ZHAOYU ZHU
WORK SAMPLE SELECTED WORKS 2011-2016
PROFESSIONAL COCA Expansion Summer 2015 | St. Louis, MO Crystal Armature Summer 2015 | Kalininggrad
ACADEMIC Art Trek Fall 2016 | Poughkeepie, NY The Goldenness Fall 2015 | San Francisco, CA Mirage Spring 2015 | Ames, IA Chicago Green Corridor Fall 2014 | Chicago, IL
01 | Center of Creative Art Expansion
Axi:Ome, Summer 2015 Mentor: Sung Ho Kim Team with: Tianhui Hou, Chris Liao, Catty Zhang Contribution: Physical Model Making, Image making, Design Development Project Statement: Locating at the end of one of the most commercial streets amoung United States, the COCA expansion is designed to fullfil three major demands. The first is to keep encouraging and supporting creative art in St. louis and surround areas. The second is to create more space for holding classes and activities of Washington University’s performing art program. The third is to expand the original commercial street to satisfy the growing demand due to the new built student residents. In order to accomplish the idea, a main theatre is proposed to complement with Eric Mendelsohn’s original building. Along with gallary and commercial space on the street level, COCA expansion intend to become a new land mark to appeal students, local residents and visitors.
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PROFESSIONAL
Coca Expansion
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CIRCULATION DIAGRAM
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PROFESSIONAL
PROGRAM DIAGRAM
Coca Expansion
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MODEL DETAILS
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PROFESSIONAL
Coca Expansion
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THEATRE DISASSEMBLE DIAGRAM
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PROFESSIONAL
NORTH ELEVATION STUDY MODEL DIAGRAM
Coca Expansion
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SECTION MODELS
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PROFESSIONAL
Coca Expansion
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PROFESSIONAL
Coca Expansion
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Site Model
02 | Kaliningrad Competition: Crystal Armature
Axi:Ome Summer 2015 Mentor: Sung Ho Kim Team with: Ran Gu, Collen Qiu, Boris Tchatalbachev, Enzo Zhang, Tianyi Zhang, Xiaoyuan Zhang Contribution: Physical Model Making, Image making, Design Development Project Statement: Kaliningrad City is emblematic of the complex histories between eastern and western Europe. A Russian exclave, the project situates between Poland and Lithuania with a Prussian history that dates back to the Northern Crusades. The city was largely reconstructed following WWII and renamed Kaliningrad, formerly known as KÜnigsberg under German rule. Our site is located in the historic core of Korolevskaya Gora, King’s Mountain, a location chosen for its proximity to two rivers and heightened ground contours giving a visual overview of surrounding territories. For this design competition, Crystal Armature pays homage to historic structures on site while reinventing their composition as an icon of memory. We embrace the idea of fluid histories that are part of a systemic order and understood in relation to generations of cultural influences shaping the spatial reading of the historic center of Kaliningrad. More specific to the proposed design, the project creates an armature derived from the original castle(s), which is then clad in clear and translucent materials of core geometries. In the architecture there is a play between solidity and lightness as components of the castle frame relationships with the House of the Soviets and the surrounding city. 13
PROFESSIONAL
Panorama from Kant Island
Panorama from the Korolevskaya Gora
North Perspective
Panorama from the Korolevskaya Gora
Panorama over the upper city
South-East Perspective
Crystal Armature
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Top view of Model
Perspective view of model, looking west 15
PROFESSIONAL
Perspective view of model, looking south
Persepctive view looking north west Crystal Armature
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Perspective view of model, showing landscape and main entrance
North Perspective
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PROFESSIONAL
Top view of model, showing courtyard
Crystal Armature
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Exploded Axonometric Drawing
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PROFESSIONAL
North Elevation
South Elevation
Crystal Armature
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Section AA
Section BB
Tower & Facade Design Study Model
Landscape Study Model
01 Tower & Facade Design Study Model 21
PROFESSIONAL
02
Tower Design Process 2
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04
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Courtyard Designs
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02
03
04
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Courtyard Design Studies
Crystal Armature
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West Elevation
East Elevation
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PROFESSIONAL
West Interior
East Interior
Crystal Armature
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Aerial View
Perspective view looking south
Perspective looking west
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PROFESSIONAL
Crystal Armature
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03 | Art Trek
Columbia University, GSAPP, MSAUD, Fall 2016 Professor: Lee Altman Team with: Daiyue Lyu, Haochen Yang, Liwen Zhao Project Statement: The city of Poughkeepsie is in a process of revitalization in recent decades. As the city has considerable convenience in transportation and locates in the Hudson-River Valley region which is rich in scenic and artistic tourist attractions, it possesses huge potential to be developed as an art tourism destination. In fact, many art projects have already been started by local organizations and artists in and around the city. We want to take the advantage of these potentials to benefit local communities, especially the local youth generation who are suffering from high drop-out rate, high crime rate and low employment rate today. A central art district consisted of Catherine Street Community Center, the Family Partnership Center, the Art Centro and the new Underwear Factory as well as the renovated Trolly Barn along with a series of art destinations rooted in the community is proposed and will provide a variety of different participatory art and cycling activities for the local as well as the tourists. These activities will both happen inside these newly designed or renovated architectures and expand outside to surrounding streets and open fields that are designed to be theme plazas, parks and playgrounds.
