Undergraduate Architecture Portfolio 2017-2019| University of Melbourne

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P O R T F O L I O SELECTED WORKS 2017 - 2019 MARIO YOHANES RINALDY 917889 BACHELOR OF DESIGN UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE


M A R I O Y O H A N E S R I N A L D Y

C O N T E N T S

E-MAIL

EDUCATION

01

mrinaldy@student.unimelb.edu.au mario.sihombing44@gmail.com

2017 - 2019

University of Melbourne Melbourne, Australia Bachelor of Design Architecture + Transport Design Specialization

2016 - 2017

Trinity College Foundation Studies Melbourne, Australia July Fast Track program

TELEPHONE +61 426 772 317 WEBSITE excalibur561.wixsite.com/mrinaldy issuu.com/marioyohanesrinaldy

2013 - 2016

SMAK BPK PENABUR Gading Serpong Tangerang, Indonesia High school education

EXPERIENCE 2017 - 2018

DESIGN STUDIO EPSILON: CARLTON UNION

DESIGN STUDIO DELTA: THE GOLDEN LIBRARY

05

01 03

DESIGN STUDIO GAMMA: DI/VIDE HOUSE

PT. Ciputra Residence Tangerang, Indonesia Internship at Architecture and Planning Department

09

EXHIBITIONS 2017

02

Foundations of Design: Representation Exhibition Andrew Lee King Fun Gallery MSDx Winter Design Studio Alpha : Dystopian Dreams

2018

MSDx Summer Design Studio Gamma : DI/VIDE House

2019

MSDx Winter & MSDx Summer Design Studio Delta : The Golden Library Construction Design Exhibition Dulux Gallery

SKILLS CAD Software

Rhinoceros; Grasshopper

Digital Image

Adobe Photoshop; Adobe Illustrator; Adobe InDesign

Physical Modelling

3D printing; laser cutting; handcrafting

04

CONSTRUCTION DESIGN: GLASSHOUSE SECTION MODEL AND AXO

13

05

INTERNSHIP PROJECT: THE TREES CLUSTER GATE

15


01 CARLTON UNION

HEALING THROUGH COMMUNITY PROJECT BRIEF To design a community healthcare center PROJECT TYPE Civic YEAR LEVEL

Year 3, Semester 2, 2019

SUBJECT Design Studio Epsilon Academic project Individual SITE LOCATION 459 Lygon Street, Carlton, VIC TUTOR Robert Polglase robert.polglase@unimelb.edu.au PROJECT DESCRIPTION The Carlton Union is a community health center and new town square providing a space of interaction, engagement, and cultural activities for the district. Situated on what was VicRoads Customer Service Center site, the automobile-oriented character threatens communal aspects of interaction. The project aims to break the institutional typology of a health center through provision of public space as means of introducing a warm sense of community into the building. Ceiling height windows in consultation rooms, seating areas with an open view to the inner court breaks the oppressive character of the health institution. The design’s gradual slope into the ground accentuates the vertical transition between the urban city and Melbourne General Cemetery’s landscape, which functions as areas of cultural and communal exchange on its slopes. Perspective view from Lygon Street 1


TERRACE DECK OFFICE

RY

TE ME

D OA

SITE ZONING

ST

EA

SECOND FLOOR

CORE

TERRACE DECK

R

NIT

MU

M CO

PROGRAMME CLUSTERS ARRANGEMENT

MENTAL HEALTH

CE

ACCESS AND MAIN LINK STOP FUTURE TRAM

TERRACE DECK

TERRACE DECK SUPPORTING FACILITIES

CORE

H ITY

ER

NT

CE

N

MU

M CO

MULTI-THERAPHY

FIRST FLOOR

LTH

EA

GYM

DYNAMIC VIEWS

ER

ELT

SH

TRANSITION BETWEEN URBAN & LANDSCAPE

GP NURSE

LYTTON

STREET

LYGON

CARLTON UNION

STREET

GREENHOUSE PHYSIO OT

ER

ELT

SH

WINDOWS IN CONSULTATION ROOMS LTH

A HE

ER

NT

CE

ITY SUNLIGHT ACCESS TO COURTS UN MM CO

FUNCTION ROOM COMMUNITY ROOMS

SITE RESPONSE

ACTIVITIES AROUND COURTYARD

The project’s brief is simplified into clusters, where departments are grouped based on their relationship, function, and facilities required. The ground floor areas functions as the town square open space while upper floors provide calm and reflective spaces. Trees and a significant setback from Cemetery Road East provides a break from the traffic’s noise and air pollution. Carlton Union is located on the edge of Lygon Street to preserve its historic cafe lifestyle urban interface, while a secondary greenhouse building provides gardening activities as community engagement.

