ARCHITECTURE + URBANISM portfolio of work
LAUREN M VOGL
C O N T E N T S
04
EUROPAN ZAGREB
spring 2012
14
DAVIDSON-GUNDY ALUMNI CENTER professional work
2014 - 2015
20
KITA GROPIUSSTADT
professional work
fall 2012
24
40 x 40 Berlin
professional work
fall 2012
2
26
KNOWLEDGE LANDSCAPES
54
summer 2012
RIVER CITY
CULTURE
ENVIRONMENT
MORPHOLOGY
[ [
30 PROGRAM
]
LARGE SCALE MIDDLE SCALE SITE
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
34
EAST AUSTIN DATA MAPPING
RURAL INDIA EMI
spring 2011
58
WATERLOO DEVELOPMENT HUB
professional work
2014
fall 2011
WEST AUSTIN FRAMEWORK
64
JOHNSON CITY STUDIO
professional / academic
fall 2011
46
URBAN LAND INSTITUTE COMPETITION spring 2012
vol.2
RE-OCCUPYING BERLIN’S NO MAN’S LAND 2013
3
ZAGREB, CROATIA:
THE SEMI-TRANSPARENT BLOCK
U T S O A
Once considered to be on the eastern periphery of Europe, Croatia is fast becoming more central geographically due to the expansion of the European Union.
EUROPAN 2012 + ideas competition
The Semi-Transparent Block draws from the agrarian past in how blocks were subdivided inside the block. Housing along the north Critics: face makes reference to these former divisions of the interior Dean Almy block while allowing for a reading of a completed block that Zagreb Society of Architects relates to the existing tower on Vlaška Street. As a micro-reference to the reading of the spatial threshold, there are a series of layers that begin to define varying degrees of public and private spaces through varying uses of ground manipulations as well as building materials.
135m
1995
4
2008
existing
interior perimeter
existing site
extents
internal growth
regional, city and site diagrams
+
extension
public space
LOWER TOWN EXTENTS
armature entry
5
6
a
material palette model in context west to east section
section a
7
E1 A
B
unit typology B
two room dwelling 105 sq.m conditioned +30 sq.m shared patio
unit typology C
two room dweling 85 sq.m conditioned +45 sq.m shared patio
unit typology D1
two room dwelling 144 sq.m conditioned +24 sq.m shared patio
unit typology A
single room dwelling 59 sq.m living space
8
unit typology E
artist studio 96 sq.m conditioned +225sq.m studio
unit typology D2
single room dwelling 75 sq.m conditioned +22 sq.m shared patio
C
D1 D2
H
x2
unit typology h hostel dwelling 8 beds per unit
9
iv
iii
ii
i
10
i
ii
iii
iv
site plan block axon study perspective down art alley
11
12
unfolding plan with massing sections perspective from lecture hall elevation studies
13
UT Dallas
Davidson-Gundy Alumni Center
2014 - present
In just the past five years, UT Dallas has increased total school enrollment by more than 34 percent - there is a need for space and specifically for space dedicated to the goal of emphasizing and increasing private gifts and endowment funds. The Davidson-Gundy Alumni Center aspires to do just that through these guiding principles -
RICHARDSON, TEXAS
Overland Partners Team Members: Rick Archer James Lancaster Donald McGlaughin Garrett Jones Albert Condarco
Innovation / Open Space / Crossroads / Environmental Stewardship / Space Optimization / Welcoming Atmosphere / Functional Efficiency & Campus Icon The Center will be inspirational - showcasing the university’s rich past; motivational - empowering alumni and students to be active participants in the life of UT Dallas; and aspirational - fuelling the imaginations of, and the connections between current alumni and alumni to come. It will be a “gateways to the future” - the future of its alumni and the future of UT Dallas.