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ACADEMIC
SAUGERTIES
Viewing ArtsNature & ArtsExperiencing Arts-
HUDSON TOWN
-Viewing Arts -Experiencing Arts
TIVOLI
-Viewing Arts -Experiencing Arts
RED HOOK
-Viewing Arts
RHINEBECK
-Viewing Arts
KINGSTON
Viewing ArtsExperiencing Arts-
HYDE PARK
-Experiencing Arts
POUGHKEEPIE
-Viewing Arts
BEACON
-Viewing Arts -Retail & Arts -Experiencing Arts
COLD SPRING
-Viewing Arts -Nature & Arts
NEWBURG
Viewing ArtsExperiencing Arts-
PEEKSKILL
-Nature & Arts -Experiencing Arts City Locations Art Gallaries & Museums Viewing Arts Nature & Arts Retail & Arts Experiencing Arts
Art Trek
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CITY SCALE MASTER PLAN 3
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8 2&10
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PROCEDURE DIAGRAM
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Get a Poughkeepsie City Bike from a bike station
Get off a train
Dutchess County(for Youth)
Dutchess County(for Non-Profit)
Arts Mid-Hudson
Mr. Roy Budnik
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Ride in the bicycle playground& make artworks with kids and artists
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ACADEMIC
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Ride intoTrolly Barn to visit art exhibitions
ART DISTRICT MASTER PLAN
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Ride to Hudson Walkway & enjoy art installations along the way
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Participate an art workshop & make some artwork of your own
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5
Join an outdoor art class on the Hudson Walkway
Get some bicycle supplies in a bike repair shop
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Buy some special souvenirs in an art souvenir shop
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Return the Poughkeepsie City Bike
Art Trek
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MODEL OF ART DISTRICT
A A
B B
C
C
Perspective View
A A B
B C
C
Aerial View
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ACADEMIC
SECTION AA
SECTION BB
SECTION CC Fall Kill Creek Fall Kill Creek
Underwear Factory Underwear Factory
Indoor Bike lane Indoor Bike lane
Open Art Studio Open Art Studio
Major Exhibition Major Exhibition
Art Corridor Art Corridor
Bike Parking Platform Bike Parking Platform
Workshop Workshop
Entrance Plaza Entrance Plaza Community Garden Community Garden
Pedestrain Entance Pedestrain Entance
Bike Entance Bike Entance
Shops Shops
Temporary Exhibition Temporary Exhibition
Outdoor Exhibition Outdoor Exhibition
Art Trek
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Isometric Drawing OF ART DISTRICT
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ACADEMIC
Art Trek
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Goldenness: Marked by peace, prosperity, and often creativeness
EMPIRE The Dragonhead Being charged of racketeering ranging from gun trafficking to murder, Raymond “Shrimp Boy” Chow’s ongoing saga is nearing its end
Gold Rush,1848 WHAT HAS CHANGED. WHAT HASN’T.
04 | The Goldenness
Iowa State University College of design, Fall 2015 Professor: Mitchell Squire Team with: Sultan Alsamhan, Ran Gu, Tianhui Hou Project Statement: Considering the spatial impact of free-market capitalism and its reverberations on the built environment, this project questions the possibility of architecture as a medium to challenge the ever-constricting power relationship between people and money.Therefore we are speculating about a world where wealth is depoliticized as the agency for only a few, or at least decentralized to a point where it can spread to many. At the risk of seeming naïve, our question nonetheless is this: is there a neutral space, a social, political, and economic space, within which all people can have access to the same financial instruments that have led to wealth for a few. Our project seeks to orchestrate a varied complex on a single site in the heart of the city. The desire is to compose a program that combines the shared cultural histories (both high and low) with the most recent trends in economic empowerment in and around the “City by the Bay.” 35
ACADEMIC
INVESTMENTS MAP
The Goldenness
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TIMELINE OF INVISIBLE POWER 1849 1850
1900
1920
1940
1960
1980
2000 It can be said of the city of San Francisco that the desire for wealth was the foundation on which it was built. The potential for riches led its population of 1,000 in January 1848 to increase to 25,000 in December of the following 37
ACADEMIC
year. With a population surge built atop dreams of financial wealth, the California Gold Rush of 1848 led to a host of speculations including investment in stocks, property, or other ventures in the hope of gain but with the risk of loss.
