Winter 2009
Fall 2008
Ann Arbor, Michigan Winter 2008
Fall 2007
Lubbock, Texas Fall 2006
Sevilla, Spain + Brussels, Belgium
Summer 2006
Spring 2006
Lubbock, Texas
Forgotten Memorial [thesis]
LAX_engineering the fifth ecology
Architectural Theory and Criticism Silent Partners and Short Circuits
New Densities, The Lawn study [front yard - back yard], Farmer’s Market
Slack Nocturnal, 16 Green Cases, Fermi National Accelerator Lab, Viaduct in China
Space-Light-Motion Modulator, Digital + Analog
Facade Research, Student + Elderly Housing
Islamic geometries, Construction of a Minbar
Mary Lopez, North Keeragol + Matt Haynes
Fall 2008 LAX 5th Ecology University of Michigan TCAUP graduate program Jason Johnson
The Site. LAX parking garage [near international terminal] The Proposed. L.A has a lack of productive Garden Space throughout the city. Most of the food that is consumed travels on average 1500 miles. LAX’s influx of customers and necessity for food will be an ideal location for an urban, productive prototype. A colony of worker housing and hydroponic gardens will inhabit the site and repurpose it for their own needs. The influence of this particular colony will be global due to the entrepreneurial spirit that lives within a colony that produces and sells to national and international movers. With the particular driving forces of the sun and necessity for space the plants and colony will act as a single machine searching for ideal lighting conditions.
2.18
ACRES
SEEDING.WATERING.HARVESTING SEEDING EE NG.WATERI WATER WATERI TER NG.HARV G.HARVESTING ESTING R EST ESTI ESTING ROBOTIC RO OBOTIC OTI TIC SYSTEM TIC YSTEM T
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SECTION A _ A
Low Light N
Medium Light N
High Light
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ribbed structure
This uses control points to allow for or a variable amount of light to be tested ed with in the model.
process sketch
Fall 2007 Slack_Scape Fake Studio University of Michigan TCAUP graduate program Robert Adams
Truck Stop. An urban-scape in a rural setting. A port for refueling. A dense environment that provides the basic needs of life. An infrastructural system for a nomadic subculture: the trucker.
The Site. Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Batavia, Illinois Viaduct Hangzhou, China
The Proposed. Question the relationship between the worker and the work. A critical look at the densification of information and services.
[a] The site starts here
29
Who are you here with?
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Pile of white dust
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Earth flip worker’s housing 32
Fermi logo 33
Haung hui expressway under construction
Energy of 34 height
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Tall grass 41
20 new car dealerships 40
18,000 times around in 1/30 of a second
Workers on site housing Random animal tracks 44
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Percussion of pipes 46
Surveillance tower Bus of architects 47 Command and control
Elevated ground of commerce
Some piles
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Ground prepared for labor
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53 laborers in steel cage 54
Dust on the side of the road 55
Not double space 56
90RMB/day
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House of ridley scott daughter 58
1
Satellite image unclear, 2 Improve the picture 3 quality of the video, Satellite image clear, 4 Rice fields in Haunghou, China, 5 Mark on the map, 7 6 Exports to Batavia, Il, USA, 36 celsius to 28 9 celsius, 8 New technology, Chinese market, 10 An Architectural Model for Total Urbanization, 11 1969, Fills with gas and measures collisions, 12 Temperature of pipes, 13 Inspired by Jan Palach, 14 Vacant , 15 Map-Office: Underneath, 16 Leaking 17 roof-precious machines, Inner lining of particle 18 accelerator, Particle collision, 19 Asian farming
Staging area over pass
Concrete truck returning to the plant
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64
42
Sleeper
27 nocturnal spaces Influenced by the life of the truck driver, the trucker cab is hijacked and displaced in the world of factory workers [Hangzhou China] and physicists [Batavia Illinois]. The trucker lives and sleeps where he works. The factory worker ingests the dust of his own work and finds rest on site. The physicist is always collecting informa tion, never sleeping. Twenty Seven nocturnal spaces [chrome light boxes] are distributed on the site. Each unit is a bed, a place to rest, with a metal skin. The unit becomes lit when occu pied, creating subsequent indicators that something is happening on that site.