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

STRATEGIES

COURTYARD

GROUND FLOOR

NUTRIONIST DIETICIAN

ALLIED HEALTH COMMUNITY SUPPORT FACILITIES

CORE

CAFE

INNER COURT

PHARMACY

PROGRAMME CLUSTERING

TERRACING & URBAN INTERFACE

FORM MAKING

a i u e o

LYTTON STREET CEMETERY ROAD EAST

SECTION NORTH-SOUTH 2

NIT

MU

M CO

EA

YH


P1 BIKE PARKING SHELTER SERVICES &UTILITIES

PATIENTS’ DECK

FUNCTION ROOM COURTYARD

CAFE

GYM DECK

PATIENTS’ DECK GP & NURSE

P3 GYM

THERAPY DECK

RECEPTION

MEETING ROOMS

STAFF DECK

INNER COURT

NUTRIONIST

SHOWERS/ LOCKERS

P2

P4

PHYSIOTHERAPY PHARMACY

IV TREATMENT

ARCHIVES

MENTAL HEALTH

MEETING ROOM

OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY

OFFICE

DIETICIAN

QUIET ROOM

GROUP THERAPY

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

SECOND FLOOR PLAN

ALLIED HEALTH COMMUNITY SUPPORT FACILITIES

DETAIL SECTION

LYGON STREET

SECTION EAST-WEST 3


VEGETATION GROWTH MEDIUM FILTER MEMBRANE DRAINAGE LAYER ROOT BARRIER WATERPROOF MEMBRANE

METAL PANELS TOP PLATE C-SECTION TOP HAT

ROOF FRAMING STRUCTURES PLASTERBOARD CEILING

SERVICES

SUSPENDED CEILING

PERSPECTIVE 1

View to central courtyard and steps as spaces for community interaction and activity

BOOKSHELVES

CLADDING HANGERS CONSULTATION ROOM GLASS WINDOW

WINDOW FRAME FLOOR SLAB EDGE BEAM TIMBER CLADDED CEILING

CEILING INSULATION PLASTERBOARD CEILING

TIMBER FRAME WALL WITH PLASTERBOARD FINISH

TIMBER CLADDING

CONSULTATION ROOM WINDOW PANELS

BIO-BASED TILES POST-TENSIONED SLAB

PERSPECTIVE 2

Seating/waiting area with an open view to the central inner court atrium

TIMBER BATTENS CEILING FINISH

PERFORATED METAL CEILING AWNING WINDOW

PERSPECTIVE 3

Central link corridor, blending thresholds between the outdoor and indoor

PHARMACY

GROUND SLAB

TIMBER DECKING GROUND SLAB EDGE BEAM REINFORCED CONCRETE BORED PIERS

PERSPECTIVE 4

DETAIL SECTION

View in inner court as an inner town square, bringing activity to the health insitution typology

Detail section showing the timber cladding and grass roof of the building. Operable timber window panels allow for privacy options and a threshold for the consultation rooms. Terrace deck on the pharmacy area allows for urban interaction and waiting area when waiting for prescripted medicines. 4


02 THE GOLDEN LIBRARY

EXHIBITED IN MSDx Winter & Summer 2019

LIBRARY AS AN OPEN SPACE PROJECT BRIEF Design of a new City of Melbourne library in Chinatown

N

Year 3, Semester 1, 2019

ER

D

YEAR LEVEL

PE

PROJECT TYPE Civic

PL E

C

A

SUBJECT Design Studio Delta Academic project Individual

C RR

O S

SITE LOCATION 132-140 Little Bourke Street, Melbourne, VIC

E N LA

TUTOR Laura Smith laura.smith1@unimelb.edu.au PROJECT DESCRIPTION

ST KE UR BO LE TT LI EL

SS

RU ET

RE

ST

This project aims to break the library typology by inviting the public inside with an open space, restoring its connection with the urban fabric. It complements the lack of open space in the Chinatown site, as the library acts as an extension of the adjacent laneway into a new public square. Continuous and free circulation brings the public upwards in slopes through dramatic grand spaces. The main collection was sloped upwards allowing a reader direct access to a particular section instead of confusing labyrinths. Its form is both iconic and monumental, paying tribute to the rich history of gold in the area, as well as being a new pride of the city.