SITE MAP High Income Zone Start-up Firms
The Goldenness
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SYSTEM DIAGRAM
GAMBLING
START-UP
Gamblers
Idea
Partership
Currency
Currency
Group Angle Investment
Stake
Seed Stage Charity
Venture Capital
Products
Stake
Start-up Stage Gambling Games
Crowd Funding
Reward Based
Products
Venture Capital
Expansion Stage
Stake
Professional Investors
Mezzainine Capital
Private Equity
Products Bebts Based
Mature Stage
Stake
IPO STOCK MARKET As mining camps sprang up so did the gambling houses that surrounded them. No sooner than your prospective wealth emerged from the mines, there were instruments in place to entice you with ideas of what to do with it: you could gamble it of course, or you could “invest” in another person’s venture. And if you were proactive you could fulfill your dream by starting a
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ACADEMIC
business of your own. That love of risk and adventure is still evident in San Francisco— albeit in a variety of forms—and one could view gambling culture not only as a part of the foundation upon which the city was initially built but also how it is sustained today.
PROGRAM DIAGRAM
The building will consist of three primary features: a casino, a stock market, and a startup hub, all for co-Âworking entrepreneurs, activists, creatives, and ambitious professionals taking action to drive positive social, economic and environmental change. We see a parallel that already exists between these three
key forms, not only in matters of risk but also in the physical manifestations of the spaces which house their activities. Thus a dialog will be opened between them, at the meantime, information will be exchanged, flow of currency will be simulated, and existing order will be challenged.
The Goldenness
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CONCEPTUAL SLOT MACHINE
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ACADEMIC
CONCEPT IMPLEMENT DIAGRAM
The Goldenness
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FINAL MODEL
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ACADEMIC
ISOMETRIC DRAWING
The Goldenness
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STUDY MODELS
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ACADEMIC
Model of Existing Parking Grage
Study Model of Deisgn Concept
FINAL MODEL
The Goldenness
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FINAL MODEL
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ACADEMIC
The Goldenness
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MOMENTS OF EXPERIENCE
Moments will be created in this building. Several public platforms will be placed on a main circulation through out the three diferent main program. On these platforms, people will expeirence visual connection of pairs of activities and spces, and find the interesting
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ACADEMIC
and inspring similarity between them. For example, security company office vs. slot machine area, trading floor vs. table game area, security company exchange hall vs. keno game.
SECTION MODEL
PROGRAMS COMPARISON Security Company Office
Slot Machine Area
Trading Floor
Table Game Area
Security Company Exhange Hall
Keno Game
The Goldenness
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ACADEMIC
The Goldenness
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05 | Mirage: Black Contemparory
Iowa State University College of Design, Option Studio, Spring 2015 Professor: Peter Goche Project Statement:
“RR3 will re-consider the space of the family farm and the way it is farmed, expressed and understood. It is our assertion that the artist, architects and farmers can play a critical role in the production of the seen and un-seen - spaces made and re-made.�---Peter P. Goche Long times ago, human beings rely on the law of nature, but with the development of technologies, the ego of human beings are growing and the respect to nature are losing. An installation to explore natural law that hidden behind agriculture, rather than farming techniques which represents more about human activities, was proposed in the corn drying bin. To accomplish the proposal, within the space that filled with human infrastructure as far as I can see, a plain that can hide and introduce itself is built. The plain was made out of fish wire, which possess its special characteristic of transparency and reflectivity. The composition of the plain and density of fish wire are determined by on site observation and research. As a result, an amazing experience was offered to every audience. The journey starts before you walk in the space. When you stand outside and look into the bin, you will be actually looking at the installation but see nothing other than concrete and metal grid. The illusion starts to appear as you cross the threshold into the space. Every movement you make would cause things appear and disappear, glow and vanish. You are interacting with the installation during the whole journey in the bin.