14 N
WINTER
SPRING
SUMMER
FALL
WINTER
110° F
SPRING
FALL
WINTER
SUMMER
FALL
90 %
D A I L Y H I GH
50
90° F
80 %
32° C
10° C
40° F 4.4° C
TOTAL CLOUD COVER
comfort zone
DAILY LOW
E
50° F
60 %
AG
15° C
ER
60° F
40
AV
21° C
70 %
ILY
winter
70° F
DA
summer
27° C
45
AVERAGE HIGH
DAILY AVERAGE
80° F
MILES P ER HOUR
38° C
50 % AVERAGE LOW
40 %
35 30 25 20
30 % AVERAGE HIGH
15 30° F
-1.1° C
20 %
20° F
10 %
10
-6.6° C
10° F
-12° C
SPRING
60 55
100° F
TEMPERATURE
SUMMER
100 %
43° C
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
0%
DEC
JAN
FEB
MAR
record high
SEASON
AVERAGE LOW
5
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEASON
record low
SEP
OCT
NOV
0
DEC
JAN
FEB
MAR
APR
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG
SEP
OCT
NOV
record high record low
DEC record high
SEASON
record low
so
ut h
north
su n
sun expanded thermal comfort zone preservation of existing trees
preservation of existing trees
cistern below garden
ecosystems services
geothermal
connection to outdoors
solar
thermal comfort
re-use/harvesting
ecosystems services
sustainability diagrams
15
campus connections
16
east
north
west
south
17
3
2
A310
1
A310
1
1.1
3
2
A310
4
5
6
7
A301
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
3 7' - 5"
4' - 6 1/2"
11' - 6"
11' - 2"
18' - 10"
8' - 2 5/8"
20' - 4 3/8"
20' - 0"
20' - 0"
20' - 0"
20' - 0"
20' - 0"
15' - 0 5/8"
4' - 11 1/2"
20' - 0"
1' - 8"
Service Hall
129
129A
Catering Support
A1
SHELL SPACE
9' - 3"
119C
128
138H
131 138G
14' - 11"
Fire
132
131A
A2 A2
B
1' - 8"
Elec.
138L
138K
118D
A1
138J
A
132A
132C
132B
9' - 10"
Loading
C
118
F1 125A
Women's Restroom
125
A1
124
Circulation 122A
Housekeeping
145
122
F1
E1
143
Large Event/Multipurpose Room
A1 126A
Recycling Storage
138
124A
A1
31' - 5"
EC
A1
118A
Stor. 144
Elev.
1 A601
3
119A 14' - 7"
A311 1 A702
114 UP
2
Medium Meeting Room
138A
138B
138C
100D
Lounge
103
Coat
2
102
Inspiration Hall
104
Vestibule
101
3
A311
A401
100
1' - 1"
101D
W3
H 10' - 7"
Vestibule
Seating
106
C.04
101C
101B
101A
25' - 2"
105
138D
1 A701
104A
105B
115A
Info
A311
A301
116
W3
138E
2 A603
2
138F
1
4' - 6"
F G
123
Coffee
3' - 5"
E
Men's Restroom
115
Storage
A302
3 A311
Circulation 123A
E1
D
1 A401
C.03
113
DN
Small Meeting Room
109A
I
21' - 10"
Stair 2
112
UP 108A
107
Stor
ROOF OVERHANG ABOVE
108 112A
J
111A 3 A701
Seating 109
Circulation 110
Small Meeting Room
21' - 10"
1 A311
1 A311
111
A.08
1
A301
K A.07
17' - 3"
1 A603 A302
2
ROOF OVERHANG ABOVE
L
3 A302
3 A310
4 A302
2
1
A310
A310
first floor plan
18
view from the southeast inspiration hall
19
HOIDN WANG PARTNER: 086 KITA GROPIUSSTADT BERLIN, GERMANY
An existing single story kindergarten in Gropiusstadt Berlin is to be extended by 45 new units for 3 additional groups. The new floor will be constructed as a prefabricated wood construction on piloti.
Client: the city of berlin
This construction allows the preservation of the existing garden and playground, and can be built without closing the institution.