RE ET

The library is often seen as a secluded space disconnected from the urban fabric, as its presence is invisible to the public. In this era of digitalization, the raison d’etre of the library is being questioned.

Isometric view of the library in context. 5


arde ns Carlt on G

649

m

RM

IT

A’B ec

kett

Urb

an

Squa

re

388 m

State

Libra

ry Ga

rden

1,162 m Flagstaff Gardens

RISEN SHELF

THE TYPICAL BOOKSHELF

Fitzroy Gar dens Trea su

ry G

City Squ are

arde ns

VOLUME REDUCTION & CROSS PROGRAMMING

521 m

THE TOPOGRAPHIC SHELF

818 m Bi

Pa

rk

rr

ng Ma

rraru

rk

tm

an

Pa

Ba

Do

ns arde aG

dens oria Gar Queen Vict

m

andr Alex

nds

ckla

55

2,1

ical

otan

al B

Roy dens Gar

Existing libraries

win t sun er path

SITE EXTRUSION

SETBACK AS PUBLIC SPACE

INDENTATIONS & SUN ACCESS

STRATEGIES

N

17:0

8 12:0

0

+ +

w COHEN PLACE

MARKET LANE

BRIEN LANE

COVERLID PLACE

sum sun mer path

LACEY PLACE

6

CORRS LANE

20:3

LITTLE BOURKE STREET

07:3

= =

6

墨 爾 本 唐 人 街

CONTINUOUS FLOOR PLATES

E

HISTORICAL APPRECIATTION

THE NEW LIBRARY

REINVENTING THE LIBRARY

05:5

2

s

SITE RESPONSE

THE LIBRARY AND THE CITY ANALYTICAL MAPPING OF LIBRARIES, OPEN SPACES AND THE SITE

The site is located in historic Melbourne Chinatown. People flooded the streets during rush hours, creating a dense and hectic environment. However, there are barely any open space in the surrounding area to cater these people, in activity or just breathing space from hecticness as seen from the analytical mapping above. A central atrium within the library and a west-facing glass curtain wall allows for maximum sunlight acces, as the site is surrounded by tall buildings. The bluestone material of Corrs Lane creates a more pedestrian friendly atmosphere, and the library caters to that by having a setback for the laneway extension into a public square and extending this material into the interiors, integrating the library into the urban fabric, which is the main driver of this project. The library’s open interior and outdoor spaces created a breathing room for activities in the hectic Chinatown.

6

INITIAL CONCEPT The initial idea of a sloped library was derived from an earlier assignment in this Studio. The assignment’s task was to design a library, catering the public and private aspect, within a 3 x 3 x 3 meter space. The slope in this case provides seating and shelves for books. Furthermore, it also creates a transition between the public upper level and the more private bottom level, while creating an amphitheatre effect, so that the readers have a wide grand view from reading/seating on the steps. This concept evolves into a larger scale as seen in the sketch, as the sloped collection is cross-programmed with reading “You, The Library, & The Cube” Preliminary concept sketch of spaces and continous circulation into the upper floor, creating a seamless and direct journey of knowledge exploration. Assignment Model the sloped shelves


ROOFTOP

ROOFTOP AREA / OUTDOOR READINGA

STORAGE ADMIN OFFICE THIRD FLOOR

SMALL COLLECTIONS GROUP STUDY YOUTH COLLECTION STUDY AREA GROUP STUDY MEETING ROOM

SECOND FLOOR

SMALL COLLECTIONS

PERSPECTIVE 1

The grand main space of the library brings public space into the library’s main collection floor, allowing for galleries and exhibits.

