Academic Portfolio

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PORTFOLIO Roger C. Bost



TABLE OF CONTENTS Kunsthalle Chicago Sandnes, Norway A Ceramicist’s Study House for a Musician C4 Boathouse A Semester Abroad Rebecca Horn Gallery Urban Peaches Furniture Design & Fabrication Graphic Design Work A Water Vessel

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KUNSTHALLE CHICAGO Wicker Park 1482 N. Milwaukee Ave. Chicago, IL Completed: Fourth year

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The Kunsthalle is located in the Wicker Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois. During the 1980’s an influx of artists amassed in the neighborhood due to abandoned factories being converted into low cost lofts. Gentrification has made the neighborhood into what it is today - a neighborhood immersed in art, culture, and entertainment. The notion of gentrification as well as the history of the neighborhood became integral to the project. I became intrigued in how the project could be modern, but also relate to the context. Materiality was the avenue that came to mind, the mixture of brick and steel became the way to express that thought.

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Programmatically, the multiple brick volumes are the gallery spaces with other secondary and administrative spaces inbetween. On the entry level, the lobby, cafe, bookstore, and exhibition spaces are all freely placed and easily moveable. The open floor plan allows differing exhibitions to be displayed anywhere on the entry level. On the second level, there are three brick volumes: the two smaller ones are secondary galleries and the larger volume is a multi-purpose space. The space inbetween each volume allows a visual connection down to the lobby space. The third level consists primarily of administrative space and a

library/archive. The top level holds the main gallery, placed there to access day lighting from the north as well as views of the city. The overall space was designed to be intentionally open to allow for a very diverse selection of art to be displayed from up and coming international artists.

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Basement Level Plan

Longitudinal Section 6

Entry Level Plan

Second Level Plan


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Floor Key 8

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Bookstore Lobby Secondary Gallery Multi-Purpose Space Elevated Train Track Administration Archives Main Gallery

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Third Level Plan

Fourth Level Plan

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The organization of the semester was divided into three parts: schematic design, design development, and construction documentation. A few pages from the set of construction documents are shown above. 9


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A photograph of the physical model, showing the main gallery.

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SANDNES, NORWAY Graduate Thesis Study Completed: Fifth year

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The development of the master plan of Sandnes, Norway was a collaborative effort of my 12 member graduate studio. Visiting Regnier Chair faculty members, Reinhard Kropf and Siv Helene Stangeland, of Helen & Hard Architects of Stavangar, Norway were very beneficial in the two semester long process of developing the master plan, as well. Over the course of the Fall semester of 2010, we researched and visited the city of Sandnes and developed the core of our theory and strategies. We used these ideas to reactivate the coastline and examine the interactions between people, systems, and urban space. Also, we became quite intrigued with how the city could develop into a self-sustaining environment and develop into the future. We developed many questions and found few answers, but to us the questions were more important - they gave us the direction that we needed in order to move forward.

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The Stitch

A The Urban Fabric

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During the Spring semester the overall master plan was divided up into districts, allowing each member of the studio a chance to develop a scheme at the urban scale. Population numbers were calculated for 150 years into the future and utilized for the development of each district. With a certain density in mind, each district began to develop at the urban scale. Utilizing the ideas and theories generated during the Fall semester. Such as the urban floor, the stitch, and the urban fabric.

The Urban Floor The Ground Plane

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Existing Structures

Nodes, Flows, and Parks

Urban Stitch

Roads and Parking 22


Diagram of the urban floor. 23


Throughout the semester we kept in mind five terms when working at the urban scale as well as the architectural scale: Permeability, Harmony, Imagination, Diversity, and Adaptability. We believe that if the environment contains these elements, it will allow the opportunity for human interaction and the exchange of knowledge.