I
III IV
III -
II
I
II
IV 3.200 m2
465 m2
BF = 800 m2 GRZ = 0.25
III IV
800 m2 III IV
20
III IV
III IV
3.200 m2
approach to site axon of construction modules
21
3
m
2
1 GARD
GARD
GARD
BÜRO
1
3
1
1 35 m2 GRUPPE RAUCHABZUG BESTAND IN FASSADE VERLEGEN
35 m2 GRUPPE
35 m2 GRUPPE
STANDORT SPITZAHORN
2
GRUPPE / MULTIFUNK
4
first floor plan
22
2
ELTERN.
4 SUD 4 Süd
6
4.0
ERWEITERUNG KITA GROPIUSSTADT, KIRSCHNERWEG 29, BAUHERR INTERNATIONALER BUND © HOIDN WANG PARTNER
17.09.2012
Ansicht
1 Schnitt [Erweiterung] Schnitt 1 M 1:200
086 Kita Gropiusstadt
south elevation section looking north perspectives of exterior space and piloti
23
HOIDN WANG PARTNER: IN THE CENTER OF THE CITY BERLIN, GERMANY
40 x 40
Client: The series fortybyforty by the Association of Architects (BDA) Association of Architects Gallery is a contribution to the architectonic and urban debate in Exhibition : Oct 25 - Nov 22, 2012 Gallery Talk : Nov 19, 2012 at 7 pm
24
Berlin. The annual exhibition publishes statements of BDA members and invited colleagues about the urban and spatial potentials of the area between Alexanderplatz and Humboldtforum. The format for the presentation is a 40cm by 40cm board.
Stadtkern Berlin
3 2 1
1
Volkshochschule mit internationalen Sprachkursen und Abendschulangeboten + Integrationsprogramme für Migranten auf höchstem Niveau Zentrales Info Center des Labo (Landesamt für Bürger-und Ordnungsangelegenheiten) mit Service- und Weiterqualifikationsangeboten nach holländischen bzw. skandinavischen Vorbildern Internationaler Zeitungslesesaal
2
Wohnhöfe analog den Hackeschen Höfen oder Riemer´s Hofgarten (kommunales Genossenschaftsprojekt) = Karl-Marx Höfe
3
Kleinmarkthalle mit internationalen und regionalen Angeboten und Garküchenrestaurants und Büros/Wohnen im Obergeschoss Gewächshäuser / Orangerien für die Mittagspause
25
UNIVERISTÄT KASSEL:
EXPERIMENTA URBANA 7
june 28th-july 8th 2012
Running parallel to dOCUMENTA(13) experimenta urbana was a week long international workshop that focused on the theme of knowledge landscapes- the associated coexistence of functionality, design and atmosphere that looks at urbanism, landscape design, architecture and artistic creativity in a university setting.
KASSEL, GERMANY
Teammates: Professor Wilfried Wang Professor Barbara Hoidn Melissa Seanard Teams Present: Atelier Metropolitano, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ETH Zürich, Schwitzerland
The Univeristät Kassel hosted nine teams to be a part of the discussion and asked that each team produce proposals for the future development of the university and their larger role in the city itself. We worked to develop a scheme where the university acted as a catalyst for activities and programs, as well as strong visual connections within the immediate context.
Kunsthochschule Kassel Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy Technische Hochschule Karlsruhe Universidad de Talca, Chile Università di Palermo, Italy Universität Hannover Universität Kassel University of Texas at Austin, USA
26
University of Virginia Charlottesville, Virginia scale 1:5000
University of Texas Austin, Texas scale 1:5000
43 acres | land 1.58 students per acre
350 acres | land 142.8 | students per acre 7.9 | students per acre
year | 1825 students| 68 faculty| 8
N
established | 1883 students| 50.000 faculty| 2.770
N
University of Arkansas Fayetteville, Arkansas scale 1:5000
M.I.T. | Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts scale 1:5000
160 acres | land 6.25 students per acre
date | 1900 students| 1.000
N
46 acres | land 26 students per acre 3.9 faculty per acre
date | 1900 students| 1.198 faculty| 179
N
american campus comparisons workspace
27
VISION:
NEW UNIVERSITY
STRUCTURAL PLA
connection of public spaces
EXPERIMENTA U 28
Y DIAGRAM
AN
URBANA • Kassel 2012
BARBARA HOIDN + WILIFRIED WANG + MELISSA SEANARD+ LAUREN VOGL
29
30
EAST AUSTIN:
DATA RESEARCH + REPRESENTATION
Client: McCann-Adams Studio
a way of representing the major factors that affect strategic planning and design initiatives is through data-scapes: spatial impact of metrics on the landscape.
