Portfolio - Part 2 - h.k.

Page 1

HALIM KURNIAWAN BArch March Portfolio/ Academic

2011-2014


Content

content. 2011-2014


Content

Curriculum Vitae Personal details

4

To Care: Bath House Academic year 4, 2013

36

To Live/ To Work: Urban Housing Academic year 3, 2011

8

To Think: Clyde The Wild Academic year 5, 2013

48

To Exhibit: House of Isms International Exchange, 2012

18

To Imagine: Clyde The Wild Academic year 5, 2014

60

To Care: Hospice Academic year 4, 2012

28

To Realise: WildLab Academic year 5, 2014

76


Curriculum Vitae

CURRICULUM VITAE. As recent graduate from University of Strathclyde, with a Master of Architecture, I have gained wide range of valuable transferable skills through study, volunteering, community works, and internship. In academic, I was fortunate to receive several recognitions and attended an international exchange program to the Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany. During internship, I worked in design team and responsible to produce high quality images, contributing to the winning competition entry. These have enabled me to develop design skill but also gain industry experience. With strong communication skills, I developed and maintain successful study and working relationships. A building design is understood as response to a program in an environment, and design process as mediums to gain insight into the architectural issues.

PERSONAL DETAILS. Name: Halim Kurniawan Birth: 07 January 1988 Nationality: Indonesia T: E: A:

+447946066 halim.k@outlook.com 83C Candleriggs G1 1LF, Glasgow, UK

VISA IS REQUIRED

EDUCATIONS. 2014

Master of Architecture, ARB/RIBA Part 2 University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

2013-2014

PG. Diploma Advance Architectural Design, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

2012

International Advance Architectural Design, ERASMUS Bauhaus Universit채t, Weimar, Germany

2011-2013

BSc. (Hons) Architectural Studies, ARB/RIBA Part 1 1st Class, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

2006-2010

BSc. Architecture and Building Environment. Limkokwing University of Cretive Technology, Malaysia

AWARDS AND RECOGNITIONS. 2014

Glasgow School of Architecture Jubilee Prize Best Student in Final Honours Year (Year 4) Glasgow Institute of Architects, GIA

2013

Dean list, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK

2012

3rd year design commendation, University of Strathclyde Glasgow Institute of Architects, GIA

2010

5th prize winner, Rifle Range Renewal Design competition Professional category, team entry Perbadanan Architect Malaysia - PAM

2010

Limkokwing Awards for Industry Excellence Limkokwing University of Creative Technology, Malaysia


Adobe Photoshop Adobe Illustrator Adobe InDesign Autocad 2D SketchUp 3DMax Artlantis Render Studio

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCES. 2010 Jan/Aug

Aura Design, Interior + Architecture. Jakarta, Indonesia Internship Worked on diverse range diverse range of project in the field of commercial, residential, offices and healthcare. Responsibilities were mostly associated with retrofitting project. Assisted in the design and the production of working drawing and rendered images. Assisted senior staff in various design stages.

2009-2010

D-One Consultant, Interior + Architecture. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Part-time Volunteer Contributed as design team in the winning Rifle Range Urban Renewal competition. Assisted in the design and production of presentation images. Other Tasks were mostly associated with retrofitting project, also to produce working drawing and rendered images.

OTHER ACTIVITIES. 2014

2013

Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [SUPER] Natural Poster was presented in the exhibtition at the BAad (Baras Art and Design). The poster was part of Cultural Studies 5 exercises. MAP ICE-LAB Workshop, Light House, Glasgow. Conducted by MAP Architects

2010

Mosque Design Student Competition. Malaysia (Team entry). Assisted in design and production for submission.

2010

ARCHUSTIC Design Competition, Space for Street Performers. The competition was held in conjunction with the 3 days annual architectural student jamboree at the University Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) (Team entry)

LANGUAGES. Bahasa Indonesia (Native) English

Curriculum Vitae

SKILLS.



