2013 Portfolio

Page 1

LUKEWALTZ



SELECTEDWORKS Michigan Street Transit Oriented Development [Fall 2012

Residential Design Studio

Caklins + Bussiere]

Craddock Wetlands Nature Preserve [Summer 2011-Present Design Build & Internship

New Muncie Commons [Fall 2012

Residential Design Studio

Smith + Tevis]

Caklins + Bussiere]

Western Meadowlark Nature Preserve [Fall 2013

Regional Planning Studio

Baas + Day]

Parke County Gateway Trail Visitor Center [Summer 2013

Freelance Design]

All Faiths Chapel: The Duck Pond Jewel [Spring 2013

Planting Design Studio

Benson + Tomizawa]

Comprehensive Plaza Detailing [Spring 2013

Engineering Studio

Calkins + Zhang]

East Ridge Elementary School Playground [Fall 2011

Site Design Studio

Carins + Baas]


Michigan Street Transit Oriented Development -long-term vision for a residential revitalization plan that coincides with “Indy Connect� and the North East Corridor Project. -vibrant east Indy neighborhood focused on connecting regional communities to and from downtown. -providing experiences through visual gateways that frame the Indianapolis skyline, particularly at the train platform where a nexus of social, environmental and, economical programs are all woven into the urban fabric.


22nd Street Station Hillside JTV Hill Park Kennedy King

Spades Park Renassance Place Chatham Arch Mass Ave.

Lockerbie Square Downtown

REGIONAL CONTEXT

Woodruff Place Arsenal Tech High School Arsenal Heights Willard Park Holy Cross


Design Objectives The design was framed with an urban ecological approach that reduces fragmentation and provides an increased amount of natural connections for both people and wildlife. -mitigate the impact of storm water runoff onsite through swales/ gardens and day lighting/ naturalizing Pogue’ Run. -locate commercial infill along Michigan creating an economic backbone that improves relations between downtown and east Indy.

Development Summary Residential Housing Type Single Family Townhouse Apartment Duplex Co-housing Live work Total

# Units

Commercial building type # Units Day Care Community Center Retail Coffee shop Resturant Café Office Space Grocery/Farmers Market

Total Infrastructure Urban Agriculture

Lot Size 20 40 50 15 15 25 175

4500 5600 1600 7000 5000 2800 17,400

ft2 ft2 ft2 ft2 ft2 ft2 ft2

Unit size 1 1 8 2 3 2 2 1

5000 ft2 6000 ft2 2000 ft2 2000 ft2 3000 ft2 2000 ft2 40000 ft 2 2000 ft2 inside 5,000 ft 2 outside

20

67,000 ft2

Parking Spaces 20 24 96 24 54 24 160 40

160

Land size 90500ft² 80% Urban Farm 20% Roof Gardens

master plan

0

100

200


Pogue’s Run arial


plaza plan

station model

station perspective

plaza/ station cross section

0

20

30


Michigan Street Section 0

10

20

-Urban agriculture implemented in locations suitable for farming and producing food for the local restaurants.

30


The John M. Craddock Wetland Nature Preserve

is a 27-acre multi-phase design/build construction and wetland restoration project adjacent to a substantial river corridor and adjoining a former industrial manufacturing site in Muncie, Indiana. The project was designed and built by over 140 students over the course of 8 years, primarily by students of landscape architecture, architecture, construction management, natural resources and environmental management, and urban planning. The interdisciplinary teams worked closely with professional contractors, environmental education specialists, and design and engineering professionals. This student design and construction project partnered closely with the client and community group, insuring the realization of their vision.