Critics: Dean Almy Janna McCann
research on holly power plant and festival beach was conducted to produce a series of data-scapes that would help those involved in the real commission of this site. ideally the client would be able to reference these maps because of their quality in representation.
capitol
longhorn dam
holly power plant
frost bank
austonian
1:1 UT tower
fu tu re
60 feet
miller dam
li gh tr ai l
capitol
tr an si t
x 10
bus
bike
rout e
bus route
rout
M A P P I N G
e
trail future ligh transit
MORPHOLOGY City Scale 1
31
ligh
l trai Edwards Aquifer (Balcones Fault Zone)
2
Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone
3
Barton Springs Edwards Aquifer Conservation District Hydrologic Zones
4
Balcones Escarpment
5
Site
6
Buchanan Dam
7
Inks Dam
8
Wirtz Dam
9
Starcke Dam
++
7
1
+ +
10 Mansfield Dam 11 Tom Miller Dam 12 Longhorn Dam
10
8 9
13 Barton Springs
2
+ A
A A
+
13
(Geo) Morphology River
4
RIVER organization of diagrams
CITY
east austin character
32
MORPHOLOGY
[ [
CULTURE
]
LARGE SCALE MIDDLE SCALE SITE
PROGRAM
Holly Shores Park Austin, Texas
ENVIRONMENT
RR
+ 5 + A
12
3
(G) M
11
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
1. 2. 3.
re futu
6 1
west cesar chavez
holly
govalle
s
lo p
il at
str
t ee
e.
laza
4th
lightrail to ABIA >
M A P P I N G
Zoning Analysis City Scale_2
33
WEST AUSTIN: Client: Clarksville Neighborhood Association Critic: Dean Almy Team Members: Xiwei Chen Tica Chitrarachis Jose Garcia Yu-Tang Hsieh Jessi Koch Jinah Lee Sishuo Liu Jon Mautz Samantha Schwarze Abby Wiltse Jihye Yun
34
FRAMEWORK FOR URBANISM
Publication : A Redevelopment Scenario for the West End
we must give a new identity to the concept of density. one of the major challenges of current urban design practice is the restructuring of territories that are under the control of multiple stakeholders. the ‘texas triangle’ [austin+dallas+san antonio+houston] is predicted to double the population over the next twenty years. there will be an increased demand for urban housing as well as ongoing paradigm shifts from suburban to urban-oriented and sustainable lifestyles models. We investigated and established an urban system, appropriate densities and a sense of place for the clarksville neighborhood.
URBAN RULES sky plane
noncompetitive heights h
5t
density bonus
h
5t
St
identity h
5t
live work
St
St
h
5t
St
matching heights h
5t
St
h
5t
St
public transit: 1913 congress avenue
35
clarksville site size: 68 acres existing units: 472 7 dwelling units per acre
36 45’
120’ PAUL ST
W LYNN ST
60’ OAKLAND ST
LL ST
CAMPBE
EXPRE SSWAY
POWELL ST
MOPAC
45’ 45’
60’
60’ 60’
OAKLAND ST
HIGHLAND ST
W LYNN ST
CAMPBELL
ST
AUGUSTA ST
PATTERSON ST
BAYLOR ST
BLANCO ST
HARTHAN ST
WINFLO ST
PRESSLER ST
W 9TH ST
W 6TH ST 45’
60’ 45’
60’ 45’
60’
BAYLOR ST
SAYER ST
WALSH ST
PRESSLER ST
60’
120’
N. LAMAR BLVD
45’
W 5TH ST 60’
90’
120’
60’ WINFLO ST
45’
120’
120’ 200’
120’
90’ 200’
60’ 200’
120’ 200’
37
90’ 60’
or
eet
str
yl
nn
.