BSc. (Hons) Architectural Studies. 2011-2014 RIBA/ARB PART 1


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun International Advance Architectural Design, ERASMUS, 2012 Bauhaus Universitat

TO LIVE/ TO WORK: HOUSING DENNISTOUN


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

The site of the former Glasgow Meat Market in the East End of the city has been chosen for the Project. Bounded by Duke Street to the North, Bellgrove Street to the east, Melbourne Street to the west, and the railway line and market sheds to the South, the site has lain vacant since the market was finally demolised. The site sits between the traditional residential developments of Dennistoun and the on-going Collegeland development. It will provide the final link between the East End and the City Centre. The project is completed in two phases. As a smaller group within the unit, appropriate response to the site is developed and individually develop a multi-use urban housing proposal

at the selected part within the strategic framework. The idea of the proposal was inspired by the group masterplan proposal to re-activate the abandoned steel structure of a slaughterhouse as a market and to create a new public square. The proposal adept and explore the idea of exposed steel structures to celebrate and emphasize the newly reactivated market. Nonetheless, it also seeks the possibilities of a mix-used scheme to engage with the public space externally. In its relation with the market, the proposal also offers spaces to accommodate pro-active gestures - flower planting or other agricultural products.


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

Masterplan (Group proposal)


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

To Live + To Work


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

Isometry


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

Pro-active gestures


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun

Detail


To Live/ To Work | Housing Dennistoun


To Exhibit| House of Isms International Advance Architectural Design, ERASMUS, 2012 Bauhaus Universitat

TO EXHIBIT: HOUSE OF ISMS


To Exhibit| House of Isms

The Marzona Collection is one of the most important international collections of modern art. The collector, Egidio Marzona, sees the world of art not as an isolated segment, but as part of a greater cultural itinerary. An essential component of the collection is an archive of hand-written, printed, photographic and filmic works of culture, science and politics that contains around 1.5 million documents. To structure the enormous amount of documents, Egidio Marzona has chosen the common category of ‘isms’, a term often used in the history of art. The design project, a ‘House of Isms’ is located in an area of northeastern Italy called Friuli, where Egidio Marzona

has his home. The collector wishes to have an open and lively building that will present the exhibits as a collection not only to be viewed but also to be touched. The particular tension of the project results from the strong contrast of the presentation of Avantgarde-objects in a robust, rural context. Situated accross the existing art installation park by Marzona , the new gallery aims to extend the outdoor galleries and form an art ‘belt’ cutting through the town. The galleries are in two level, with series of different volume, it aims to provides a total controlled space both at the ground and basement level to accommodate sensitive artworks, yet its relationship to the outside is maintained.


To Exhibit| House of Isms Existing Park

Extended Park


To Exhibit| House of Isms

Marzona Art Installation Park


To Exhibit| House of Isms


To Exhibit| House of Isms

Archive

Basement Floor Plan (top) | Ground Floor Plan (left)


To Exhibit| House of Isms Longitudinal Section

Longitudinal Section


To Exhibit| House of Isms

Library Space


To Exhibit| House of Isms Designing with perspective (Class module)


To Exhibit| House of Isms


To Care | Hospice Academic Year 4, 2013 University of Strathclyde

TO CARE: HOSPICE


To Care | Hospice

The project concerns the design of a Young Adults (16- 25 years old) Hospice, to be sited on one of Glasgow’s principle parks – Kelvingrove Park at the west of the city. Hospice (Latin hospes, referring both to guests and hosts) is both a type and a philosophy of care that focuses on the palliation of a terminally ill patient’s symptoms. Hospices (originally conceived by the Crusaders circa 1065) were established in the early 14th century by the order of the Knights Hospitaller of St. John of Jeru- salem, to provide refuge for travellers and care for the ill and dying. Many of the foundational principles by which modern hospices operate were pioneered in the 1950s by Dame Cicely Saunders. Hospices rely on their architecture to do a significant amount of the passive

palliative work, setting the scene for people going through a traumatic experience. Stitching itself between the city and the park, the proposal aim to increase the sense of connectedness between people. In domestic approach, the proposal serves as an interface, both physically and metaphysically. it concerns to the importance of the dichotomies of inside/outside, inclusion/ exclusion, life/ death. While simultaneously retaining a strong degree of privacy for the more intimate spaces, the proposal aims to address fundamental considerations, such as maximising daylight and the opportunity to be able to look out (and even step out) from inside to outside.