Materials 4,588 - zinc lug nut covers [2”d made in CHINA]
2,000 - external LED lights 0 001 - metal cable tray [30“ x 7.5”]
0 001 - sleeping pad [30” x 78”]
interior view scale 1” = 1’
Sleeper Unit on Site
27 Nocturnal Spaces The truck driver becomes his work. He sleeps in the machine he operates all day. The truck becomes a portable dwelling [a space for living and a space for working]. The physicist can never escape his work, every piece of matter contains micro particles [the meson, proton and neutrino]. The light box provides the physicist a place to sleep. It can be placed on any site, providing workers a place to sleep for short or long periods of time.
+ 7’-00”
One Unit.
+ 0’-00”
21 - Nocturnal Spaces 21 - light boxes for the factory workers Hours of Operation Sunday - Sunday 1:00 - 24:00 hr [a]
The viaduct becomes lit underneath as the night sky deepens its pigment [lit by chrome light boxes]. When the light boxes are vacant, there is no light, but as they become occupied the exterior becomes illuminated. Workers from the nearby factories are provided a place to rest.
6 - Nocturnal Spaces 6 - light boxes for the physicists working at Fermilab [Tevatron]
[view 3]
Hours of Operation Sunday - Sunday 1:00 - 24:00 hr
[b] The tevatron [four mile circumference particle accelerator] becomes lit with chrome light boxes. FermiLab physicists are provided rest in individual sleeping units placed on site [set in the natural prairie land, particles are being accelerated underneath them].
9 million events per second store one days worth
The bands of tape, entangled wires and blinking lights are resultants of the congestive nature of urbanism. Data is streamed under our feet, on the floor of the ocean and through the particles in the air. This new emerging architecture has to account for the data that is being produced [9 million events per second].
Annual Student Show [02.04.08-02.08.08] Reviewed by U-M Alumni Award Received: Graduate Studio Award
Spring 2006 Islamic Architecture Texas Tech College of Architecture undergraduate program Kristina Yu
UNITY in Multiplicity the challenge: to understand a subculture in america; to make full scale and construct
In its simplest form the minbar is just a platform with only a few steps. As a class we were broken into groups and given the task to design and build a minbar for the local Islamic community of Lubbock, Texas.
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Material
Size
11 06 03 01 01 03
Poplar wood posts Wood cross braces Russian birch plywood steps Russian birch plywood step Russian birch plywood bottom face MDF lasercut islamic motif screens
[04“x04”] [02“x04”] [36”x12”] [36”x36”] [36”x36”] [42”x42”]
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planimetric. a
planimetric. b
section. a-a
section. b-b
Fall 2006 Poetic Potential of Computers Texas Tech College of Architecture undergraduate program Bennett Neiman
The space modulator provides the opportunity to relate design to direct work with materials as against previous architectural methods in which structural inventions were hampered by the shortcomings of visualization on paper alone. On the other hand, structural projects could be solved just as well by working with the model alone; but again this would not give the experience in visualization and development on paper which is essential to the exploitation of a "space fantasy", one of the main requirements of contemporary architecture. -Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
the event .10 gallons of water. gravity. stretching plastic to its limits. a burst, a release of tension
the study the bulge. the moment when tension is at its highest. gravity creating a force pulling the water down. the water currents applying pressure to the bag. stretching a material to its limits.
Summer 2006 Study Abroad Spain + Belgium Texas Tech College of Architecture undergraduate program Joseph Aranha + Hendrika Buelinckx
Texture Map. The urban fabric of San Benardo neighborhood in Sevilla, Spain. Issues of privacy and ownership are articulated through the use of different materials from neighbor to neighbor.