ll be
st We
mp Ca
5th
120’
Ly nn
60’
5th
e promenad
m co
capitol view corridor
ds ar
6th
eet str
ds
we Po
ds
ar
et
ar
60’ 45’
ll
60’
45’
d an st
stre 6th
d an st
eet
str
ty li bi ta pa
d an
st
ty li bi ta pa
m co
m co
ty li bi ta pa
6th
r
ls Wa
ma La
5th
m co ty li bi ta pa st ds ar
ty li bi ta pa
d an
m co
implementing zoning regulations et + compatible height standards tre h s
6th
d an st
eet
str
ar ds
r
ls Wa
ma La
60’ 45’
massing model
h
ch Or
120’ yl Ba
d ar
or
60’ 45
120’ 60’
5th
t
5th
h
nn
eet
str
individual block studies 6t
ee str
Ly
5th
.
ll be
60’
5th
ee str
eet
str
m co d an st
eet str
ty li bi ta pa ar
6th
ds
60’ 45’
ls Wa h
ch Or
120’
d ar
60’ 45
5th
str
eet
120’ 60’ 45
t
st We
mp Ca
or
120’
d ar
yl Ba
60’
ch Or
120’
38
eet
str
str
eet
re et st
5t h
re et st
6t h capitol view corridor st We .
Campbell
reet 5th st
Ly nn
promenad
90’ 60’
e
pre
sss ler
capitol view corridor m co ty li bi ta pa
et
ds
we Po
ar
ll
60’
45’
d an st
stre 6th
120’ 60’
.
ll be
st We
mp Ca
5th
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str
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wes
t l ynn
m co ty li bi ta pa st d an ds ar
6th
eet
str
ma La r
yl Ba or
120’ 60’
5th
eet
str
m co d an st
eet str
ty li bi ta pa ar
6th
ds
60’ 45’
ls Wa h
ch Or
120’
39
ar
view from lamar bridge
40
catalytic forces
41
green roofs
residential
commercial
civic
parking
ground
axon: program breakdown
SECTION
scale 1/16”: 1’-0”
43
3rd street promenade
44
24%
40%
LAMAR
WEST LYNN
47%
HOUSING: 4.9% 168 Units
25%
36%
34%
31%
37%
17 Units
44%
34%
34%
22%
31%
32%
57%
11%
67%
62%
54%
150 Units HOUSING: 10.3%
154 Units
urban housing inventory
45
DOWNTOWN CONNECTIONS
URBAN LAND INSTITUTE: DESIGN COMPETITION HOUSTON, TEXAS Faculty: Simon Atkinson Dean Almy
Mentors: Mary Martinich | design workshop Steve Oliver | opa studio John Mapes | gensler
the living district
breathe
city of houston data
today 2,140,000
total additional land use equivalent to
2,520,000
grow
a. highrise residential b. incubater business c. office d. entertainment
regional rail connections link residents
requires open space equivalent to
54
15.8 acres 1,000 residents
Memorial Parks
2020
live
4
100% of residents within 1/4 mile of open space dense trees screen and
cleanse highway air
Memorial Parks
requires development equivalent to
45
roof gardens invite a slower pace and reveal a
new downtown perspective
2 units acre
Memorial Parks
with opportunities
a dense variety of work, live and play options
bike lanes and mass transit
delivers a high
quality of life for residents and
integrate
requires open space equivalent to
11
20 acres 1,000 residents
5 Memorial Parks
large open spaces reduce stress and multi-use paths
encourage physical activity street plazas develop community and provide venues for
shade and create habitat
historic districts, enhancing the appeal of greater downtown
bayou recreation areas 16 units acre
Memorial Parks
Memorial Parks
leaks landscape waste irrigation water facility toilet use
48 inches year
32 gal capita
f. SRO housing
demand 51%
g. transit station
potable water
1
municipal water facility
perspective view
improve surface water quality
through on site biofiltration
capture
2 2
reuse
Memorial Parks
with the bayou life to the streets
reduce domestic
potable water collection
requires potable water supply equivalent to
trails connect
e. live work units
evapotranspiration
filter store
4
multi-use paths link residents to existing
5
annual rainfall
collection
requires development equivalent to
culturally diverse activites
Memorial Parks
63 gal capita
the site with the theatre and
visitors alike
large trees provide
total additional land use equivalent to
requires potable water supply equivalent to
throughout the greater houston area
filter
and downtown, drawing
store
district character a dense and active urban setting, accommodating the dynamic cultural diversity of the city
community commons increased access to recreation and nature for the entire community
adaptive façades
multi-modal community lifestyle, connected across the city and the
the living district is a scalable, adaptive paradigm, proposing a dense culturally rich center of economic and ecological productivity that can be replicated across houston’s regional transit network.