To Care | Hospice

1

1

Site strategy


To Care | Hospice

Site and space distribution


To Care | Hospice Section A-A

Section B-B


To Care | Hospice


To Care | Hospice Single-occupancy patient bedroom


To Care | Hospice

Multiuse communal spaces


To Care| Bath House Academic Year 4, 2013 University of Strathclyde

TO CARE: BATH HOUSE


To Care| Bath House

The project concerns the design of a Bath House, sited within Glasgow’s principle parks – Kelvingrove Park. Public Baths originated from a communal need for cleanliness, becoming incorporated into the social system as meeting places. Bathing is the washing or cleansing of the body, with its principle purpose for personal hygiene, however it is also a preventative measure to reduce the incidence and spread of disease. From the 1840s, hydrotherapy was established across Britain, with Scotland particularly well represented. They elevated bathing to a fine art and their Bath Houses manifest these advancements. They were called Thermae, with a Public Bath composed of three principal rooms: the

caldarium (hot bath), the tepidarium (warm bath) and the frigidarium (cold bath) Located on the edge of a river within an urban void, the bath house realises its advantages and begin to form a new courtyard for public space with the neighboring structures, while on the other side revealing the riverside. Learning from the origin of the historically rich public bathing, the pools are in linear configuration suggesting the various components of the bathing ritual, (undressing, bathing, sweating, massage, and resting), yet, optional routes of individual preferences are maintained. Informed by the neighbouring site context, the bath house explores various type and use of masonry.


To Care| Bath House


To Care| Bath House

Site strategy


To Care| Bath House


To Care| Bath House

Bathing component and ritual


To Care| Bath House Main pool

Longitudinal Section


To Care| Bath House

Spa/ Turkish Bath


To Care| Bath House


To Care| Bath House



PgDip. Advance Architectural Design/ Master of Architecture. 2013-2014 RIBA/ARB PART 2


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural Academic Year 4, 2013 University of Strathclyde

TO THINK: CLYDE THE WILD, POST-INDUSTRIAL TO [SUPER] NATURAL


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

The metatheme for this year’s PGDip/ MArch studio is ‘(un) Certain Futures’. The project is completed in a team of two who have similar interest in the relationship between architecture and the urban animals at the local river of Glasgow, the Clyde River. Far too long, the famous salmon – on the Glasgow’s coat of arms was just a non-existent fish. Clyde the wild is inspired by the changes in the way that the River Clyde is used, in which is gradually leading to a local environment that will encourage wildlife back to the area. After long absence, the Atlantic salmon, as a key stone species, is evident of healty habitat, has once again flourishing even in the city center.

Salmon runs as it transport marine nutrients upstream through out the rivers and ended in the ocean. Salmon carcasses are primary to feed aquative invertebrates and fish, terrestrial wildlife ranging from marine species to birds, and especially us. It is the biological foundation, or keystone species, of ecosystems as well as human economies With the iconic nature of salmon in Glasgow folklore, the city of Glasgow wishes to use the opportunity to maintain the essential link between people and nature. With this, rivers and streams, which are veritable corridors of life passing through the modern built-up areas thus constitute a major asset in facing up to this challenge.


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

1700

1950

2008

Salmon and Culture


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

Salmon and Ecology


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

Migration and the [UN]Certain Future


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

Natural chanel

Early urban influences

Urban encroachment

Grave deposition

Managed withdrawal River Morphology


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

Pre-treatment septic tank

Vertical flow cell Horizontal flow cell

Pump chamber

Dosing pipe

Perforated collector pipe

Gravel/ Coarse/ Sand

Bio-urban Remediation

Riparian zone


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural

Higher education

Participation

University Natural heritage conservation

Vocational training

Active school

Community learning

Schools

Youth groups

Outdoor learning

NGO’S LEARNING TRAINING

Neighbourhood DEVELOPERS

COMMUNITY GROUPS

Interest based Health care Residential Area based

Workplace Toursim & Recreational

Site based community

Artist, water sport, cycling, etc.


To Think| Clyde the Wild: Post-industrial To [Super]Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural Academic Year 4, 2013 University of Strathclyde

TO IMAGINE: CLYDE THE WILD, UNVEILING THE NATURAL


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

“Glasgow’s freshwater fishes are surprisingly poorly known, despite the well-publicised renaissance of the local watercourses and the iconic nature of the salmon in Glasgow folklore.” William E Yeoman Phase two deals with more thorough proposal of the interventions, which in this case, is to unveil the “natural” in the River Clyde. Site was selected based on its ecological potential through research, as well as site survey. The project sees the advatage of River Clyde as an inner estuary. The River Clyde at this point is a mixture between salt and fresh water, therefore offers great refugees for the domestic, as well as migrating wildlife.

