R. Cox Portfolio 2012

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01HOUSING STUDIO 02LIBRARY 03PARAMETRICS 04LABORATORY 05STUDIOLO 06FURNITURE 07CELL LAB 08TECHNICAL 09DRAWING 10PHOTOGRAPHY


M.ARCH. COLUMBIA GSAPP

ROBERT A. COX



01HOUSING


an

Drawing -10’

28’

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UP


THE CITIZEN-CONSUMER


Two roles, among many, dominate an urban life: that of consumer and citizen. We live in communities of neighbors and of commerce, as social life and commercial life intertwine. These apartments, sitting atop an existing big-box grocery store, incorporate and reflect the benefits of commerce through focu sed attention to a central market and the ability of residents to gain income from billboard-like screens surrounding the building. But residents are also encouraged to interact with neighbors as they fill the terraces overlookign this central market, utilizing this screen as it transforms inside into a flexible framework for courtyard life.



Inside the apartments, residents can transition between two experiences of the city: the glowing, electronic striations of their billboard, or the light and plant-filled terrace of their courtyard.




02LIBRARY


Silence and personal space are commodities in the city. Libraries are publice places that provide this commodity. As patrons ascend from the noisy, open street leve, they are further and further contained and enclosed by the growing, thickening walls that in turn become shelves, seating, and private reading spaces.


ENCLOSING PLANES



          

  



The increasing thickness of the walls eventually results in a fully-enclosed cloister on the top floor, a removed and still place for writers to work and share their stories.



03PARAMETRIC ADAPTATION


SURFACE AREA: 255.91sq.in. WEIGHT: 13.5lb

SURFACE AREA: 133.8sq.in. WEIGHT: 7.98lb

SURFACE AREA: 236.61sq.in. WEIGHT: 14.19lb


THE DAISY CHAIN



The Columbia Building Intelligence Project (C-BIP) is a three-year pilot project designed to explore new forms of technology-enabled collaboration within and between the various sectors of the architecture, engineering, and construction industry. Students learn to use parametric software (namely Catia) to reconsider adaptive reuse in the future of architecture, based on the design of an “element�, a module designed for implementation on a variety of existing buildings. My element, the Daisy Chain, aims to create a framework for water collection, shading, and green walls using a simple, flexible form. The double-curved surface continues along a variety of facades to bring people to their windows to garden and share a small bit of green space with their neighbors. The module can be adjusted parametrically to adapt to sunlight, rainwater, and facade conditions.



04LABORATORY

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Science (capital “S”) isn’t a monolithic institution, an entity that brings down a few new articles from a secular Mt. Sinai every year. It’s made up of individuals, interacting and working with each other, often messily. It’s a human endeavor, not something distant and institutional. This laboratory, situated at the edge of a large tourist area in New York, aims to communicate this human personality of science. The exterior is active, personal, and a bit disordered, creating a variety of spaces for interactions with fellow scientists and with the city.


HUMAN ENDEAVOR


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1welcome 2conference 3office 4flex 5restroom 6workshop 7lab

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Scientists occupy unique office spaces within a larger stream of common rooms and gathering points.

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With a location along historic Peck Slip, between South Street Seaport and the Brooklyn Bridge, the lab is given the opportunity to communicate with the public, inviting them into and around the building.


labs

collaboration areas

offices

public rooms




05STUDY CARREL



I based this design for a study carrel on the cells in medieval Cistercian monasteries, focusing on a sense of seclusion, thick walls, and the effects of light across robust surfaces.

SILENCE AND LIGHT



06FURNITURE


After a summer working for a small fine furniture company in North Carolina, I was able to build my own piece: a lap desk designed for reading and writing in bed. I included convenient spaces for paper storage along the side, as well as a spot of a coffe e mug. The entire piece was made using only joinery, and was constructed out of soft cedar and impressionable leather to age as I use it.


JOINERY PLANS AND PRELIMINARY SKETCHES



07CELL LAB



This project asked us to consider a one-man lab to monitor the surrounding environment. Taking the lab as a statement, a way to say that the environment is everywhere around you, this “cell� was placed on the top of a smokestack, a widely-understood symbol of pollution. Often prominent features in the urban landscape, and today often lying dormant, these smokestacks stand to remind us of the consequences of industry, and now supporting a platform for research in alleviating those consequences. The structure clamps onto the top of the smokestack, and then can rotate slowly in the air, its shape and mechanics moving with the wind.



08TECHNICAL TYP. FACADE

9’4” (TYP.)

OPERABLE WINDOW

SCREEN (FULLY EXTENDED)

CL. OF HORIZONTAL MULLION

AWNING WINDOW

INTERIOR

EXTERIOR

INTERIO

ARGON FILLED LOW-E INSULATED GLASS

ALUMINUM MULLION

ALUMINUM MULLION

MULLION PLATE

FLASHING

MULLION PLATE

6"

STEEL FRAMING

STEEL FRAMING

GYPSUM BOARD

AIR BARRIER

GYPSUM BOARD

CORTEN STEEL SOLID SCREEN

3'-4 11/16"

STRUCTURAL INSULATED PANEL XPS R-30

CORTEN STEEL PERFORATED SCREEN

10"

1'-9 1/2"

10"

1/4"

1"

MULTIPLE SETTINGS: SEE ELEVATIONS AND SECTIONS

CL. OF HORIZONTAL MULLION

PARTIAL SECTION at EXTERIOR ENVELOPE scale: 1/8” = 1’


mech

mech

3rd Floor Plan

mech

mech

2nd Floor Plan

10deg

12ft

10ft

8ft

4.5f t

3f t

1.5ft


8th Floor (roof) 116' - 0"