Catalogue: Map Location 1
2
[209 steps]
2
3
[200 steps]
4 [227 steps]
5
Density of Infrastructure
01
billboards lamp post [40’ tall] trees streetlights pedestrian sign
12 06 04
apartments hanging pedestrian lamps [12’ above sidewalk] apartments being remodeled
31 18 11 06
apartments large trees hanging pedestrian lamps stores
06 05 03 02
bank bookstore cruz campo bar telephone pescaderia 06 05 03 03 02 02 01 01 01 01
fruit trees parking signs trash cans recycling bins corner street lamps benches apartment being remodeled empty lot telephone pole pedestrian sign
6 Interior courtyard muffles out the sound of the busy street, uses the density of the apartments to block out the sound of the cars. The buildings are old and flaky, some lie vacant, but with freshly planted fruit trees and flowers the space is a live and breathing- does not feel abandoned-life is in the center. 7 Temporary meat market, open in the mornings, used existing train building for meat display/grocery store, the pavilion part for preparation of the meat
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The Site. San Benardo Barrio Sevilla, Spain
The Proposed. Urban housing, mixed use, student + elderly
axonometric detail 1
outdoor lamps
grass earth rocks
concrete slabs w/ cut tile lines
concrete railing metal tubing metal frames double swing windows concrete panels mosaic tile metal plate
axonometric detail 1
grass earth rocks
structural laundry post outdoor lamps natural irrigation concrete slabs w/ cut tile lines
metal frames slide window concrete railing water drainage
wood railing
axonometric detail 2
axonometric detail 2
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detailed floor plan 3/32”=1’-0”
Winter 2008 New Densities University of Michigan TCAUP graduate program Craig Borum
The Site. 4th and Kingsley Ann Arbor, Michigan The Proposed. With an interest in the local farmers market, in relations to the neighborhood, an extension of the farmer’s market into the neighborhood is proposed. The idea of the lawn is re-established, turning the back yard in to productive community gardens, redefining the edge condition between front yard and back yard.
4th Street Section
People’s Food Co-op (organic) Hours: Sunday - Saturday: 9:00:00 to 22:00:00
00:03:00
00:03:15
4th Street Section Detail
Back yard [bar b q space]
Front yard [lawn space] Farmer’s Market
Farmer’s Market. [Site Model] 2 wooden crates from the Eastern Market Detroit reconstructed Seeds [radish, lettuce, grass and cucumber] 3 sliding drawers [Co-Op, Farmer’s Market, and Sparrow’s Meat Market] 1 sliding drawer seed calendar of harvestable produce in michigan
Sustainable design has consumed the architectural scene spreading to advertisements selling the image of
sustainable, and renewable design to architects.
What’s more green than grass? Winter 2008 Architectural Theory and Criticism Silent Partners and Short Circuits University of Michigan TCAUP graduate program Amy Kulper
environmentally friendly contributes to LEED credits Graceful. Powerful.
Sustainable.
provides energy efficiency
contributes to LEED credits
green coating solutions LEED contributing product
generating efficiency through technology
green Kawneer sustainable solutions & products
tiny footprint environmentally speaking
environmental sensibility
energy efficient reduce carbon footprint
Ecological Building Solutions
environmental performance
get serious about green
What’s more green than mother nature? save on energy costs
Architectural Record America 2008 38 Advertisements
November 2, 1985 January 23, 1992 December 3, 1992 June 23, 1993 Fate-of-the-Earth Furniture October 10, 1993 ARCHITECTURE VIEW; Fear, Hope and the Changing of the Guard November 14, 1993 Where Earth Tones Are the Music of Design April 21, 1994 ARCHITECTURE VIEW; Nocturne For the Marxist Of Venice May 8, 1994 ARCHITECTURE VIEW; The Polyglot Metropolis and Its Discontents July 3, 1994 Mr. Fisk Builds His Green House February 15, 1996 Connecticut Q&A: Aris Crist;Can Buildings Harmonize With Nature? June 2, 1996 For Kuwaitis, Self-Reliance Proves to Be an Elusive Goal September 24, 1996 In Umbria, Tradition Confronts Convenience October 15, 1997 ARCHITECTURE REVIEW; Greening