Portfolio Roshanak Ghezelbash, INTERIOR DESIGNER 2021

Page 1

ROSHANAK GHEZELBASH

Phone:213-500-3626 Email:roshanak.ghezelbash@gmail.com Adress:Los Angeles, CA, 90068


ROSHANAK GHEZELBASH EDUCATION SCI-Arc, Los Angeles, CA.

Sep 2020

AIU, Tehran, Iran.

Jan 2015

Master of Science, Design Theory and Pedagogy. Master of Science, Architecture.

SKILLS • • • • • • • •

Revit 2016 and later AutoCAD 2016 and later Rhino 2016 and later Sketchup 2016 and later Maya 2019 and later After Effects 2019 and later Photoshop Illustrator

COMPETENCY      

Strong organizational skills, Strategic, and results-oriented. Strong design skills, a passion for creativity, and an eye for detail. A professional, positive, team-minded attitude. Strong work ethic, can carry projects through to completion. Time management, strong desire to learn and develop profession. Ability to learn and grasp new concepts quickly with a willingness to learn and accept new challenges.  Knowledge of construction materials, standards and details.  A designer/ architect with a focus on restaurant and hospitality.

EXPERIENCES Interior designer Freelance, Los Angeles, U.S. • Consulted with clients to determine architectural preferences to meet overall design goals. • Developed space planning concepts, color palette selections, and textile presentations. • Led interior design across conceptual, schematic, design development, and construction document phases. • Assisted clients with budget considerations and made recommendations for furniture and wall hangings.

PRESENT- 2019

Mid-Level Interior designer, Amir Kabir Co.,Tehran, Iran. • Developed space planning concepts, color palette selections and textile presentations. • Consulted with clients to determine architectural preferences to meet overall design goals. • Led interior design across conceptual, schematic, design development and construction document phases. • Carefully reviewed contractor submittals of finish materials. • Researched trends in area of green building and environmental design to incorporate into business and residential projects.

2019 - 2016

Junior Interior designer, Amir Kabir Co.,Tehran, Iran. • Designed and drafted project blueprints. • Consulted with clients to determine functional and spatial requirements of new structure. • Devised overall strategy for documentation and identified design sets planned for each stage of work including as-built designs and final building information models (BIM).

2016 - 2015

Interior designer Intern, Imen Markazi Design-Construction and Design firm,Tehran, Iran. • Developed key client relationships by providing design solutions that met needs and budgets without compromising quality or design intent. • Interfaced effectively with design team members, including contractors and vendors to resolve issues and discuss ideas. • Created, printed and modified drawings in AutoCAD and Revit.

2015 - 2014

WORKSHOPS, SEMINARS& SYMPOSIUMS Blue Rhino Symposium And Exhibition, Best Hotel, Istanbul, Turkey. Designing Villa, By Gisoo And Mojgan Hariri, Contemporary Architects Association Of Iran, Tehran, Iran. Tradition + Identity, Kasper Ax, AA Tehran Visiting School, Tehran, Iran.

2018 2015 2014

Design And Construction Of Karbandi, Arch House Of Iran, Yazd,Iran.

2013

Educational System And Research In Architecture, Iranian Architectural Association, Tehran, Iran.

2012

TA 101 Course In Transactional Analysis, The Gregory Institute For Transitional Analysis, Pert, Wa, Australia.

2005


Qazvin Headquarter Building


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

Main Entrance of Qazvin Headquarter Building

The Glass House is for the whole town. A symbol of rejuvenation and the new-found self-esteem of glass-making in the country. The most excellent factory of making glass in Iran held a competition for headquarter in the capital. A sustainable approach to have natural air ventilation and providing daylight for offce hours. For avoiding the sunset light for the main facade in the west, make alternative shades to change during the day to evening. The Diamond shape inspires by Iranian architecture. The luxurious touch of the lobby made it more of a metaphor for darkness and light.


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

Parking Plan of Qazvin Headquarter Building


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

Open Offce Plan of Qazvin Headquarter Building


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

West Facade of Qazvin Headquarter Building

South Facade of Qazvin Headquarter Building


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

Showroom Interior of Qazvin Headquarter Building

Concierge Interior of Qazvin Headquarter Building


Qazvin Headquarter Building

Amir Kabir firm, with : Naser Ghanbari, Paniz Ghaednia. Spring 2017.

Qazvin Headquarter Building at night


Fashion House


Fashion House

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Miri, Azad University Fall 2014.

Facade of Fashion House

An Eco-village was a place for those who desire to live in a city’s cultural atmosphere with less exposure to traffic or air pollution. The limitation was each student had to design a cubic form with local materials. The project was located in the countryside, based on sustainable architecture, social, and power saving. My task was to improve the community’s creativity and production of fabrics and clothes. The fashion house has a natural-based approach, a place for visitors to the village as a financial resource. A place to create, socialize, and educate children in different ranges from fabricating to tailor clothes. Using light, thin fabric for facades protects from rain and wind and provides sunlight to the complex. Moreover, locating the classrooms under the ground creates the opportunity of using soil’s thermal performance.