7th Floor 88' - 0" 6th Floor 74' - 0" 5th Floor 60' - 0" 4th Floor 46' - 0" 3rd Floor 32' - 0" 2nd Floor 18' - 0" Level 2 10' - 0" 1st Floor 0' - 0" Foundation

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With this light industrial building, our group wanted to treat the facade with a unique shading system, which would vary according to the program inside. The adjustable panels of perforated corten steel rise and fall with the height and use of the interior space, creating a facade screen that lightly moves across the building. 8th Floor (roof) 116' - 0"

Roof Garden Exhib Hostel Lobby

7th Floor 88' - 0" 6th Floor

Offices


ROOF PARAPET

GROUND

STAINLESS STEEL PANELS

1/8” = 1’


Given a site facing a parking lot, our team proposed a facade that would utilize translucent concrete to block views of the car park yet allow light into the hotel. The undulating surface allows light to come both through panels of translucent concrete as well as through the sides of these panels. The result is an exterior and interior articulated by varying light qualities and a distinctive patterning.



09DRAWING


<ANIMATION STILLS: the Valleaceron Chapel, a small structure in rural Spain, is reconstructed via floating, moth-like planes


Using a Roman sarcophagus frieze as a basis for pattern and linear arrangement, a series of charcoal drawings emerged that abstracted the stone figures first into triangles, and then into eroded, organic shapes. I wanted to communicate depth and slow movement, like ice fragments flowing la yers over water.


PLAN, SECTION, PERSPECTIVE


IN SITU SKETCHING at the Met


Sheriff Horncorft and Adam

Miss Bunnikins and Claire

When Imaginary Friends Come to College


I saw two buzzards then, gently pushing down around a rotting pinpoint. They saw me, too, I suppose, As I backed back through the briars, Another center for another day. -R. Cox, 2009

Prayer


These paintings come from a series dealing with the potential ambiguity of images, illustrating a formless folk tale. Through the use of repeated, mysterious imagery and flexible ordering, these illustrations let the viewer construct his own narrative.


“You see, the cloud didn’t have anywhere to go. His family had sailed over the mountains that night, and accidentally left him behind (it had been dark, remember, and I hate to say it, but clouds do look awfully alike...)”

I have been writing and illustrating stories for children since I was a child myself. It’s a rich synthesis: narrative and image, working together to create an individual world of balancing direct communication with the subtleties of the illustration. “The one problem with the moon, though, is that he really is a pretty vain creature. He’s very proud of his good looks, and the stars are always complaining about how often he asks if there’s anything stuck in his teeth. Usually, though, his vanity is harmless -- except one night, several years ago, when it got him into trouble...”



10PHOTOGRAPHY


The following photos are about shape, line, motion, and arrangement, captured in the everyday and the discarded. Chaotic flow, stylized exuberance, and vibrant decay resonate throughout these works and many of the pieces I develop in my home darkroom.


These decaying machines lie in the woods near my home. The forms of these objects echoed classical statuary in my mind, prompting me to digitally pair them with the Nike of Samothrace and The Sleeping Hermaphrodite from the Louvre.






EDUCATION COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, New York, New York, May 2013 (expected) Master of Architecture WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, May 2009 Bachelor of Arts in Art History with a minor in Studio Art and a study concentration in Architectural History HONORS Cum Laude graduate Omicron Delta Kappa National Honors Society: Inducted Fall 2007 Robert P. Holding Scholar: Awarded on the basis of exceptional leadership and academic promise Mary and Elliot Wood Scholar: Given for leadership in cultural, civic, and ecological affairs Eagle Scout WORK Lab Assistant, Columbia University Laboratory for Applied Building Science, NYC, 2011-present • Assisted fellow students in use of woodshop tools and techniques • Collaborated in renovation projects for the school Intern, Skram Furniture, Hillsborough, NC, Summer 2011 • Built handmade, contemporary wooden furniture in a small workshop setting • Designed and produced my own pieces of furniture LEADERSHIP Tour guide, Asheboro Downtown Sculpture Initiative, Fall 2009 • Led weekly tours through an outdoor, public sculpture installation Board Member, Student Government Sustainability Commission, Fall 2007 – Fall 2008 • Studied the university’s energy usage and proposed programs to reduce waste and cost Co-Chair, Wake Forest University Traditions Council, Spring 2006 – Spring 2008 • Edited, compiled, printed, and distributed books of Wake Forest traditions and history for students and alumni • Planned and carried out a two-month exhibit of Wake Forest history for display on campus TRAVEL-STUDY Student, Falmouth, Jamaica: University of Virginia’s Falmouth Field School in Historic Preservation, Summer 2008 • Recorded threatened and damaged structures through detailed scale drawings and surveys, depositing work in a comprehensive scholarly database of Falmouth’s colonial architecture • Participated in carpentry and masonry work on historic structures Researcher, Rome, Italy, Contemporary Religious Architecture in Italy, Summer 2008 • Conducted research on the current state of religious architecture in Italy, concentrating on four recently-constructed churches in Bergamo, Rome, and San Giovanni Rotondo, through observations and interviews with Italian architects, priests, and congregants • Presented findings at a research symposium SKILLS Computer skills: AutoCAD, Rhinoceros, 3dsMax, Adobe Creative Suite, Google SketchUp, GIS, MS Office, basic knowledge of BIM Foreign language: Proficient in Italian and Spanish Other: Hand drafting, watercolor, photography


RESUME



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