SCHRODER HOUSE REVERSAL
SCHRODER HOUSE REVERSAL STEP 1. Reversal STEP 2. Tectonics STEP 3. Program
DIAGRAMMED VOIDS Plans
Voids
1
0
Sections
Abstracted spaces translated from solid-defined to void-defined. Sectional diagrames relate voids with floor plates to understand spatial interactions.
ENFILADE REVERSAL Plans
Planes
APPLIED REVERSAL
Voids
1
Plan
1
Section
SEGREGATED SPACES | PROCESS
Schroder House
x4
Disrupted
x2
90
Floor 01 x3
X
Vertical Circulation
90
90
90
Floor 0
X
Color-Coded Axonometric
SEGREGATED SPACES | THEORHETICAL
SERIES ONE
SERIES TWO
Axonometric
Elevations
Plan
SERIES THREE
SERIES FOUR
SERIES FIVE
SEGREGATED SPACES | APPLIED
SERIES ONE
SERIES TWO
Axonometric
Elevations
Plan
SERIES THREE
SERIES FOUR
PERSPECTIVE VIEW
Axonometric
Elevation
Elevation
Plan
EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC
SECTIONS
SECTION DD
SECTION CC
SECTION BB DD CC BB AA
SECTION AA
ELEVATIONS | PLAN
DIAGRAMMATIC FIGURE GROUND
FLOOR PLANS
FLOOR PLANS
3 2
1
0
-1
-1
0
1
2
3
SCHRODER HOUSE REVERSAL STEP 1. Reversal STEP 2. Tectonics STEP 3. Program
ORIGINAL AS PLANES
REVERSAL BY VOLUME
TEXTURES & MULTIPLICITY
PLANE TECTONICS REVERSAL
Piet Mondrian
Plane
Extrude Lines
Rotate X
Rotate Y
Planar
Volumetric
Rigid
Flexible
Enclosed
Permable
Solid
Textured
Abstraction
Multiplication
TEXTURE + MULTIPLICITY
Piet Mondrian
Extrude Lines
Abstraction
Step 2. Vertical elements of the original house were replaced by the De stijl pattern to form a volume. All new elements were multiplied and rotated N-S as well as E-W.
Step 1. Vertical elements of the original house remained. Every volume was shifted. Some volumes were additionally rotated, multiplied, or mirrored.
Plane
Rotate X
Rotate Y
Multiplication
TEXTURED MULTIPLICITY
Vertical planes on the left multiplied volume are replaced further with De Stijl patterns at a smaller scale. The project transforms from a design of planes and volumes to one of porosity.
SCHRODER HOUSE REVERSAL STEP 1. Reversal STEP 2. Tectonics STEP 3. Program
OCEAN FILTRATION FACILITY It is estimated that 1.15-2.1M Tonnes of plastic enters the ocean each year and has accumulated in 5 large zones, one being the Great Pacific Garbage Patch (measures 1.6M sq. km, located between California and Hawaii). This proposal is for abandoned oil rigs to be converted into filtration systems. The scaffolding collects microplastics floating on the ocean surface and the adjacent towers convert the waste into energy to power the facility.