Fashion House

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Miri, Azad University Fall 2014.

Diagram Concepts of Fashion House


Fashion House

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT

B

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Miri, Azad University Fall 2014.

- 3.10

A

A - 3.90

B

- 3.90

First Floor Plan of Fashion House

PRODUCED BY AN AUTODESK EDUCATIONAL PRODUCT


Fashion House

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Miri, Azad University Fall 2014.

Section Façade of Fashion House

Section Façade of Fashion House


Sand Wave Community Center


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Main Entrance of Sand Wave Community Center

The community center is based in the Kashan desert to accommodate people for gathering and social events. The site-specific center was inspired by how wind shapes the desert’s sand. The project combined protrusive organic formations, linear embellishments, and futuristic sensibilities. The grand scale of achievement is how this place could be a place for minorities to gather, hence a better chance of equal opportunity and social injustice. The architecture is conceived as landscape--the landscape becomes architecture, and the building takes on the surrounding countryside wave. The desire to be one with nature and connection with the landscape also felt from within the building. The main salon has a generous glass facade, both in size and sophisticated details— the outside’s visual contraction.


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Floor Plan of Sand Wave Community Center


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Underground Plan of Sand Wave Community Center


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Section D-D of Sand Wave Community Center

South Facade and Section of Sand Wave Community Center

North Facade of Sand Wave Community Center


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Section A-A of Sand Wave Community Center

Section B-B of Sand Wave Community Center

Section C-C of Sand Wave Community Center


Sand Wave Community Center

Studio Project, Instructors: Reza Habibi, Azad University Spring 2013.

Interior of Cinema Hall Enterance of Sand Wave Community Center

Interior of Cinema Hall Enterance of Sand Wave Community Center


Light Museum


Light Museum

Studio Project,Instructors: Hossain Ghamchili, Azad University, Spring 2014.

Main Entrance of Light Museum

Zoroaster said: love like the Sun; even if you want not to give someone love, you cannot. The light museum used different lighting systems to create a recreational place for various audiences: children and adults. To achieve both amusement and education, the museum allowed exploring light, shadow, and refection between them--like reflecting light throughout the water in a dark room, reminds the goddess of water, Anahita. The most significant recourses of life, the Sun, called Mehr—love, in ancient Iran, provides an extraordinary experience for who comes to the light museum. Learning and playing in different rooms of this place brings about another type of experiment using audience contribution.


Light Museum

Studio Project,Instructors: Hossain Ghamchili, Azad University, Spring 2014.

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1.4957 0.5463

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Site Plan of Light Museum


Light Museum

Studio Project,Instructors: Hossain Ghamchili, Azad University, Spring 2014.

Section A-A of Light Museum

Section B-B of Light Museum

SECTION A - A


Light Museum

Studio Project,Instructors: Hossain Ghamchili, Azad University, Spring 2014.

Site Plan of Light Museum

Interior of Light Museum


Future Cities 2050


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Floating city in the ocean

The final master Studio was based on the premise that ideas, techniques, and formal provocations. In the studio, contemporary issues of critical importance provided alternative architectural discourse contexts, explored and produced. Living in the Anthropocene era and rising sea level makes it more evident that we will soon experience another urban type. The expansion of the population on earth triggers the land shortage also, lacking natural resources. The need for alternative energy sources and enhancing personal spaces plus a global village requires a place where everyone has privacy while a community brings such cluster cities. Nature: In the shape of green surfaces between frames and different latitudes. Energy: This provides two ways: as mentioned before, there are three energy cycles in the central core. Residential: consist of a set of cells in which each section will define a space for human living uniformly cover all the collection.


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Growth of Floating city in the ocean

Diagram of Floating City

Use of alternative resources : The creation of alternative energies was the topic that has been considered in two parts. This complex’s primary structural definition is the central absorbent core of the sea’s power: Wave energy, Tide. Each cell’s body is an adsorbent of solar energy, making the cell like a closed cycle of life. We might need an auxiliary structure to keep the mass’s stability and confront ocean waves like a plate works the same as a mussel-type structure to justify the floating potential. Byssal or byssus threads are solid and silky fibers made from proteins used by mussels and other bivalves to attach to rocks, pilings, or other substrates. These animals produce their byssal threads using a byssus gland located within the organism’s foot. A group of these mussels, strong filaments, are secreted by some clams’ families to attach themselves to hard surfaces. Mollusks can move slowly by extending a byssal thread, using it as an anchor, and then shortening it.


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Section of Floating City


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Adaptable Room in the Floating City


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Interior of Adaptable Room in the Floating City


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Interior of Adaptable Room in the Floating City


Future Cities 2050

Studio Project, Instructors: Farhad Ahmadi, Shahid Beheshti University,Spring 2015.

Floating city in the ocean


ROSHANAK GHEZELBASH

Phone:213-500-3626 Email:roshanak.ghezelbash@gmail.com Adress:Los Angeles, CA, 90068


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