Nowadays, particularly where the River Clyde meets the Lower Kelvin tributaries is threatened with the proposal of 26 acres shopping center development along its bank followed by the issue of water quality. Noticing this location for its high potential of habitat value, while salmon is maintained as the main theme of the development, Clyde the wild has decided to react, once again raises the issue of water discharhes to the river, and essentially is an expansion of the present urban wildlife habitat mosaic. At last, to unveil these life to the wider community, it calls for architectural exploration in terms of a series of infrastructural intervention to facilitate the needs for one obtaining a relationship with the natural - To learn, to play and to observe.


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural Clyde and White Cart Tributaries

Ecology Appraisal


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural Focus of intervention - The Clyde and Kelvin Tributaries

Glasgow Green

River Clyde and Its Tributaries


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

Proposed Action


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

WETLAND EXPANSION

MOBILITY/ ACCESS

1. Kelvingrove park: Identified as wetland 2. Constructed wetland: freshwater habitat 3. Natural waterfall, atlantic salmon leaps 4. Bedrock cover river bank provide potential for otter shelter. River bank covered in narrow band of broad leaved woodland offer opportunities for kingfisher netsting ground 5. Constructed tidal wetland: Brackish water habitat.

1. Kelvingrove Park, Kelvingrove Art Museum, GlasgowUnivesity, Kelvin River walk 2. Kelvinhall subway station 3. Riverside museum 4. Partick subway station 5. Glasgow Harbour 6. Govan

HISTORIC NODES AND VISTA

POINT OF INTERVENTION

1. Kelvingrove Park, Kelvingrove Art Museum, Glasgow University, Kelvin River walk 2. Natural history hunterian museum (converted) 3. Bishop mills. 3. Riverside museum, science centre, the hydro

1. Infobox 2. Gallery/ Salmon enumeration facilities 3. Birdhide River Crossing 4. Clyde Ring Walk


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

Salmon Enumeration Facility

Floor PLan


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

Viewing Gallery

Viewing Condition

“Plinth”

Longitudinal Section


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

Birdhide River Crossing


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural

Clyde Ring Walk

Low tide -4m

High tide +2m

Walking Typology


To Imagine| Clyde the Wild: Unveiling the Natural


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness Academic Year 4, 2013 University of Strathclyde

TO REALISE: WILDLAB, ARCHITECTURE + WILDERNESS


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

“For many years, I was the self- appointed inspector of snow storms and rain storms, and did my duty faithfully; surveyor, if not of high-ways, than of forest paths and all across- lot routes, keeping them open, and ravines bridged and passable at all seasons, where the public heel had testified to their utility�. (Thoreau, 1854) Glasgow is currently undertaking a huge amount of works at parks, green spaces, woodlands, and rivers to protect and enhance the rich natural diversity. As a habitat for wildlife, a natural refuge for endangered species, a commodity for income, a place to retreat from everyday life, the wilderness accommodates diverse needs and wide interpretation.

Wildlab is interested in exploring an architecture that amplifies territories in the wilderness through a journey of inhabitation. While embracing certain aspect of the woodland, the project wish to interactively enhance one’s connection to the wilderness. The whole process is conducted through stages of research (observation through participation in wilderness related event and activity), experience (visit, trail), design, and assembly. The project is executed as a live project and aims to encourage community involvement in the process. The project is supported by the Forestry Commission, and Yooz re-use and recycle workshops.


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness Research Stage: Bio-Blitz (Right) Focus area of interventions: Bishop Loch (Top)


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

3

2 1

Journey of Inhabitation


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

Scavange


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

Proposed Action


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

To Contemplate (Built proposal) Assembly


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

Plan

Rear Elevation


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness

Rear Elevation

Section B-B


To Realise| Wildlab: Architecture + Wilderness




PORTFOLIO 2011-2014 Halim Kurniawan BArch March RIBA/ARB Part 2 T: +447447946066 E: halim.k@outlook.com


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