Selected Works 2018 - 2021
Maggie Martin
Studio Projects
Waste - Land Pages 6-15
Physio Reality Pages 16-21
Via Cavour Pages 24-31
CloudScape Pages 32-37
Design Work
Watchtower Pages 40-43
Research Sound Pavillion Pages 46-53
“But more importantly, they remind us of what it means to have an American architecture without pretence. They remind us that we can be as awed by the simple as by the complex and that if we pay attention, this will offer us a glimpse into what is essential to the future of American architecture: its honesty.” - Samuel Mockbee on “The Rural Studio”
Waste - Land Spring 2021
Sarah Nichols 504 Studio Proposes a new Houston Municipality that approaches many of the shortcomings of a government sphere through architecture. My partner Yun Koo and I found Houston’s predominantly privatized waste system as an opportunity to readdress the lens which covers the by-products of our everyday life. In envisioning a new civic sphere, the wasteland project suggests a new public waste service intervention / that co-exists with other municipal institutions literally and physically, with the site of a recycling waste center parallel to the city hall. The project directly undermines the productive typology we find ourselves living under/ by declaring that every good ever needed already exists in circulation and should be cared for as a public good. The Project wasteland attempts to imagine a world with no waste. It attempts to question what place architecture has an adaptive timeline of a progressive system that requires immediate action. Today’s proposal is sited adjacent to downtown recognizing the significant role of waste facilities in a functioning municipal system. The project consists of the leading recycling plant that sits on top of public markets, classrooms, and workshops. The center is then pierced through with worker dormitories, a Cafe, and Breakspaces. Giving care to the workers and their families who help keep Houston clean.
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Compost Center perspective
System Perspective
Roof Cafe Perspective
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Site Plan
Elevation Perspective
1st Floor Plan
2nd Floor Mezzanine Plan 12
Section
Site Model - Plaster 4’ by 5’ 13
Concept Perspective
Physio Reality Fall 2020
“Only Nature is truly Continuous. The builders of buildings must contend with construction in parts. Operating thusly, under original sin, the will to continutity and discontinuity is the source of pleasure and pain, virtue and vice. Man is finite and so are his products.” Atlas of the novel techtonics Liz Galvez’s Studio 2020 Fall semester was titled Air Architecture, a studio questioning phenomena, sensations, and environments. What began as a study of insulation evolved to a survey of cavity walls and their many layers that retain our comfort perception. Physio reality challenges the need for central air and the 72-degree artificial climate we often find ourselves occupying and placing full responsibility of comfort in the hands of materials and their manipulation. The project designs walls to be opened, peeled back layer by layer, allowing occupants to explore and become responsible for their environment directly. The project questions the given “recipes” of various wall types, using off-the-shelf materials accounting for the advanced disposal rate of manipulated materials. While the project gains atmospheric connections and releases the occupants from sealed rooms, it also generates an increased amount of waste. An opportunity to catalog the decay of these materials is placed at the forefront of the project. The site’s spine is a large-scale archive, a boneyard of the building’s past.
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Gallery perspective
Diagramatic Wall Section
Front porch perspective
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Ground Site plan
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Wall types PLAN Project Wall Interventions
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Site
8 Office Axon
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Via Cavour Spring 2020
Situated on the corner of Via Cavour and Via Dei Fori Imperiali, one of Rome’s most historic locations, this public building acts as a sanctuary for the neighboring community and visitors. The area is one of the most visited city spaces by tourists, with the Colosseum and the Roman Forum as the building’s neighbors. However, the project is bordered by residences and a school. Through a dual façade, the exterior is wrapped in a barrier, allowing for privacy, while the courtyard façade activates the building through its undulating transparencies. The biaxial plan dissolving from the street edge through the building to the courtyard provides pockets of the program and various degrees of privacy. Upon entry, the visitor is pulled down into the building, then lifted through the circulation and café core or continuing into the protected courtyard space, paralleled with a daycare. A primary event space becomes the building’s center point, with the adjacent café and office feeding into gathering space through circulation. While the exterior courtyard is a primary community space, the rooftop terrace becomes a secondary area for events and viewing of Rome’s most significant archeological sites.