AUDITORIUM STUDY AREA

MEZZANINE

DIGITAL INTERACTIVE AREA MEZZANINE

OPEN STAGE MAIN COLLECTION & READING AREA FIRST FLOOR MAIN SPACE GALLERY SPACE CATALOG & LENDING

FIRST FLOOR

ADMIN DESK

PERSPECTIVE 2

STORAGE CHILDREN COLLECTION PUBLIC OPEN SPACE / CORRS LANE SQUARE ADMIN DESK GROUND FLOOR MAIN SPACE

The narrow point where the rising collecttion slope meets the declining auditorium slope allows for a more private reading space and viewing point to the outdoor. GROUND FLOOR

RETAIL/ F&B PUBLIC COMPUTERS MEETING ROOM PERIODICALS CAFE ENTRY FOYER

PRIMARY CIRCULATION SECONDARY (FREE) CIRCULATION DAY ACTIVITIES NIGHT ACTIVITIES 7

EXPLODED ISOMETRIC


The library’s overall form pays respect to the site’s historical significance, where the area was home to traders during the Melbourne Gold Rush. The angular form was inspired by a gold ore, in which the building’s materiality of stone and light sandstone colour complements that. The windows are gold coated, similar to that of Eureka Tower with a gold wall piece placed in the Little Bourke Street facade. TOILETS STORAGE

TOILETS

MEETING ROOM

TOILETS

DIGITAL INTERACTION MAIN COLLECTION

TOILETS ADMIN OFFICE CHILDREN COLLECTION

ADMIN DESK

MEETING ROOM

PERIODICALS CAFE

MAIN SPACE

STUDY

STUDY

MAIN COLLECTION

OUTDOOR READING

YOUTH COLLECTION

AUDITORIUM

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

MEZZANINE FLOOR PLAN

SECOND FLOOR PLAN

THIRD FLOOR PLAN

ROOFTOP PLAN OUTDOOR READING

YOUTH COLLECTION STUDY AREA

AUDITORIUM

STUDY AREA

MAIN COLLECTION

GRAND SPACE

CORRS LANE

PERSPECTIVE 3

SECTIONAL PERSPECTIVE

View from entering Chinatown from Russel Street, showcasing the iconic forms of the new City Library.

CAFE

MEETING ROOM

PENDER PLACE

Showing the sloped topographic bookshelfs and the grand central main space, a new public space for Chinatown.

8


03 DI/VIDE HOUSE

EXHIBITED IN MSDx Summer 2018

PROJECT BRIEF Design of a multi-generational house on a narrow inner-city site PROJECT TYPE Residential YEAR LEVEL

Year 2, Semester 2, 2018

SUBJECT Design Studio Gamma Academic project Individual SITE LOCATION 4 MacArthur Place North, Carlton, VIC TUTOR Sarah Kahn skahn@unimelb.edu.au PROJECT DESCRIPTION The project is a three-bedroom house extension of a heritagelisted house. The DI/VIDE House is one take on the renovation and upgrades to the original inner-city Victorian home. The site itself is telescopic and small, facing the lush garden on the South. The brief requires to accommodate the needs and functions for several different people over the course of 30-years. The new home retains the existing frontal part of the house, while the rear laneway provides an opportunity for activation as an extension of the rear garden. The overall shape of the house respects the frontal heritage component and respect the surrounding Carlton suburb character. The timber cladding facades blends the house into the suburb, as the weathering effect of timber will seamlessly integrates itself into the surroundings.

View from Nicholls Lane, the rear of the house with weathered timber and simplified context. 9


3 PM

ELGIN STREET

9 AM 9 AM

NICHOLLS LANE CANNING STREET

CANNING STREET

NEW EXTENSION HERITAGE CONTEXT

MACARTHUR PLACE NORTH

DESIGN RESPONSE

SITE CONTEXT ANALYSIS

SURROUNDINGS CONSIDERATION

NORTHEAST SUN ACCESS TO FRONTAL AREAS AND COURT

LEVELS OF PRIVACY ZONING

STAIR COMPONENT AS CENTER AND THRESHOLD

30 YEARS TRANSFORMATIVE SPACE

DIAGRAMS

The design of DI/VIDE tries to stay away from the ‘central courtyard’ typology as a way to allow sunlight into the house. The mass division wastes valuable space which can be used for functions and eclipse the courtyard itself, rendering it useless. This resulted in the house’s function to be pushed to the front, allowing for an open personal garden at the back for the client’s relaxation and maximizing northern sunlight.