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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SITE ANALYSIS
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ACADEMIC
2
4
1 2
3 5
3
4
5
Mirage
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CONCEPT DIAGRAM
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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INSTALLATION GRANGE DETERMINATION DIAGRAM
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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TECHNICAL DRAWINGS
EFFECT VARIATION DIAGRAM
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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EXPERIENCE SEQUENCE
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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ACADEMIC
Only within strict limitations is freedom possible. --Igor Stravinsky
Mirage
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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“Being Creative is perhaps not the desire to do something, but listening to that which wants to be done, the dictation of the materials.� --Anni Albers
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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“The hallucinatory effect derives from the extrodinary clarity and not from mystery or mist. Nothing is more fantastic ultimately than precision.” ——Robbe-Grillet on Kafka
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ACADEMIC
Mirage
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06 | Chicago Green Corridor: revive of the dormant industrial area Iowa State University College of Design, Fall 2014 Professor: Tat Bonvehi-Rosich Team with: Shaohua Dong, Ran Gu, Donnie Hull
Project Statement: The Chicago river has a history of breeding the development of the recent industries of central United States, creating one of the greatest post-industrial cities, and at the same time, taking acres of living space of animals. Leaving hundreds of concrete buildings, bridges and highways, most of these human infrastructures as waste ground, the underutilized industrial corridor is obviously both economically and environmentally mismanaged today. The proposal is for a green corridor that will offer a safe space for animals’ migrating and revive the deserted old Chicago industrial corridor. Based on different categories of infrastructure, different greening strategies will be applied in order to achieve the most proper planting density. By applying these greening strategies, those waste infrastructures could maximize their function of serving as a migrating corridor for wildlife from suburban without being entirely demolished, which also minimizes the financial costs of the project. At one end of the green corridor, a new high-speed railway station will be built for serving as a transport hub as well as a research center, playing a important role of serving both animals and human.
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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DEVELOPMENT OF THE GREAT CHICAGO The modern city was incorporated in 1837 by Northern businessmen and grew rapidly from real estate speculation and the realization that it had a commanding position in the emerging inland transportation network, based on lake traffic and railroads, controlling access from the Great Lakes into the Mississippi River basin. Despite a fire in 1871 that destroyed the central business district, the city grew exponentially, becoming the nation’s rail center and the dominant Midwestern center for manufacturing, commerce, finance, higher education, religion, broadcasting, sports, jazz, and high culture. (source:wikipedia) Since 1960s, many middle and upper income Americans continued to move from the city for better housing and schools in the suburbs, taking acres of habitat of wildlife. Land-cover 1972
Land-cover 1985
Land-cover 1997
urabn nature
urabn nature
urabn nature
The Chicago Industrial Corridor is currently mismanaged and underutilized due to the decline of traditional heavy industries, which offers a oppotunity to propose a green corridor and let wilds and people be more close.
39%
23%
5%
3%
Manufacturing Production Warehouses packaging
Interstate Utilities
Property Open Space
Recreation Other
Industrial 1557.8 ACRES
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ACADEMIC
Infrastructual 920.6 ACRES
Vacant 206.1 ACRES
Open Area 114.5 ACRES
EXISTING INDUSTRIAL CORRIDOR ANALYSIS
Railway Zone
Indusrial Zone
Highway Zone
Chicago Green Corridor
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GREENING STRATEGIES DIAGRAM
Railway Zone
elevated tracks
elevated tracks with station
ground level tracks
ground level tracks with station
junction
subway
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ACADEMIC
Industrial Zone
industrial buildings
industrial river shore
industrial loading docks
Highway Zone elevated highway
elevated highway(bridge)
flat with draining system
sink into ground
with bridge crossed
Tunnel
Chicago Green Corridor
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EXISTING INDUSTRIAL CORRIDOR Roads
Railways
Water Existing Green Space
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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MASTER PLAN Roads
Railways
Water Existing Green Space
Proposed Wetland
Proposed Grassland
Proposed Forest
Proposed High-speed Railway Station
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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PROPOSED HIGH-SPEED RALIWAY STATION MASTER PLAN
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ACADEMIC
SITE IMPLEMENTATION DIAGRAM
Initial Site Condition
Remove Buildings
Remove Excess Tracks
Add High-speed Rail Lines
Reestablish Original River Path
Habitat Gradation & Human Circulation
Chicago Green Corridor
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PROGRAMING DIAGRAM
Museum
Parking
Transportation Connections
Lobby
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ACADEMIC
Circulation Corridor
Local Train Connections
High-Speed Tain Waiting Lounges
Platform
MODULE STRATEGIES WETLAND swamp shallow water
WATER sea shore shallow water deep water river
taproot trees prairie grasses deep water
sedums grasses gravel sand
FOREST forest open forest forest edge
GRASSLAND open grassland grassland with trees
HUMAN-MADE cliff infrastructure buildings
heart root trees submergents floating leaved shallow water
spread root trees herbaceous emergents shrubs
Chicago Green Corridor
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ISOMETRIC DRAWING
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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SECTION DRAWINGS
SECTION PERSPECTIVE
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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ACADEMIC
Chicago Green Corridor
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