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The exchange of human knowledge is what we came to understand as the only renewable resource, and it should be fostered by the design of space, at all scales. As a studio, we discovered that the end product was important, but we felt what was most important part was the process - the journey. The process was how we learned; it is how we came to the realization that we became the inbetween factor of our process, our theories, our thoughts, our conversations, and our questions. All in all, we found that we always reverted back to three questions that gave us direction: - What is it? - Why is it important? - How does it move us forward?

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A CERAMICIST’S STUDY* Completed: Second year

* location: out in the woods somewhere

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The ceramicist’s study project was developed by means of a subtractive process, through a series of charcoal drawings and a foam model. The rather small interior space opens up directly to the surrounding landscape to the north, and south to the stream. The uninterrupted connection between interior and exterior space allows the interior space to seem much larger than it appears.

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HOUSE FOR A MUSICIAN Manhattan, KS Completed: Second year

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Foyer Library Kitchen Dining Room Living Room Pool House Master Closet Master Bathroom Master Bedroom Private Terrace Roof Terrace Green Roof

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Every few years a visiting professor is invited to be a part of the department of music at Kansas State University. During their tenure, this house is meant to be their place of residence as well as a place for entertaining their guests. With this in mind, the dialogue between public and private space became very important to the house. The placement of the private living quarters on the second level separates the public space from the private space, yet all spaces are connected by views. The house itself is placed around a central courtyard intended for garden parties and the entertainment of guests.

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C4 BOATHOUSE

Cambridge, MA Completed: Third year

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The boathouse is meant to serve both the M.I.T. rowing team as well as the surrounding Cambridge community. The challenges of this project revolved around the sectional relationship of the boathouse to the land, as well as the relationship to the campus and community.

Most importantly though, became the idea that the boathouse should function as a transition between land and water. Explorations in tectonics and the sequence of construction became relevant to the project, as well. 45


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A simple ramp serves as the connection between land and boathouse.

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A SEMESTER ABROAD January 2010 - May 2010

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During the Spring semester of my fourth year I was given the opportunity to study abroad in the Tuscan hill town of Castiglion Fiorentino, Italy. I spent four months immersed in the Italian culture. That experience of living in Italy has become significantly influential on not only my education, but my life.

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REBECCA HORN GALLERY Cambridge, MA Completed: Third year

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This project gave me the opportunity to examine the life and art of Rebecca Horn. Through the study of her work I discovered an art of movement.... This idea of movement became essential to the project. I thought of not only how the movement through the gallery could be experienced, but also how the movement outside of the gallery could be experienced. Located across the street from Le Corbusier’s Carpenter Center on the campus of Harvard University added a unique element to the project. Through the process, a very public gallery developed that allows for multiple interactions between the art and the viewer.

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Interior view of the day lighting study model for the main gallery. 59


Section perspective integrated with a photograph of the day lighting study model. Entry Level

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Second Level

Third Level


Due to the site dimensions, the program needed to be stacked vertically. This problem allowed for the unique moments to develop sectionally throughout the project. For instance, one can be standing on the street outside and actually be able to look up into the main gallery, and vice versa.

Fourth Level

Fifth Level

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URBAN PEACHES Stavangar, Norway Competition Work Completed: Fifth year

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Urban Peaches was an entry for the 2020 Park competition, that developed in tangent to the master plan of Sandnes, Norway. This project became a way to test our strategies that were developed for the master plan. The site is located in Stavangar, Norway, just North of the city of Sandnes, and covers roughly 200,000 square meters. The objective of the team working on the project was to produce a healthy, self-sustaining and synergetic urban ecosystem by nurturing a balanced relationship between the community and the surrounding environment.

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FURNITURE DESIGN & FABRICATION Manhattan, KS Completed: Fifth year

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This table was designed and fabricated as part of a history of furniture design seminar course during my final semester of architecture school. For this portion of the course, I was given a 5’ x 5’ birch plywood sheet and the task of designing a piece of furniture that could be altered and adjusted. The idea of the coffee table was that the top three layers of plywood could be interchangeable and rest on the bottom two layers of plywood that are actually connected to the steel angles. The steel angles connect all five layers of plywood and give rigidity to the overall table. The pockets for magazines at both the middle and at the ends of the table became the focus of how the coffee table could become something more than just a table.