The secondary family and dining space at the rear allows for an extension of the rear garden as a family area. The overhang on the first floor acts a shading system to shade the decking and dining areas during hot summers. The little lightwell on the central part of the house, combined with the glass wall and roof of the stair component allows maximum sunlight penetration on the frontal part of the house without sacrificing space.

NICHOLLS LANE

MACARTHUR PLACE NORTH

SECTION A-A’ 10

ELGIN STREET


A’

A’

A’

MASTER BEDROOM

KITCHEN/ UTILITIES

D

D’

D

D’

D

D’

DINING ROOM STUDY

BATHROOM FAMILY ROOM

INITIAL SKETCHES C

C’

C

B

B’

B

TOILET

BEDROOM 1

C’

C

B’

B

Initial ideas of different sections of the house creates different spaces with the concept of a long extruded form lying on top of a smaller form, the final form of the house.

C’

BEDROOM 2

B’

LIVING ROOM

A

ROOF PLAN

A

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

A

FIRST FLOOR PLAN PERSPECTIVE 1

The dining area and the rear garden allow a smooth transition betweent the interior and outdoor, extending the family space outwards.

HOUSE STRUCTURE The house uses a steel portal frame system for its roof and overall form. The portal frame creates a sense of direction and focus into the interior and the green grass on the rear garden as a person enters the house from the front. Furthermore, it also allows the creation of high ceiling, allowing a sense of grandeur and height even though the house is on a narrow site

SECTION B - B’

SECTION C - C’

SECTION D - D’

11

PERSPECTIVE 2

The interior of the house uses concrete, marble, and white platerboard. The light gray colour of these materials integrates well with the timber colour and texture, creating a timeless combination for modern contemporary homes. The concrete floor acts as thermal mass for comfort.


MULTI-GENERATIONAL ADAPTABILITY

MODEL

The brief specifies the house adaptibility to different users’ needs for a 30-year period. The main users are: the client, his wife, his child and a possible second child, the grandparents, and a possible renting tenant, not family related. The house’s adaptibility is as follows:

Sectional cut

FIRST 10 YEARS

SECOND 10 YEARS

THIRD 10 YEARS

The grandparents lives in the ground floor bedroom in the frontal heritage house, while the couple and their first child lives on the level above. Being seperated by a floor allows privacy on familial matters to prevent internal conflicts. The study area is located inside the master’s bedroom seperated by a wardrobe to allow privacy on the client’s business matters.

The grandparents moves out and the room was refurnished for the now teenage child. As a child grows during their teenage phase, they grow the need for privacy and a tendency to stay away from parents and closer to friends. The teenage child can greet their friends on the living room without disturbing his/her parents. The new child occupies the upper bedroom.

The first child has moved out. The ground bedroom allows for two possible functions, either a renting tenant or the now adult second child staying before moving out. If it is the renting tenant, a sliding door is to be installed on the staircase component, dividing the house into two parts. The current family enters from the rear, while the tenant from the front. The former bedroom on the first floor was turned into a home office, while the master bedroom is extended to include the bathroom. 12

Timber cladding facade

Retained historical frontage

Spaces within the ‘adaptive’ space

Stairway component


04 GLASSHOUSE SECTION MODEL &AXO

EXHIBITED IN Constuction Design Exhibition 2019

PROJECT BRIEF Physical modeling and detail axonometric of a section of the building PROJECT TYPE Civic YEAR LEVEL

Year 3, Semester 1, 2019

SUBJECT Construction Design Academic project Individual SITE LOCATION Olympic Boulevard, Olympic Park, Melbourne, VIC TUTOR Yi Lobachevsky yi.lobachevsky@unimelb.edu.au PROJECT DESCRIPTION The Glasshouse, home to Collingwood Football Club, is the selected project for the Construction Design assignment. I was assigned a focus section area of the building, in which a 1:20 sectional model and a 1:10 detailed axonometric drawings covering 2 x 2 x 2 meters were created. Understanding the underlying construction strategies responding to the architect’s design intent was shown in both the model and drawing.

Front and rear view of 1:20 sectional model 13


GLASSHOUSE Olympic Park by Croxon Ramsay.

MODEL DETAILS

Section A location.

