sustainable society.

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“Grandma the iPad, I am knitting. “

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1 “Morning exercises in the garden.”

“Do not pour the water too much” “I live under guidance but my neighborh will help you with repairing of stuff in the HUB”

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Competition/Who Cares/2017

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“What makes us more happier?The grandmother’s meal after the working day”

a map of possibilities “We share the vegetables planted together in the garden and saling in the HUB”

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“Ah, they were done, me just picked it up”

“Together we are smarter than a computer”

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Competition/Who Cares/2017

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KUBATAKE’S HOUSE Professional project /(Conceptual) Architect Oroz Baigozho’s Studio Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan 2008 Director: Oroz Baigozhoev In 2005, Emil Toktaliev one of the eminent artists stopped by in our studio , expressinganidea of designing a house for JusubalievKubatake. Kubatake is an extraordinary person, writer for us at least. This idea has been running around in our minds for 2 or 3 years, due to we could not discover a significant and fundamental basic concept for the future house. Having seen multiple of projects, references, books and etc. relevant to Kubatake‘s personality, once we were lucky to encounter to a picture painted by Emil. It called: „Asleep dervish“ (Portrait of Kubatake). Further, this picture was considered as a main conceptual version, in other words, we came up with an idea of possibility or impossibility transformations of a basic concept of the picture into distinct, self-sufficient architectural object.

“Asleep Dervish” ( portrait of Kubatake) artist Emil Toktaliev

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Professional project/ Architect Oroz Baygozo’s Studio /Bishkek/ Kyrgystan/2008

3D Visualtization

Professional project/ Architect Oroz Baygozo’s Studio /Bishkek/ Kyrgystan/2008

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Facade

Section

Ground floor plan 45

Professional project/ Architect Oroz Baygozo’s Studio /Bishkek/ Kyrgystan/2008

Facade Professional project/ Architect Oroz Baygozo’s Studio /Bishkek/ Kyrgystan/2008

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Professional project/ Architect Oroz Baygozo’s Studio /Bishkek/ Kyrgystan/2008

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OFFICE COMPLEX Professional project / Studio AOiK Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan 2014 Director: Akmat Alseitov The territory for designing office building is situated in the central part of Bishkek city, on Sydykov street close to the crossing with Togolok Moldo street. There are plethora of old private houseson the area from Soviet period. This district has been intensively developed in the past fewyears. According to the General plan of Bishkek city this site is offered for public, business developing. High cost of land, comfortable location, close placing to the main streets and central communications are general advantages of this area. Customer wanted us to creating -18levels office building which would include necessary facilities in, but main requirement was having more office spaces. Our project aimed to future developing to complete this area with high level solution. Design inspired by Traditional colorfull tissue being used in sewing female clothes in Central Asia region. This kind of fabric differs from other one by playfull geometrical ornamentation. Translating this pattern into architectural proposal is applied to get peculiar outcome. It has 18 levels above ground and 2 underground levels. Size of the building 30,7x39,6m, each floor‘s height is 3,6m. In the first floor restaurant placed. Each level contains: office spaces, hall, WC, conference room. Parking placesare placed on the 2 basements. The terrace is placed on the top level. The fasades faced with 3 kinds of panels, stained-glass windows, triangular windows modules .

3D visualization

Site plan

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Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

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3D visualization

Generating and developing the concept 51

Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

Section 1-1 Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

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Ground floor plan

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Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

Second floor plan

Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

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Offices, conferense rooms etc.

Offices, conferense rooms etc.

Public spaces, cafe, restaurant etc.

Public spaces, cafe, restaurant etc.

Communication spaces, corridors, elevators, staircases

Communication spaces, corridors, elevators, staircases

Privat rooms, WC, wash rooms

Privat rooms, WC, wash rooms

Technical and facility rooms

Technical and facility rooms

Passage for vehicles, ramps

Passage for vehicles, ramps

Car parking

Car parking

Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

Professional project/ Studio AOiK/Bishkek/ Kyrgyzstan/2014

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