structural vents
region
ecosystem services water conservation for a healthy community and a healthy bayou
downtown connections
building with the houston downtown development framework
biofiltration tieback
interactive water meter display
transit and mobility framework
commuter rail
flood basin expansion
the bank
district components
breathe
the beach
the triangle
live
civic space
district sown
district germinates
district sprouts
white oak bayou commuter rail washington ave
the living district
roof garden
community commons
urban bayou beach
interstate 10
arts district
investing in quality of life air purification
bus and street car passenger stop
historic district interstate 45
$120,000
permeable open space
biofiltration
community green roof, native species for habitat and water quality 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
flood mitigation, riparian corridor expansion, urban beach bayou boardwalk
$486,000
greywater capture, filtration, and reuse system
$300,000
washington avenue streetcar project
Bayou Boardwalk
$3,825,000
sound mitigation
Greywater Capture, Filtration and Reuse System
Washington Avenue Street Car
21,500 residents
water vaults 100 yr. flood plain
Project $18,906,500
7,500 units
6
6
mixed use/ office
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
Community Green Roof (native plant species for habitat and water quality) Flood Mitigation, Riparian Corridor Expansion, and Urban Beach
light rail main street
residential target of 20,000 residents by 2025 in an ecology of integrated Living Districts
$11,826,000
Improved Streetscapes and Public Plazas
theatre district
grow
live work move
live work move
$2,349,500
water vaults
buffalo bayou
memorial park
open space playing fields
6
18
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
6
18
6
21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21 21
6
improved streetscapes and public plazas residential
phase I
total investment in public infrastructure
residential
office
515 units *160 SRO, 35 affordable 200,250 square feet
retail
93,420 square feet
hotel
-
residential
phase II
office
*20,520 affordable
515 units *160 SRO, 35 affordable
office
200,250 square feet
retail
93,420 square feet
hotel
-
*20,520 affordable
residential
355 units *28 affordable 213,480 square feet
retail
72,450 square feet
hotel
65,000 square feet
355 units *28 affordable
residential
phase III
office
residential
330 units *30 affordable 188,280 square feet
retail
68,310 square feet
hotel
-
330 units *30 affordable
residential
build out office
residential
1200 units *160 SRO, 103 affordable 602,010 square feet
retail
234,180 square feet *20,520 affordable
hotel
65,000 square feet
1200 units *160 SRO, 103 affordable
office
213,480 square feet
office
188,280 square feet
office
602,010 square feet
retail
72,450 square feet
retail
68,310 square feet
retail
234,180 square feet *20,520 affordable
hotel
65,000 square feet
hotel
-
hotel
65,000 square feet
8008 8008
8008
8008
8008
8008
presentation board
46
five students. three disciplines. two weeks. the challenge is to devise a comprehensive design and development program for a real, large-scale site full of challenges and opportunities. this years location was houston, texas. directly adjacent to the buffalo bayou and at the site of the post office distribution center for the region. we were to give the site a new identity. a specific identity that spoke to the current theatre and historic district of downtown houston. team members: Nicolas Alinder J.W. Fields Travis Glenn Kevin Sullivan
district sown
district germinates
| | | |
M.Architecture MBA M.Landscape M.Landscape
district sprouts
memorial park
VISION PLAN
THE LIVING DISTRICT 47
the Living District’s scalable reinterpretation of today’s urban village challenges the city of no zoning to maximize its potential for responsive, adaptive land use, replicating dense centers of economic and ecological productivity across a regional network of interconnected transit systems. this proposal links all of the greater Houston area into the vital, resilient Bayou City of the 21st century.