LEGEND 1 2

4

3

5

4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

26

25

14 15 16 17 2

4

3

18 19 20 21 22

1 9

23 8

24 27

7 6 12

25 26

10 8

13 12

MARIO YOHANES RINALDY 917889

FFL RL 10.70 - LEVEL 2 15

16

8

13

14 7 4

6

3

5

19

RL 16..84 - TOP OF NORTH PARAPET

15

24

15

23

16

17

10

18 21

23

14

LEGEND

Structural Universal Column 200 UC 46, Inclined. Alumunium Transom/Mullions Plasterboard lining Sprandel Insulation Bradford CSR, 75mm thick SPANSEAL Rockwool Boards (R(m) 2.2) with THERMOFOIL vapor barrier and Black Tissue Facing Fully sealed sprandel panel 5 Alumunium Window Head and Subhead 6 Folded alumunium flashing 7 Folded metal cladding parapet capping with anti-abrasive paper, 12 mm ply substrate, and framing 8 RT 1 Truss Top Chord 150 PFC 9 RT 1 Truss Diagonals 75 x 8 EA 10 RT 1 Truss Verticals 75 x 8 EA 11 RT 1 Truss End Verticals 150 PFC 12 RT 1 Truss Bottom Chord 150 PFC 13 MC 2 metal cladding VMZinc Vertical Interlocking Panels Nominal 300mm panel width Panel depth 24mm 1mm thick Preweathered Anthra Zinc finish 14 MC 3 metal cladding VMZinc Flat Lock Seam Panel 0.7mm-0.8mm thick Preweathered Anthra Zinc finish 15 Stud wall system to support panels Minimal/Conflicting information Either Timber or Steel 16 Folded Colorbond Box Gutter with Insulation min. 834mm x 150mm 17 MC 3 folded apron flashing 18 Folden colorbond flashing 19 Metal roof sheet Lysaght Kliplock 406, BMT 0.48 with 18mm thick Plywood backing, Zincalume finish 20 B4 battons Joint with RB2 150 UC 23 12 Cleat plate, 6 CFW 2M20 8.8/S bolts 21 RB2 beams 250 UB 31 22 Feature beam, black finish 200 UC 46 6 CFW 23 Z purlins 24 Blanket Insulation Fletchers 100mm (R(m)2.5) heavy duty sisalation adhered 75mm Roof Rack thermal spacer 25 Internal Ceiling Cladding American Oak, White Smoked Finish Custom profile 26 External Glass facade Sprandel Viridian Thermotech IGU, 6mm thick toughened Super Grey Finish 27 Steel Plate Cleats for Mullion Support Mechanically fixed to slab edge 28 Insulation Bradford CSR Gold batts 215mm thick (R(m) 4.1) 2 3 4

11 15

17

27

1

Structural Universal Column 200 UC 46, Inclined. Post Tension Concrete Slab 220 mm thick, F’c= 40 MPa Bottom Reinforcement Bars 10 N12 (B19) at 400 mm centers Top Reinforcement Bars 2 N16 (T21) Post Tension tendons 4 strands, Dead load Floor Beam IB46 700 x 600 Beam Reinforcement Bars 1N18 E.F. Top and Bottom Reinforcement Bars 7N20 at 80 mm centers Floor Beam Ligatures N12 at 300 centers Steel Plate Cleats for Mullion Support Mechanically fixed to slab edge Steel Shelf Angle for Window Sill Support Mechanically fixed to slab edge Single Hollow Section 89 x 5 Sprandel Insulation Bradford CSR, 75mm thick SPANSEAL Rockwool Boards (R(m) 2.2) with THERMOFOIL vapor barrier and Black Tissue Facing Plasterboard lining to bulkhead 160 PFC Aluminum Window Sill/Mullions Steel Shelf Angles with openings for drainage at 1000 mm centers 125 x 10 EA 180 PFC Insulation Bradford CSR, 88mm thick sound screen, R(m) 2.5 Ceiling Plasterboard suspenders Plasterboard Ceiling Metal Roof Sheet Lysaght Kliplock 406, BMT 0.48 with 18mm thick Plywood backing, Zincalume finish Folded Colorbond Box Gutter 500x180 Box Gutter Insulation Foil Board, Ultra 20 Folded Colorbond flashing and ply substrate fixed to steel shelf angle Timber Floor finish American White Oak, 189x20 Structurally Double Glazed Window Min 6mm thick, 12mm Argon gap, Min 6mm VFloat toughened, IGU thickness 25mm, Grey finish Glass Facade Thermotech IGU, Min 6mm Super Grey toughened, Super Grey finish

