selected works lynette lynette salas heyaime Lynette Salassalas Heyaime
During the final review for my degree project, I was repeatedly asked about my design process. Said one critique, ‘So you did this, then that, then you came up with this? Can you tell me the order of your design process? There seems to be some steps missing in between.’ I was confused and feeling flustered by the question. I am naturally very succinct in my explanations and presentations, feeling that if I have to do more talking than my diagrams, drawings, photos, and renderings can explain, then I must’ve failed in communicating my idea. It was at the point in my review where my critics were on the precipice of believing in my premise or thinking it was complete bullshit. I responded, ‘Well, It is difficult for me to answer that in the linear manner to which you posed the question. My design process is not linear, rather exhaustive and circuitous.’ I began to recall the process that I took, including cultural, historical, social, and environmental research, many tests, intermittently disrupted by study models, and then further research, precedence, interrupted with more site visits, climate analysis and the list goes on and on. The critic that asked the question replied, ‘That’s good...a great design is never linear and I hope you never design in a linear manner.’ He, in addition to the other critics, lauded my process, my premise, and ultimately my design in addition to providing very constructive critique in how to make my intervention better Architecture. It is always a rewarding experience when you have a great constructive review, but this was an especially rewarding review. Throughout my undergraduate studios and even some graduate studios I was discouraged from having a research-based process that was not linear. My studiomates would discourage me from looking up native plants or researching the history of the site, while my professors would claim, ‘do this next, don’t waste your time researching cultural issues.’ This continually frustrated me. How is this Architecture? I believe it to be a difficult task to create good Architecture if it is not at least supremely comprehensive and can form a relationship with its context and the people and purpose to which it serves. No site is a tabula rasa. This is part of the reason I call my buildings “interventions” instead of “buildings.” The structures are intervening into a social, political, historical, environmental, etc network, not merely placed. As a result, my reviews were either full of rich concepts and research but lacking representation when it came to the final product, or the concept was weak and indefensible, as I struggled to make vapid aesthetic architecture. This final degree project meant so much to me because I was able to accomplish both. I was able to gather my ideas and opinions of the site and translate into a form that would serve the community, and finally represent it. I finally selected a professor that was known for being research and designed focused, and he taught me how to delve even deeper into issues and relationships. Not only did he teach me to be more comprehensive, but he taught me to be fast, very fast. If I was ever going to make Architecture, not architecture, I had to be thoughtful, comprehensive and a fast producer. While I have many good projects to show, these four have been the most exhaustive for me, the most comprehensive. I am still extremely critical of these projects because I wish I could have researched more or represented more, but they remain large snapshots of what I have become as a designer.
process
table of contents BRIDGING THE BOUNDARIES gutter to gulf, phase iv
04
NICKELODEON IN THE CITY reinventing the hudson rail yards
18
STRANGE ATTRACTORS (an)other addition the kimball art museum
28
PERIPHERAL EXCHANGES connectivity through vacancy (final degree project)
36
4
bridging the boundaries gutter to gulf studio, phase iv
critic: derek hoeferlin washington university in st. louis with university of toronto landscape architecture school graduate - spring 2012 29.9221째 N, 89.8903째 W st. bernard parish, louisiana program: wellness retreat center
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perspective// approach from 40 Arpent Canal
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premise
Landscape and its respective ecologies adapt over time. It is vital to create Architecture that similarly adapts. Situated on the 40 Arpent Canal, between Bayou Dupree and the Mississippi River, this critical landscape is characterized by four main conditions: a Hardwood Forest, a Drainage Canal, an Earthen Levee, and decayed wetlands. The possible opening of the Mississippi River Diversion will divert fresh water to the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet and has huge potential to rebuild the vital wetlands while temporarily flooding the landscape of St. Bernard Parish. Whether or not this happens, the Wellness Retreat Center bridges over all landscapes and is elevated to withstand flooding and soil regrowth while dually hindering the growth of an invasive plant species by restricting sunlight. Program: Reception Massage Rooms Acupuncture Rooms Changing Rooms Yoga Platform Lounge Meditation
Map provided by the University of Toronto Landscape Architecture School
View of 40 Arpent Canal, showing the water hyacinth covering the water and the hardwood forest on the left.
7
research
Water Hyacinth are invasive plants not indigenous to Louisiana that cover the freshwater canals, blocking sunlight to species living in the water and clogging the motors of boats travelling on the canal. Because Saint Bernard Parish provides optimal sunlight for the Water Hyacinth, if the temperature were lowered through shade, their growth patterns would be hindered. This would allow the underwater species to thrive, and be less of a nuisance to boaters. Wetland loss is another huge issue concerning Southern Louisiana due to salt water intrusion into the freshwater. In order to rebuild the wetlands, a soil gathering system can be implemented which will promote the growth of Cypress trees.
WATER HYACINTH GROWTH
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photo credit: derek hoeferlin
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process The concept model served as a method to explore how tensile structures can bridge over a range of conditions including the: Hardwood Forest, 40 Arpent Canal, Earthen Levee, and the decaying wetlands. The structures were designed as a multi-layered filtering system for sunlight and soil. The tensile structures formed enclosures, protection, and walkable surfaces.