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COMPREHENSIVE PLAN scale 1:200
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The Beach
Urban Beach
living
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though all team members had direct influence to the overall vision and each component crafted here, I was personally responsible for the work of the sectional drawings, comprehensive plan, and diagrams
The Triangle
N to S SECTION SCALE
activity
1:50
open space
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DEVELOPING NATION : INDIA
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mussoorie cow, ladour village tailor facade mumbai nightscape,new dehli tracks bazaar classmates
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ENGINEERGING MINISTRIES INTERNATIONAL:
PUNE TRAINING CENTER
MAHARASHTRA, INDIA Client: Rev. P. Haokip Rev. Moses Parmar Operation Mobilisation Team Members : Matthew Coffey civil engineer Brandi Hill architect Raju Pun technician Laura Sheely environmental engineer Stephen Sparrow civil engineer
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precedent project under construction in lucknow, india
site border ground floor plan
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on site renderings overall site plan
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CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND Fall 2014 Overland Partners Teams Members: Rick Archer Madison Smith Samantha Whitney Schwarze Alan Gombera
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WATERLOO DEVELOPMENT HUB At the core of the Waterloo Development Hub is people. Through culture, economy and ecology people are brought together to form a life-giving hub that - contributes to the rebuilding for the people of Christchuch by addressing the industrial, commercial, and residential demands of the city through a diverse development model that fusters a sustainable urban future.
BAY OF ISLANDS
Pegasus Bay 12km
AUKLAND NORTH ISLAND
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within the transport network and have an emphasis on distribution and ctivities.
Christchurch Airport Harewood
WELLINGTON n undertaken of business sites within Christchurch City and this sought to 7
hip for employment density based on gross site area to assist with forecasting SOUTH ISLAND uts for greenfield business 1 zones. The analysis identified a relatively high CHRISTCHURCH 8 a, particularly for Business 4 zones, resultant from the wide range of activities
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6km
Mairehau
Burwood New Brighton
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1
ed a relationship of an DUNEDEN average of 36 employees/ha of gross site area for anticipated that the Islington Park will have approximately 3,960 employees ationships.
CHRISTCHURCH CBD
3km
STEWERT ISLAND
been undertaken of the ANZSIC employment types within each zone for ss 5, and a similar development in Auckland that represents the developer’s Again, there is some variation within the zones of each business type. Having s categories, the following categorisation was adopted. Percentage Employees
A Agriculture, Forestry and Fishing
0%
B Mining
0%
C Manufacturing
20%
D Electricity, Gas and Water Supply
1%
E Construction
8%
F Wholesale Trade
35%
G Retail Trade
6%
H Accommodation, Cafes and Restaurants
2%
I Transport and Storage
3%
J Communication Services L Property and Business Services
15%
K Finance and Insurance
1%
M Government Administration and Defence
2%
N Education
3%
O Health and Community Services
2%
P Cultural and Recreational Services
1%
Q Personal and Other Services
1%
Middleton 76
Woolston
Cashmere
WATERLOO SITE
Category
Islington
Lyttelton
Governors Bay
Prebbleton
Table 6: Expected Employment Mix
it is proposed that there will be a small retail contribution, with a higher ntribution.