Roof structure

Post-tensioned slab system

Suspended ceiling

Bored piers and precast panel joint

Ground Floor precast wall

Ground slab and floor finish

MARIO YOHANES RINALDY 917889

9

Tutorial 7 Yi Lobachevsky

Tutorial 7 Yi Lobachevsky

GLASSHOUSE Olympic Park Community Facility Olympic Blvd, Olympic Park

GLASSHOUSE Olympic Park Community Facility Olympic Blvd, Olympic Park

11

by CROXON RAMSAY

by CROXON RAMSAY

SECTION A FIRST FLOOR JOINT AXONOMETRIC

SECTION A ROOF JOINT AXONOMETRIC

28

24 1 27

23

12

22

21 22

20

27

19

25

2

Drawing Scale 1:10 @ A2

Drawing Scale 1:10 @ A2

CL RL 9.50 - CAFE

18

Axonometric detail showing floor slab and facade joints.

CL RL 13.70 - LEVEL 2

Axonometric detail showing roof structure and facade joints.

THE AXONOMETRIC DRAWINGS

THE MODEL

Complementing the sectional model are the axonometric drawings. The axonometric drawings covers a 2x2x2 meters cube of an edge joint detail and roof structure joint detail. The first axonometric shows the connection details of the posttensioned slab and the lower roof structure with guttering. The second axonometric covers the roof structure and the doubleceiling system, which allows for extra noise insulation from the metal roof. Both drawings shows how the notable sloped glass facade were attached to the building with waterproofing details to ensure weathertightness.

I was assigned with Section A, which is located on the northwestern end of the building. The model covers 24 square meters of base area from the building’s substructure to superstructure. This section contains complex structural systems as this part of the building was built on poor soil conditions--Coode Island Silt--yet it has an iconic design form with sloped glass facade and a divergence point of two different structural grid. The model shows the structural connections as well as slab systems and waterproofing details that provides me with a critical understanding of the building’s performance.

14


05 THE TREES CLUSTER GATE

ROLE

Conceptual design, renders

RG

RE

EN

BO

UL

CLUSTER GATE

EV

AR

D

TIM UR

VE

BA

RD

Haryanto Ong Planning and Design Manager

.E

RA

T

THE TREES CLUSTER

NORTH ELEVATION

EV A

REPORTED TO

JL

UL

SITE LOCATION Citra Raya Tangerang, Tangerang, Indonesia

The gate consisted of two structures. The bigger structure on the right is where the security kiosk will be stationed by security guards. The smaller structure on the left is the toilet for the guards, allowing them to maintain the security of the cluster 24/7 without leaving the premise. The shape of these two function remains a square, however, as according to feedback, these circular form and space are very hard to be done precisely in brick and concrete with the current skills of the available labour force. The metal gate has a tree trunk illusion played with the thickness of each steel member, allowing a sense of entering the forest. The design does not incorporate plants hanging and growing on the timber members, as the firm’s experience suggested it is very costly to maintain and the desired effect of greenery is unlikely to be achieved constantly due to varying plant growth.

BO

FIRM PT. Ciputra Residence Internship project Individual

DESIGN RESPONSE

EN

DESIGN PERIOD December 2017 - January 2018

TOP VIEW

RE

PROJECT TYPE Civic/Residential

Eye-level view of the cluster gate entrance. Made with Rhinoceros

ER G

PROJECT BRIEF Design for a gate of a new residential gated-community cluster development

JL .

EV

PROJECT DESCRIPTION Before the launch of The Trees residential cluster, I was asked to develop a concept for the security gate. The brief was to create an iconic design which still corresponds to the cluster name, nature connections, and relates to the architecture and materiality of the houses that will be sold in the development.

EAST ELEVATION

Arrayed in a circle, timber beams formed the shape of two trees. The overarching canopy form of the structure creates a sense of welcome and prestige for residents and possible buyers, while the natural representation of using timber allows a more intimate connection with nature. The warm material breaks away from the standard 3-storey concrete shophouses bordering it, cementing an iconic nature of the residential cluster. 15


E

N

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