entry plan

entry seating

trellis roof construction

bike rack

green roof installation

extensive tray system

entry gathering

pavilion deck overlook


Upland woodland Wetland boardwalk

Emergent wetland

North entry plaza

Learning Center Pavilion

White River Greenway Shrub-carr wetland

Prairie

Seadge meadow

White River

South entry plaza

Cardinal Greenway

0

100

200 FT


This nature preserve and environmental education site serves as a recreational trail loop offshoot expanding river greenway system. The site also serves as an environmental education-learning center for K-12 school children. During the spring of 2004 students completed Phase 1, that included design and construction of an initial arrival space overlooking the wetlands to support the dedication of the site to John M. Craddock. After an extended period of time seeking additional funds, the students completed Phase 2 in 2009, including three sections of boardwalk to extend access deeper into the site. Phase 3 construction, completed in the spring of 2010, concentrated on the larger boardwalk completing the loop trail through the site. During the spring and summer of 2011, students designed and constructed Phase 4: a second entry plaza arrival seating and teaching space. In 2012 students began Phase 5 addressed the capstone piece necessary to complete the environmental education support. This final phase designed and constructed an iconic interpretive learning pavilion in the center of the site, overlooking the wetlands.

pavilion structure

green roof plant massings

green roof tray alignment



NEW MUNCIE COMMONS: growing a better community WALKABILITY/ CONNECTIVITY -on street parking, housing fronts common green space VIEWS/ SITELINES -views align with pedestrian paths and terminate at park entrances SUSTAINABLE GROWING/ LIVING -produce grown and marketed on site


Cluster Detail 1”:20’ Neighborhood Detail 1”:20’

0

20’

0

20’



Development Summary Residential Housing Type Single Family Zero Lot Line Townhouse Apartment Cottage Cluster Duplex Co-housing

# Units

Total

161 43 35 10 24 120 7

Lot Size 7000 ft2 4800 ft2 5600 ft2 1600 ft2 10000 ft 2 7000 ft2 5000 ft2

400

41,000 ft2

Commercial building type Unit size Parking Spaces Civic Center 5000 ft2 20 Coffee shop 2000 ft2 Café 3000 ft2 20 Office Space 10000 ft 2 80 Grocery/Farmers Market 2000 ft2 inside 40 5,000 ft 2 outside Total

28,000 ft2

Infrastructure Urban Agriculture

Wind Energy Turbine 1 Turbine 2 Total

160

Land size 196020ft² 71% Residential Plot 29% Community Garden 10% annual neighborhood intake

Single Family Detail 0

100 ft 2 500 kW 100 ft 2 500 kW 200 ft 2 1 MW 100% annual household need

Open Space Commercial/ mixed-use Multi-family Duplex Single family

north 0 50 100 1”:200’ 0 “

200

400

Townhouse Detail 1”:20’

20’


The Western Meadowlark:

Leporte

Portrer

Lake

A Porter County nature preserve The purpose of this study is to locate land in Lake, Porter, and Leporte counties to preserve summer migratory breeding habitat for the Western Meadowlark. Without this land, the state risks eliminating the delicate grassland ecosystem many bird species rely on.

Regional Grasslands Highways High Development High 1 Mile Radius Medium Development Medium 1 Mile Radius grasslands > or= 7 acres All Grasslands

´ Lake

Portrer

Lake, Porter, Leporte Counties 0

4

8

16 Miles

Leporte 725

Slope Roads One Foot Contour Lines 15 Acre Habitat

Slope <VALUE> 0-5 5.000000001 - 10 10.00000001 - 20 20.00000001 - 30

´ Regional Grasslands Greater than 15 Acre Sites 5 Mile Radius ! (

Schools Highways High Development Medium Development

´

Lake, Porter, Leporte Counties

0

4

8

16 Miles

30.00000001 - 46.00439835 0

0.125

0.25

0.5 Miles



Preliminary Rockville Train Depot Design

Waveland Russellville Marshall

This concept for a regional rail-trail would link Terre Haute’s National Road Heritage Trail to Brownsburg’s B&O Trail creating a 5 county, 150 mile loop.

Guion

Bloomingdale Judson Montazuma

Rockville

The plan looks specifically at steps towards revitalizing Parke County communities, increased tourism revenue, and connections to surrounding attractions through a Railsto-Trails route. PCI (Parke County Incorporated) would manage the tourism information center serving as a hub for the greenway and annual festivals.