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Approach on Via Dei Fori Imperiali
Suspension Bridge over Courtyard and Theatre
Sunken Entry
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Ground Floor
Cross Section
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1st Floor plan
2nd Floor Plan
Roof Plan
Cross Section
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Long Section
Cloudscape Fall 2019
Set in downtown Boston Caddy Dan Zahng’s Studio questions urban farmings place in a dense city setting. The project is a statement on the timeline of architecture and the accumulation of use on buildings, particularly the waste accumulation produced by the animal product industry. It focuses on how we design for a climate and society now and later. It provides an answer for what happens when we take accountability for a building 100 years from now. The project flips a neighborhood’s existing building circulation, bottom to top, in reverse. The project is a solution that adapts to rising tides and allows cities to infill as required. The grid system stabilizes existing buildings allowing for the lifestyle change to happen gradually. The project provides a physically sustainable community structure; the project also offers a community park and farm that supports feeding and jobs to the primary residences while still giving the district space to expand.
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Tower Entry
Milking Stations
View From Residential Window
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2nd Floor plan 1/16” = 1’
8th Floor Plan
5.50’
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3rd Floor plan 1/16” = 1’
9th Floor Plan
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Design Work
Watchtower Summer 2020
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Located on Long Farm in Concord, NC, The watchtower is a secondary structure annexed from the client’s home. The watchtower, the lighthouse, and the deer stand all have a precarious history, one a lineage of oppression, one of safety, and the last modern man’s position in nature. However, all place an individual teetering over a landscape left to contemplate for an often lengthy period of time. When a previous professor and mentor asked for a remote office that would allow them to keep an eye and light on the vegetable beds across their farm, a vertical steel structure was designed. The project offers a secluded philosopher’s office, sat atop a micro-library of tools and objects. The thinker passes through the object library through a spiral staircase up to a platform providing maximum look-out space, possibly for contemplating and sipping tea. The visitor then steps down into the office, fit with a builtin desk, movable wall panels, and light tunnels, all manipulated through levers found at the desk. The project prioritizes the client and his hours sat at a desk, providing a modulated home office that reimagines these building typologies. *Currently under construction
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644'
642'
640'
638'
Septic Field
641" 636'
636' 648'
646'
FF 641.5
644'
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Detail Axons
Plans
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Research
Sound pavillion
“Architect’s Newspaper 2019 Editors Pick Best of Design Award for Research” Summer 2018-2019
The project title, Allotrope, draws from its chemistry definition which involves different physical forms of the same element caused by variation in arrangement and type of bond. For instance, both diamond and graphite are made of carbon, yet they exhibit very different properties. In the case of Allotrope Architecture, the same design and fabrication methods can be applied to generate multiple design solutions at various scales as seen with the proposed architectural concepts at the scale of a brick, pavilion, and infrastructure. Gypsum is one of the most commonly used building materials today. However, despite its ubiquitous appropriation in architecture and construction, few domains of research and fabrication seek to provide opportunistic design approaches for its application. Outside of typical wall board, contemporary production of architectural elements range from cornices to column covers, which use Glass Fiber Reinforced Gypsum (GFRG) products to pick up the intricacies of ornament. In industry the production of these parts come with a catalog of options allowing for multiple casts using the same mold, not unlike the application of complex formal molds for automobile production. Drawing from these existing processes, the Allotrope Architecture project seeks to find ways to explore innovative alternatives to the use of GFRG, while also developing design methods which allow for repetitive use of molds by aggregating similar panels in threedimensional space with variable relationships between them. + Rachel Dickey with Alexander Cabral, Drake Cecil, William Hutchins, Hana Maleki, Margaret Martin, Jarrod Norris, Ashkan Radnia, Robert Sachs, and Hunter Sigmon. *Description taken from official project publishing, My role as an undergraduate research assistant was spent on drawings and fabrication from start to finish as well as some design influence from previous research.
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GRFG casting process
Connection Details
Exhibition Space
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Pavillion Section 1 A0.3
PAVILION SECTION scale 1/2" = 1'-0"
PAVILION DRAWINGS
PRESENTATION DRAWINGS
A 0.3
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Pavillion Elevation
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Thank you