a South Bronx Brownfield January 23, 1998 ARCHITECTURE; Looking at the Lawn, and Below the Surface July 5, 1998 CURRENTS: ARCHITECTURE; Yesterday Recycled Into Tomorrow August 13, 1998 PUBLIC EYE; First Day of School: The Desk as Lesson August 27, 1998 DESIGN NOTEBOOK; Shelter Made of the Earth's Own Dust April 15, 1999 CURRENTS: EDUCATION; From Parsons to the University of Virginia June 24, 1999 THE NEW SEASON/ARCHITECTURE; Imaginative Design Finds It's Homeless No Longer September 12, 1999 ART/ARCHITECTURE; Echoes of '68 on Columbia's Campus October 24, 1999 1999: THE YEAR IN REVIEW - ARTS/ARCHITECTURE; New York Starts to Look Beyond Its Past December 26, 1999 HUMAN NATURE; Splendor in Rust Belt Ruins February 10, 2000 CURRENTS: ARCHITECTURE; Offices So Green, They're Practically Outdoors February 17, 2000 ART/ARCHITECTURE; Good Buildings, And Good for You April 16, 2000 THEATER; Robert Wilson's 21st-Century Academy August 13, 2000 COMMUNITIES; Investing the Family Fortune September 17, 2000 From Baltimore Warehouse to Giant Office Building October 22, 2000 SCREEN GRAB; Browsing the Web for the Ideal Utopia Site December 28, 2000 HUMAN NATURE; Slag Heaps Into Gardens January 18, 2001 BUSINESS; Building on Ideas for Urban Conservation March 4, 2001 On The Edge April 1, 2001 With the World Redesigned, What Role for Designers? October 25, 2001 Engineers Ask Nature For Design Advice December 11, 2001 In the Region/Long Island; Standards Called Lacking on Indoor Air Pollution February 17, 2002 STYLE; Traveling Light March 3, 2002 Australian Architect Receives Pritzker Prize April 15, 2002 A Development Fuels A Debate on Urbanism June 14, 2002 DESIGN NOTEBOOK; A Slightly Immodest Proposal August 8, 2002 Don't Rebuild. Reimagine. September 8, 2002 Collegians Compete to Let the Sun Shine In October 3, 2002 THE AMERICAN EMPIRE; The Burden January 5, 2003 COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE; Not Going Green Is Called a Matter of Economics January 15, 2003 ART/ARCHITECTURE; How Downtown Can Stand Tall and Step Lively Again January 26, 2003 City Plans Design Competition For a 2012 Olympic Village September 25, 2003 So Green, It's Platinum November 13, 2003 GREEN VS. GREENBACKS; A Shrewd Eye for the Wash Cycle November 13, 2003 ARCHITECTURE; Conserving Everyone's Energy but His Own November 23, 2003 In the Region/New Jersey; Innovative School Buildings Win Design Awards December 7, 2003 PUBLIC LIVES; Steeped in Green and Eager to Lead the Market January 23, 2004 DESIGN NOTEBOOK; Factory Fresh: Interstately Homes April 1, 2004 An Iconoclastic Architect Turns Theory Into Practice May 17, 2004 COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE; A New Office Can Mean Making Do With Less May 26, 2004 ART/ARCHITECTURE; The Nobel Garden Prize Winner June 27, 2004 ARCHITECTURE; Elevated Visions July 11, 2004 L.I. @ WORK; Rejuvenating a Venerable Club on Lake Montauk August 22, 2004 Even in an Age of Terror, Towers Use Glass Facades September 6, 2004 Exploring Design as Metamorphosis September 15, 2004 For an Architect and His Family, a Home and a Laboratory October 3, 2004 Mini-Size Me October 10, 2004 HAVENS: LIVING HERE; Modern Kit Houses: Thinking Inside the Box October 15, 2004 Architect and Client Matched by Mouse November 4, 2004 CURRENTS: DESIGN; Housing With a Clean Conscience January 20, 2005 An Icon of Urbanism February 13, 2005 CURRENTS: ARCHITECTURE; Eco-Friendly and Now Worldly, Too June 30, 2005 LONG ISLAND JOURNAL; 800 Square Feet and Zero Energy Bills September 11, 2005 Connecticut Town Helps Create an Architectural Anomaly: An Appealing Water Plant December 4, 2005 There's More to It Than a Manicured Lawn January 8, 2006 The Greening of America's Campuses January 8, 2006 High-Rises That Have Low Impact on Nature February 2, 2006 THE WEEK AHEAD: Feb. 5 - Feb. 11; ART/ARCHITECTURE February 5, 2006 Architects Are a Lagging Indicator for Sustainable Design May 17, 2006 Battle for Biloxi May 21, 2006 Second Homes That Put Ecology First June 2, 2006 A Fence With More Beauty, Fewer Barbs June 18, 2006 Redefining American Beauty, by the Yard July 13, 2006 Creating a Self-Contained World August 6, 2006 Build Your