SAMPLE PORTFOLIO MIRUNA MAZILU AA Dipl 2016 PART I I
mirunamazilu@gmail.com +44 7 51 7 861 642
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
AA SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE 5th year project, RIBA PART 2 2016
The Artifice of Place The thesis crafts the line between the seen and the actual, as a method of constructing place and its identity. It establishes that the places we construct expand beyond the borders of the site of inspiration or the site they are found in. They engage with the world outside and negotiate a fundamental exchange. Thourgh model making, collaging, 1 : 1 installation and animation, the project creates instances of ambiguity and of misplacement which imply multiple readings of our surroundings. Therefore, the proposal moves away from a room, building or landscape per se, towards designing the ground which connects them, offering an extension of the context in which they are found. These moments challenge thresholds of proximity, framing, boundaries, materiality & duration. These conditions define a particular relation between the place and inhabitant. They shift a moment from its usual state, by introducing another.
Perceived Setup 1:100 00 60
mm
9
o
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net Creating the effect of vastness into the city responds to the desire of escaping into ‘the other’. By deconstructing foreground, middleground and background, the city falls away as you surface on to the fields that stretch350m towards the horizon of rolling hills. You escape by artificially creating a view you rarely get in the city. The project establishes place as a dynamic and fragmentary construct, using forced perspective and alignments.
Access points connecting all levels
50m
As you navigate through the terrain the fragments form instances of continuity, presenting a continuous narrative. It is a constant process of constructing landscape as a discontinuous geography which reveals itself as a seamless experiential & visual ground. Photograph of sequence of 1 : 100 , 1 : 300 and 1 : 3000 scale models
150m
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
Technical Study of proposal structural beam toothed wheel
Pivoting element
cast-iron plate
gears and machinery counterweight
spread footing
Once the steel is in place, the entire structure is covered with concrete.
cast-iron plate grillage horizontal steel beams thick concrete pad poured directly onto the hard clay under the ground.
As the platforms come together as one for the audience’s experience, they also engage with each other into a cycle of disabling place from being established at one end in order to form the identity of a place at another. The continuity of the view relies on the elements being aligned. Once the alignments is broken, we have a clash between two worlds.
1
5 0 x 7 0m
o
9
In very heavy buildings, the base of the spread footings rest on massive concrete piers that extend all the way down to the earth’s bedrock layer.
2
3
The Artifice of Place Philip Johnson builds the Glass house as a house in which to die. In the house, Poussin’s painting, “The burial”, hangs in perfect alignment with the horizon to extend the exterior view. The narrative of the painting envelopes the reality of Johnson’ s death, whom died in 2005 in the Glass House.
Two completely different worlds and realities which are combined and disrupted by a 10 cm frame. By collapsing thresholds multiple readings of a scene create an expanse of context. They connect an object, an interior, a building and the landscape.
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
WORKING EXPERIENCE - Proctor and Matthews Architects RIBA PART I & I I Architectural Assistant 2013 - 15
Winning competition entry - Residential & Masterplanning The project comprises of two development plots and will provide 155 dwellings consisting of a wide range of housing types from courtyard clusters to larger family courtyard houses.
The 21st Century design achieves Code for Sustainable Homes Level 5.
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
Each cluster of dwellings is arranged around a central shared court. A semi-private communal space designed to accommodate residents’ parking and support neighbourly interactions.
Each typology is provided with either a private courtyard garden or terrace (or both).
WORKING EXPERIENCE - Proctor and Matthews Architects RIBA PART I & I I Architectural Assistant 2013 - 15
Post Competition - Evolving desgn from Stage 0 to Stage 3 I followed the project from the competition stage up until its Planning stages, developing typology plans and elevations to a high level of detail as well as: - Refuse Collection Strategy, Estate Management, Provisional Utility Layout, Distribution of dwelling types, Construction Delivery Strategy etc.
Built Form
Longevity
The proposed facades transition from a gault brick to the more red hues of nearby distinctive stone and red brick buildings.
Ground Floor
1st Floor
2nd Floor
Type B
Type C1
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
WORKING EXPERIENCE - PMA RIBA PART I & I I Architectural Assistant 2013 - 15
Post competition - Developing design The proposal offers a mix of housing types, including apartments, terraces, semi-detached and detached houses for the scheme which range from 1 & 2 bedroom apartments to 3, 4 & 5 bedroom houses, designed to meet Lifetime Homes Standards. Ground Floor Loadbearing internal walls Internal bracing walls
uilt Sustainability Formdiagram Sustainability
First Floor
Proposal for Sea World India Oceanarium Feasibility Study The Oceanarium comprises of four intertwined buildings, like a family of ocean creatures swimming together. The dramatic entrances of the bridges set across a moat lead to separate ticketing areas for the aquarium and conference venue. The proposal also includes research, conference and education facilities. The visitors’ journey through the atmospheric spaces, which include the external exhibition areas, designed to entertain and educate.
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
WORK EXPERIENCE - Practice Architecture On-site assembly 2012
Building Frank ‘ s Cafe and auditorium The project comprised of the design and construction of a reception area, a hay auditorium and a rooftop cafe. Applied valuable creativity and teamwork skills as part of the 8 week project led by a group of young architects. I gained valuable organisational and problem solving skills, following the project from design phase to building and completion. Client: Bold Tendencies Location: London
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net
AA SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE 3rd year project, RIBA PART I 2013
Aalto’ s Crepuscular Loyly Town hall extension proposal, re-appropriating redundant sections of Alvar Aalto’s Town Hall in Saynatsalo, creating the effect of the building leaking into the forest. The proposal extends the traditional concept of a Loyly; a Finnish word associated with the experience of steam and heat experienced in Finnish saunas.
To develop the design, multiple techniques were used: lasercutting, 3D modeling the proposal and its mould, 3D scanning and CNC milling the moulds for the model and slipcasting ceramics to make the 4 ceramic 1:50 tower models.
Brick 1 Porous ceramic bricks
Galvanised smooth reinforcement
30 cm
Galvanised steel angles
*1
6.5 cm The geometry derived from the surface area studies as well as the previous light studies.
Brick 1
Brick 2
Wall buildup
m
19
m
Solidity of wall - combination of ceramic and framework
17 m
24
Sauna Chamber 4
Wall layers: Wall solidity Skin has a slit becomes an opening
Structure
Skin
Sauna Chamber 3
Sauna Chamber 2
Sauna Chamber 1
Saynatsalo Town Hall
N
Ground level plan Scale 1:100 Saynatsalo Island Finland, 62.8°N 25.46°E
Steam chambers
AA SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE 4th year project, RIBA PART I I 2015
From Fleeting to Fixed The project examines what we make, how we make and where we make it. Exploring the space of production -the studio- where identity is shaped through the making of immaterial & mass; what sits between making event and artefact? The primary precedent was Donald Judd’s 101 Spring St. which is an example of a landform, his house, bringing together a series of independent objects in a permanent installation. It is interesting to clash this with another major ideology that was taking form in New York simultaneously. While Judd was transforming the building into a home, a studio and a laboratory of ideas, the explosion of consumerism reverberated in Andy Warhol’s “Factory”. Here event becomes simulation of place, generating 15 minutes of fame and the nomad artwork assembly line. Pairing the two, I question instances of permanence within a collection of work, in relation to place.
Miruna Mazilu www.mirunamazilu.net