Catlin

Rosedale

Terre Haute

CULTU

BRIDG E

FA R M ER

-OPEN AIR SATURDAY MARKET

-PRIME RENTAL SPACE

-VENDORS SETUP IN PARKING LOT

-IMPROVE ATMOSPHERE OF FESTIVAL SHOPPING

-BIKER DISCOUNT

-CATALYST FOR COUNTY

-ACTIVATES SPACE -ENCOURAGES HEALTHY LIFESTYLES

S

L

-REGIONAL DESTINATION -ARCHITECTURAL REUSE

R KE T

-HISTORIC PENNSYLVANIA RAIL LINE- VANDAILA RAIL LINE

EN L TA

MA

ENTER -EDUCATIONAL LEARNING CENTER

BIKE R

F

TIVA ES

S

LC

RA

-BIKE RENTAL STORE LOCATION -ECONOMIC IMPACT -HEALTHY LIFESTYLES -TOURISIM FOR CASUAL ENTHUSIAST


1.5 MILE

ROCKVILLE DEPOT/ GATEWAY TRAIL TRAILHEAD

1 MILE

.5 MILE

.25 MILE

ROCKVILLE LAKE

TRAILHEAD/ ROCKVILLE LAKE CONNECTION



U.S. HIGHWAY 36

TRAIL CROSSING

VIEW 1

SIGNAGE

SEATING PARKING

DEPOT

ON-SITE RAIN WATER MANAGEMENT

BICYCLE STORAGE RACKS

GATHERING PLAZA & SEATING SPACE

RESTROOMS

STORAGE BUILDING

HIGH STREET

0’

5’

1” : 20’ 0”

10’

20’

40’


All Faiths Chapel: The Duck Pond Jewel

The “All Faiths Chapel” on Ball State’s campus is located in a setting allowing maximum immersion of a serene deep woods experience. Using a native woodland planting palette arranged in soft and organic shapes creates an inviting and comfortable environment of reflection and worship.

parking and drop off

All Faiths Chapel woodland trail

waterfall deck and overlook

board walk section cut A

section cut B

deck overlook

Illustrative Master Plan


Key QTY Shade Trees ACE-R 10 ACE-S 7 CAR-O 14 CEL-O 5 FAG-G 8 LIR-T 24 PLA-O 14 POP-D 9 QUE-A 6 QUE-B 8 QUE-M 7 QUE-P 16 SAL 3 Ornamental Trees AME-C 6 ASI-T 16 CER-C 32 COR-F 9 HAM-V 7 ILE-V 10 MAG-V 10 SAS-A 25 Evergreen Trees ILE-O 4 PIC-P 7 PIN-S 11 TSU-C 14 Shrubs CEP-O 14 FOR-I 15 LIN-B 5 Perennials CAR-A 8615 CLA-V 13845 HEL-A 14 HOS-B 14 RHO-P 25 SAN-C 2760 SYM-N 9 TRI-G 13045

Botanical Name

Common Name

Acer rubrum Acer saccharum Carya ovata Celtis occidentalis Fagus grandfifolia Liriodendron tulipifera Platanus occidentalis Populus deltoides Quercus alba Quercus bicolor Quercus macrocarpa Quercus palustris Salix nigra

Red Maple Sugar Maple Shagbark Hickory Hackberry American Beech Tulip Poplar American Sycamore Cottonwood White Oak Swamp White Oak Bur Oak Pin Oak Black Willow

3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3" 3"

Size cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal.

Spacing Roots Notes per per per per per per per per per per per per per

plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans

B B B B B B B B B B B B B

& & & & & & & & & & & & &

B B B B B B B B B B B B B

Amelanchier canadensis Asimina triloba Cercis canadensis Cornus Florida Hamamelis verginica Ilex verticillata Magnolia virginica Sasafras albidum

Service Berry Paw Paw Eastern Redbud Flowering Dogwood Common Witchhazel Common Winterwberry Sweetbay Magnolia Sasafras

2" 2" 2" 2" 2" 2" 2" 2"

cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal. cal.

per per per per per per per per

plans plans plans plans plans plans plans plans

B B B B B B B B

& & & & & & & &

B B B B B B B B

Ilex opaca Picea pungens var. glauca Pinus strobus Tsuga canadensis

American Holly Colorado blue spruce White Pine Eastern Hemlock

8 ft. 6 ft. 8 ft. 6 ft.

per plans B & B per plans B & B per plans B & B per plans B & B

Native/ Non-Nativ Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native

multi-stem multi-stem

multi-stem multi-stem

Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native

Cephalanthus occidentalis Forsythia Ă— intermedia Lindera benzoin

Buttonbush Forsythia Spicebush

No. 1 No. 1 No. 1

24" o.c. 24" o.c. 24" o.c.

cont. cont. cont.