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GRAPHIC DESIGN WORK Manhattan, KS Completed: Fifth year

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BILL HANUS *director of development, resorts division, walt disney world

“Disney Imagineering� 7:30 p.m.

Wednesday September 29 forum hall student union

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Poster designs for lectures and exhibits of the College of Architecture, Planning, and Design at Kansas State University.

CENTRO STUDI CITTA DI ORVIETO ITALART CENTRO STUDI SANTA CHIARA ACADEMIC PROGRAMS INTERNATIONAL, LORENZO DE MEDICI CZECH TECH FACHHOCHSCHULE COBURG DESSAU INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE GRADUATE SCHOOL AT ANHALT UNIVERSITY OF APPLIED SCIENCES DENMARK INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAM

CAPD STUDY ABROAD EXHIBIT CHANG GALLERY AND EAST WING SEATON HALL 09.13.2010 € 10.08.2010

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KANSAS CITY DESIGN DISCOVERY JUNE 6 – 11, 2011

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LOCATION

Kansas City Design Center, 1018 Baltimore, Kansas City, MO.

REGISTRATION

For registration questions, please call 1-800-432-8222.

LEARN MORE

For cost, enrollment, and other information, please visit the course website: www.dce.k-state.edu/courses/designdiscovery

Kansas City Design Discovery is a one week intensive studio-based program for students interested in the design professions of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Interior Architecture and Planning. If you are considering undergraduate studies in the design professions, this is your opportunity to find out more about what design professionals do. You will learn the basics of design, start developing the skills needed for success and get the answers you are looking for about design education.

DATE

June 6 – 11, 2011

College of Architecture, Planning, and Design

Notice of Nondiscrimination Kansas State University is committed to nondiscrimination on the basis of race, color, ethnic or national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, age, ancestry, disability, military status, veteran status, or other nonmerit reasons, in admissions, educationa programs, or activities and employment, including employment of disabled veterans and veterans of the Vietnam Era as required by applicable laws and relations. Responsibility for coordination of compliance efforts and receipt of inquiries concerning Title V of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, title IX of th eeducation Amendments of 1972, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Age Discrimination Act of 1975, and the Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990 has been delegated to the director of Affirmative Action, Kansas State University, 214 Anderson Hall, Manhattan, KS,66505-0124, 785-532-6220 or TTY: 785-532-4807.

Disability Support Services A student wity a disability who wishes to request accomodations for a credit course should notify the course instructor or contact the Disability Support Services Office, http://www.k-state.edu/dss/, 785-532-6441, or e-mail dss@k-state.edu. Early notification is requested to ensure that accommodations can be provided in a timely manner.

Division of Continuning Education

Back

The Kansas City Design Discovery program is for high school students who are interested in attending architecture school. Matthew Knox, Associate Professor and Associate Head of Architecture, College of Architecture, Planning, and Design at Kansas State University leads the program. As a part of a graphic design seminar, each student designed a 5.5” x 8.5” handout intended to be distributed by high school counselors to high school students. My entry was selected out of the 13 entries to be used for the KCDD program during the Fall and Spring of 2011.

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A WATER VESSEL Manhattan, KS Completed: Third year

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This three day project is one that may be more important to the development of my education than any other. This is when I learned about how hard it is to actually make something work. This is also where I learned about failure, and what one can gain from the experience. For the project, each member of our studio were presented with a problem: develop a vessel that could hold a gallon of water for a minute, and then empty itself only through the ability of the contraption (similar to a Rube Goldberg device). Essentially once the water has been poured into the vessel, a series of events would be set in motion, and the ending result should be that of an empty vessel...mine failed.

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Roger Cody Bost

617 N. 12th Street Manhattan, KS 66506 43 Tomaro Trail Poplar Bluff, MO 63901

rogerbost@gmail.com 573.300.9693


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