Plan Change assessment, three spare zones have been reallocated to the present:
e existing Business 4 and Business 5 zone that is subject to the subdivision ha)
regional mapping
REGIONAL CONTEXT
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT HUB FOR CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND
WAT E R L O 59
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UTSOA:
JOHNSON CITY: URBAN DESIGN STUDIO
Fall semester 2014
Collaboration between the Hill Country Alliance, Overland Partners and the University of Texas School of Architecture collaborated together on an urban design studio. The studio was focused on the Texas Hill Country, a rather large swath of 11 million acres. The hill country is beautiful and prosperous, a host to European, Mexican and American influences.
JOHNSON CITY, TEXAS
Hill Country Alliance: Christy Muse Overland Partners: Bob Shemwell Samantha W.Schwarze UTSOA professor: Dean Almy UTSOA 1st year Urban Design Students
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A taxonomy of other Texas towns kicked off the studio. Once scale was understood and approach established, four key issues emerged -
Mobility & Transit | Ecology & Landscape | Culture & Identity | Settlement & Built Form
THIS IS A TOOL
WHAT IS IT
WHAT DOES IT DO
VIDEO / COMMERCIAL
ACTIVATION
WHAT IS THE CONTENT
WHO IS THE AUDIENCE
Highlighting the beauty and meaning of the Hill Country Addressing the temporality of the Hill Country and the possibility that it could disappear
+ goes viral + social media shareable
Uncovering the current threats
TEXANS + boy scouts + families +fisherman +hunters + hikers +campers + ranchers + artists + kids
FUNDING
Pro-bono [Overland]
WHO IS DOING THE WORK McGarrah Jessi [Austin, TX] advertising firm
Donations Out of pocket HCA Historian : Stephen Harrigan
MILLENIALS predicted Millennials will become more like the “civic-minded” G.I. generation with a strong sense of community both local and global.
SHORT TERM [3 months]
X-GENS
this
Gen Xers are less likely to idolize leaders and are more inclined to work toward longterm institutional and systematic change through economic, media and consumer actions
THE ISSUES as defined by the Hill Country Alliance
BOOK
MOTIVATION
Illuminating the possibilities of the Hill Country + scope of the region + scenarios of how to take action + possible future
Screenwriter : Bill Broyles “This movie begins and ends in Texas,” says Broyles, here with his wife Andrea and Hanks in Canadian, Texas, where Cast Away’s bookend scenes were shot. “And that’s no accident. This is where my heart is.”
BABY BOOMERS
EVERYBODY Regional stakeholders Landowners
Team up with a local university [UT: UD / CRP / MLA, UTSA]
Developers
Professors + Students
Utilities County / City / State leaders
informs this
Community leaders Businesses
MID TERM
Argriculturalist
[1 year]
Interested activist Need money for a book cost to design / produce [$6k?]
GUIDELINES DESIGN
TOOLKIT
IMPLEMENTATION
+ Low impact development + Policies that have worked for other projects - water / sprawl
informs this
City planners and staff +architects +landscape architects +urban designers +planners Philanthropist
LONG TERM
Policy Makers
[5 years]
TX-DOT
Grants : EPA / Graham Foundation + TPWD
Founded in 1956, the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts makes project-based grants to individuals and organizations and produces public programs to foster the development and exchange of diverse and challenging ideas about architecture and its role in the arts, culture, and society.
+ Environmental Education Grants + People, Prosperity and the Planet + Water Grants
SWA | AECOM | ARUP +landscape/engineering
+ Community Action for a Renewed Environment (CARE)
+ Thesis
WHAT IS IT
WHAT DOES IT DO
WHAT IS THE CONTENT
WHO IS THE AUDIENCE
FUNDING
WHO IS DOING THE WORK
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student work
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All material in nature, the mountains and the streams and the air and we, are made of light which has been spent, and this crumpled mass called material casts a shadow, and the shadow belongs to light.
Louis Kahn