Dream, Hold Your Breath August 6, 2006 The Long Zoom October 8, 2006 Keeping It ‘Green’ With Panels and More October 15, 2006 Young, Idealistic and Now Developers October 18, 2006 Room to Improve October 19, 2006 Visions of Manhattan: For the City, 100-Year Makeovers November 4, 2006 Social Improvement With Architecture November 5, 2006 Where the Corner Bakery Is Sure to Be Organic November 8, 2006 Down and Dirty February 8, 2007 Where Artists and Inventors Plot to Save the World March 5, 2007 Top Prize for Rogers, Iconoclastic Architect March 29, 2007 First Architect, Then Tenant May 3, 2007 Denis Kuhn, 65; Restored New York Landmarks May 18, 2007 The Accidental Environmentalist May 20, 2007 Why Are They Greener Than We Are? May 20, 2007 Calling Mr. Green May 20, 2007 Flour Power May 20, 2007 The Native Builder May 20, 2007 The Zero-Energy Solution May 20, 2007 Modernist Times June 3, 2007 Why Ask for the Moon if You Have the Stars? June 10, 2007 The Green Home of Their Dreams June 17, 2007 Companies Giving Green an Office July 3, 2007 A Contractor Who Was Green Before Green Was Cool July 20, 2007 In Chicago, a Haven for Green Enterprise July 25, 2007 Is Santa Fe Ready for a Makeover? August 5, 2007 Sipping From a Utopian Well in the Desert September 16, 2007 A Green Resort Is Planned to Preserve Ruins and Coastal Waters October 16, 2007 Out of the Woods October 21, 2007 In Miles of Alleys, Chicago Finds Its Next Environmental Frontier November 26, 2007 Brad Pitt Commissions Designs for New Orleans December 3, 2007 For Green Products, a Green Showroom December 16, 2007 Open a New Window: A Tower With a View January 15, 2008 The Slow Life Picks Up Speed January 31, 2008 Preserving the Best of the Old March 2, 2008 In Chicago, Tinted Green March 13, 2008 HOUSTON CAMPAIGN GOES PAST IMAGE IN EFFORT TO PROMOTE CITY
With Glue Hardly Dry, This Chair's a Classic
A Tree Grows In Architecture: 'Green' Design
Critic's Notebook; Design vs. the Environment: A Debate Among Architects
By ROBERT REINHOLD By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN By CARA GREENBERG By HERBERT MUSCHAMP
1985 1992 1993
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By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN By BOBBI P. MARKOWITZ By DOUGLAS JEHL By ELAINE SCIOLINO By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By BARBARA FLANAGAN By PHIL PATTON By FRANCES ANDERTON By BARBARA FLANAGAN By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By ANNE RAVER By BARBARA FLANAGAN By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By JONATHAN KALB By ROBERT WORTH By CHARLES BELFOURE By MICHAEL POLLAK By ANNE RAVER By LINDA BAKER By AMY M. SPINDLER By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON By JIM ROBBINS By CAROLE PAQUETTE By PILAR VILADAS By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By TIMOTHY EGAN By ALASTAIR GORDON By HERBERT MUSCHAMP By AMANDA GRISCOM By MICHAEL IGNATIEFF By MICHAEL BRICK By SASKIA SASSEN By GLENN COLLINS By CHRISTOPHER HAWTHORNE By LISA GUERNSEY By JAMES S. RUSSELL By ANTOINETTE MARTIN By ALASTAIR GORDON By LYNDA RICHARDSON By JULIE V. IOVINE By TERRY PRISTIN By GINGER DANTO By JULIE V. IOVINE By WARREN STRUGATCH By DAVID W. DUNLAP By ALAN RIDING By PENELOPE GREEN By TYLER BRÛLÉ AS TOLD TO BETHANY LYTTLE By ERNEST BECK By STEPHEN TREFFINGER By ALEXANDER COOPER and JAQUELIN T. ROBERTSON By ALAN G. BRAKE By MARCELLE S. FISCHLER By STACEY STOWE By ROBERTA HERSHENSON By TIMOTHY EGAN By ROBIN POGREBIN By HOLLAND COTTER By BARBARA WHITAKER By JIM LEWIS By SARAH TUFF By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN By TRACIE ROZHON By MOTOKO RICH By STEVEN JOHNSON By COLLEEN KALEDA By LISA CHAMBERLAIN By MITCHELL OWENS By ROBIN POGREBIN By ROBERT SHAROFF By STACEY STOWE By DAVID GELLES By SAUL HANSELL By ALLISON ARIEFF By ROBIN POGREBIN By STUART LAVIETES By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF By DEBORAH SOLOMON By AMANDA HESSER By JIM LEWIS By MARK SVENVOLD By KEVIN BAKER By STEPHEN P. WILLIAMS By VALERIE COTSALAS By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH By ROBIN FINN By KEITH SCHNEIDER By HENRY SHUKMAN By CHRIS COLIN By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL By ALICE RAWSTHORN By SUSAN SAULNY By ROBIN POGREBIN By CLAIRE WILSON By DAVID W. DUNLAP By PENELOPE GREEN By TRACIE ROZHON By MIMI READ