FOREST
40 ARPENT
EARTHEN LEVEE
WETLANDS
surface
storage
barrier
storage
6 feet sea level -2 feet -6 feet -12 feet
HARAHAN CLAY
model construction: handmade hemp weavings over graphite on vellum and crescent board
BARBARY CLAY
photo credit: derek hoeferlin
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photo credit: derek hoeferlin
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photo credit: derek hoeferlin
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perspective// left, changing rooms; center, massage corridor; right, entry
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A
B
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D
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Circ Circulation After
A
A
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C C
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Circ
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G
Circulation Before D F
E A B
C
D
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Circulation Before
D A
E
B
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Circulation After
D
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Circulation Before B
D
Circulation After A B
C
D
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Circ B
A
Circulation After
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A B
Circ
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perspective// entrance to massage rooms
impact
photo// lounge space above and intersecting walkways below.
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nickelodeon in the city reinventing the hudson rail yards critic: mark mcglothlin undergraduate - fall 2008 in collaboration with suzanne davis 40.7546째 N, 74.0038째 W new york, new york program: mixed-use residential corporate retail cultural public institutional
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perspective// from the High Line- Left, Residential Towers; Center Back, Corporate Towers; Right, Media Arts Campus
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The Nickelodeon
(concept of new district connecting to New York’s history)
zipper + drawer = interlocking moving parts
(concept of form and relationships to allow for interactive projections)
Purpose: To re-develop the 6 city blocks that make up the Hudson Rail Yards. Approach: A new neighborhood based off of a lost fragment of New York City’s past: the nickelodeon. The public core serves as an urban carpet and the facades of the buildings serve as interactive screens for projection of media events.
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East-West Section through Media Core: from left, Visitor Center + Gallery + Film Deck, Indoor/Outdoor Theatre, Media Arts Student Center with Outdoor Projection.
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NOW SHOWING: ‘The Tramp’ starring Charlie Chaplin perspective// from west-end of Media Park with Retail/Residential Tower on Right and Corporate Towers on Left showing Projection Facades.
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perspective// from Corporate Tower down into Welcome Center and Media-Park
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perspective// Entry from Northeast Corner into Corporate Corridor
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Commercial Public
Cultural
Residential
Media Arts
AA
CC
BB AA
DD CC
BB
2
Gym Retail Commercial Information Center/Gallery Indoor Theater Outdoor Theater Student Dining Library Restaurant/Cafe Residential Dorm Classrooms/Labs
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3
1
DD
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3 2
3 3
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4 6 5 2 10
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2 9
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7 8
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strange attractors (an)other addition to the kimbell art museum critic: robert mccarter graduate - spring 2011
32.7485째 N, 97.3651째 W fort worth, texas program: museum addition for contemporary art
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perpsective// entry to Fifth Floor Special Exhibition
30 Purpose: to confront Renzo Piano’s controversial change in his addition site, from the publicized East site to the West, demolishing the grove of Yaopon holly trees, compromising the approach to the museum and the west-gaining light into the portico entry Approach: A tower with a small footprint that creates a campus with several smaller structures. Why a tower? A tower accomplishes an understated tension that respects the landmark museum while maintaining a bold approach to design. Sited to maximize sequence and circulation
actual site
published site
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Program: 1. Lobby Gallery with a. cafe b. museum shop c. coat check 2. Main Gallery 3. Special Exhibit 4. Sculpture Park 5. Education Center 6. Auditorium 4 7. Library Service Parking
3
level: five
3 7
level: four
2 6 c
1
b
level: three
5
a
2 level: ground
level: two
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Drainage Layer Roofing Membrane Thermal Insulation Vapor Retarder Flashing
2” Plaster 12” Concrete 4” Rigid Insulation
Aerial View of Addition
Vapor Barrier 2” Channelled Glass Aluminum Mullion
2” Glass
4” Cross-Cut Wood Flooring Setting Bed
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perspective// fifth floor special exhibit
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perspective// fourth floor special exhibit with outdoor terrace
perspective// fifth floor special exhibit
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peripheral exchanges connectivity through vacancy
design thinking (research) critic: derek hoeferlin graduate - fall 2012 degree project critic: adrian luchini graduate - spring 2013 38.6447째 N, 90.2615째 W st. louis, missouri program: nutrition research + resource center
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eco
eco
no
no
mi
mi
cd
cp
isp
ros
ari
pe
ty
rity
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premise
While the discussion of St. Louis’s vacancies is an international and controversial one, “peripheral exchanges” captures the current condition of vacancies in anticipation of future economic growth and its implied increased density. The vacancies in Central West End facilitate interaction and connectivity between people and the Architecture captures those peripheral exchanges. The overlapping and undulating roofs are derived from the overlapped distorted perspectives of the context’s gable roofs. This Nutrition Research and Resource Center dually serve Central West End’s science community and the health needs of its immediate community.