Native Native Native

Carex Aquatilis Claytonia virginica Helenium autumnale Hosta sieboldiana 'Elegans' Rhododendron prinophyllum Sanguinaria canadensis Symphyotrichum novae-angliae Trillium grandiflorum

Water Sedge Spring Beauties sneeze weed Elegans Hosta Roseshell Azalea Blood Root New England Aster White Trillium

No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.

12" 12" 24" 24" 24" 12" 24" 12"

cont. cont. cont. cont. cont. cont. cont. cont.

Native Native Native Native Native Native Native Native

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

o.c. o.c. o.c. o.c. o.c. o.c. o.c. o.c.


Section A


Section B


PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

Paver A

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

Construction document details for a plaza in downtown Muncie, IN. Experimenting with material types and how they work together. Learning how to correctly draw and annotate plans, sections, and elevations. PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

Paver B

Tree Grate

A 2

Concrete Paving Module

Luke Waltz Plan

1":1' 0"

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

D

12'-0"

FFE C 399.4

B

E

F

(TYP)

G

399.3 H

399 398 I

J

building wall

paving pattern

tree grate

396

LA 312: SEMESTER DETAILING ASSIGNMENT 1":10'

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

AA

395.6

Luke Waltz SPRING 2013

N

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

397

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

Construction Documentation


PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

45 DEGREE BEVELED EDGE TYP.

1'-6" Brick Type A

A

L-7

Brick Type B PAVING DETAIL

SS Angle Tree Grate

#5 REBAR 12" o.c. TYP.

EXPANSION JOINT

Aggregate Base, 95% Compacted

2' 6"

SUBSOIL 2"x4" KEYJOINT

POURED IN PLACE CONCRETE

3'-6"

CONCRETE RAMP DETAIL

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

A

L-8

1'

24"

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

8"

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

3 4"

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

3'-6"

LIGHTING PRODUCT #1

Bolt #5 Rebar @ 12" O.C. 2" CLR. TYP. Concrete Footer

3 4" EXPANSION JOINT 8' o.c. TYP.

POURED IN PLACE CONCRETE

A

L-1

STAIR DETAIL

A

L-6

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

Aggregate Base, 95% Compacted Concrete Sidewalk PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

HANDRAIL DETAIL #5 REBAR 12" o.c. BOTH WAYS TYP.

2" Sand Setting Bed

CONCRETE FOOTING

11" 40'

Concrete Paving

Luke Waltz Section

1":1' 0"

Luke Waltz Wall Section

A L-5

Concrete Retaining Wall

Luke Waltz Wall Elevation

1":1' 0"

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT A

L-7

45 DEGREE BEVELED EDGE TYP.

HANDRAIL DETAIL POURED IN PLACE CONCRETE #5 REBAR 12" o.c. TYP. LIGHTING PRODUCT #1 3 4"

A

EXPANSION JOINT

CONCRETE RAMP DETAIL

5'-6"

Aggregate Base, 95% Compacted SUBSOIL

STAIR DETAIL

A L-6

2"x4" KEYJOINT CONCRETE FOOTING

A L-4

Concrete Retaining Wall 1":1' 0"

Luke Waltz Wall Section

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

L-8

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

A 1

Retaining Wall

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

6'

A Concrete L-3 1":1' 0"


This conceptual study looks at interactions that are considered when designing a school playground. First looking at the landscape the location and the school structure, a sutable site can be determined. The building functions then begin to relate with outside contextual connections, creating spaces and experiences suitable for children play activities. Development of motor and cognitive skills are very important, and merging that learning process into a play environment stimulates the child’s growth.





lowaltz@ bsu.edu

765.592.4143

720 W. Centennial Ave. #30 Muncie, IN 47303

lwaltzdesigns.com


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