The New York Times. Keyword: Sustainable Architecture Results showing 113 out of 113
Winter 2009 Thesis [Forgotten Memorial] University of Michigan TCAUP graduate program Craig Borum + Keith Mitnick
Mary Lopez Forgotten Memorial Wars, tragedies and fallen public servants become memorialized through out our cities. The moment the memorial is erected, we remember. We hold ties to that event, to that person, but as the years pass the memorial loses the strong sense of attachment, slowly fading into the fabric of the city. Camouflaged within the formalities of the memorial, a larger infrastructure is being set forth. The memorial becomes forgotten but at the same time is used to generate a hidden monument. When homelessness becomes more permanent than transitory, the city is translated into a domestic realm. Dualities are found in the space we occupy. One space becomes two places, established through the dichotomy of uses. Forgotten Memorial projects a memorial that is no longer about what is claimed to be memorialized and begins to facilitate the existence of another user, the homeless.
The Case [duality of space] One space becomes two places defined by the perspective, the user and the use.
utilitarian perspective [1]
utilitarian perspective [2]
formal perspective [1]
formal perspective [2]
a TThompson & Knight
H HOK
KPMG Sheraton Dallas Hotel
Haynes and Boone, LLP Neiman Marcus Inc N
Urban Market
AT&T Headquarters
Main Street
JJimmy Johns
public library Blockbuster Inc
7 Eleven
section 1/8” = 1’-0”
The Site. Young and S Akard Dallas, Texas
The Proposed. [Forgotten Memorial] A memorial is erected, slowly fading into the fabric of the city as time goes on. Within the formalities of the memorial, a utilitarian purpose is formed. The urban center of a city has two layers of users. A layer that uses the surface of the city and abides by it formality and then there is another layer that undermines the formalities and uses the city to provide basic needs. I am not proposing that one layer is greater than the other, or one should take precedent. I am setting up a framework that allows one to feed from another. The memorial becomes erected, not for the formal figure but for the forgotten.
city hall
Dept Development Services US Labor Statistic Bureau
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“I’ve heard from other guys that there is more to this place. All I know is that I see mist coming from the supports. This is better then walking in front of buildings, waiting for the air condition to leak out.”
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02 “The cold water rejuvenates every inch of my body. It hits the back of my head and the soap suds roll down my arms and legs.”
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“I sit here feeling untouched by the world around me but like I am a part of it.”
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public library
rest
read
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shower
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sleep
city hall
a plan for utility 1/16” = 1’-0”
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“My eyes go numb from the white walls, grayish blue industrial carpet and the bright computer monitor that stares at me all day. I escape at lunch. I walk down one block to the park.”
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02 “I sit for one full hour with the sun warming my skin, with a warm breeze that is cooled by the mist of the fountain and my packed lunch.”
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“From here I can see the whole city. The lights flicker on and off and the sound of sirens crescendo as they get closer.”
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public library
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walk
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play
socialize
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contemplate
city hall
a plan for leisure 1/16” = 1’-0”
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