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what actually exists
what we consciously focus on
what we subconsciously ignore
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Approaching a City, 19461 I see scrub lands and some pine groves that escort me for a long stretch (with signs of human presence nearby) in the midst of anticyclonic weather. It increases at the rate we advance the number of industrial buildings that rise like huge masses of demoralizing and contagious ugliness, and in the distance looms the overpopulated city, with infulae of framework for an empiricist spectacle, bereft of common sense, kaleidoscopic. I see irrigated lands, billboards and bridges spanning ditches and twisting highways. I see retaining walls with spray-painted scrawls dividing routes in the overlapping continuum of streets, warehouses and homes dotted with narrow windows. As if rigged for a tracking shot, the camera approaches the mouth of the tunnel and just at the moment of entry, seeing the present denatured world and suddenly overwhelmed by unfamiliar darkness, I feel like someone sticking his nose where it don’t belong. I let myself get carried away with jitters and think that’s all right.
image credit, above: Hopper, Edward. Approaching a City. 1946. Painting 1 Farres, Ernest.
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periphery core
core periphery
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44
XXX
divide new, illegal path path of desire blockage
the great blockade of central west end
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xxxxxxxxx
O EC
C MI NO RI PA ITY
R PE
TY
OS
PR
S DI
C
MI
O ON
These blockages take the form of giant bollards, locked gates, dead-end roads separated by a sidewalk (as seen above), or a combination of the three.
EC
There are certain neighborhoods within St. Louis City--particularly Central West End and University City--where the streets do not connect. Not because of rivers or harsh topography, but because of economic differences and the actual and/or perceived crime of the peripheral neighborhoods. While University City attempts to block out the Skinker-Debaliviere, Wellston and Pagedale neighborhoods, Central West End attempts to block out Lewis Place and other northern-lying neighborhoods.
W
46
WAS H
ING
TON
AVE
DEL
VE
WES
TMI
NST
PLA CE
NEW
STE
ER
AVE
AD
OLI
TAY LO
RA VE
MAR
MCP
HER
TAY LO
RP
LAC
ED
R
SON
AVE
OLI
VE
AVE
HOD
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IAM
ENR
ONT
STR
EET CAR
ROW
IGH
NP END
ELT ON
T
END
ELT ON
$65,000
typology of exclusion
cost of average home
median
$600,000
gate
bollards
48
vision analysis 60째
core vision
120째
peripheral vision walking
88째
peripheral vision driving
as speed increases, peripheral vision narrows, diminishing the range of connectivity.
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50
vacancies facilitate connections to surrounding context
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52
speed + connectivity as a design catalyst
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Program
55 Private Employee
Research
23% 6670 nsf
Resource
44% 12877 nsf
Food Lab Nutrition Lab
2182 nsf
Reserved Library Stacks
3576 nsf
Library Main Stacks
2432 nsf
11723 nsf
Reading Room
400 nsf
Workshop Room
754 nsf
Administrative Administration/Mail Room
8%
912 nsf
347 nsf
Offices (2)
804 nsf
Conference Room
295 nsf
Waiting Room
986 nsf
Utility
Storage + Mech Room
4557 nsf
Vestibule
159 nsf
Restrooms
206 nsf
Circulation
3053 nsf
15%
Circulation
10% 3053 nsf
4192 nsf
Public Student
All
56
overhead condition frames existing context
ot
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1
1 2 1a
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north
Plan // Level One
Nutrition Research + Resource Center 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
Mechanical Room + Storage Administration Office Reading Room Conference Room a. Storage Workshop Assembly Waiting Room Food Lab Nutrition Lab General Stacks Computer Station Circulation Desk Main Entry Library Reserves
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perspective// threshold between research wing and resource wing from left, Library, Workshop Room, Reading Room, Outdoor Enclave
perspective// Main Library, with Special Collection Mezzanine
Roof undulates to let in natural bounced light from above and Northeastern Ambient Light through the glass facade. Shape of roof is extruded from existing context.
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perspective// threshold between research wing and resource wing
from left, aperture letting in Northern Light through Copper Screen, Staircase to Mezzanine, Main Library.
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destroy the great blockade of central west end! (see p. 44)
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thank you
to my family, immediate and extended for all of their support and wisdom to drink a glass of wine when feeling stressed. to my business school friends for understanding that studio takes precedence over “networking� (aka drinking), but not always. to my architecture friends for support, blunt critique, unity, and much needed escapes. to my professors for challenging me and opening my eyes, especially: Robert McCarter for your thorough critiques, encouragement, and challenging predicted typologies. Derek Hoeferlin for teaching me the value of research, Architecture (not architecture), focus and speed; and for arguing with me on a daily, if not hourly, basis. Adrian Luchini for giving me the room to explore, test and discover, and teaching me when to allow my concept to dominate or fade the continuing design process.
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lynette lynettesalas salasheyaime heyaime lynette salas heyaime spanish: :arabic room foreign german: bldg