Architecture Portfolio | San Lae Lae Cho

Page 1

Architecture Portfolio

Selected Works

San Lae Lae Cho 2015~2020



SAN LAE LAE CHO 312.206.1636 sanlaelaecho@gmail.com Chicago, IL www.linkedin.com/in/sanlaelaecho

EDUCATION Master of Science in Architecture

Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA 05 2021

Bachelor of Architecture, Specialization in Landscape and Digital Design Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, USA 05 2018 3.75/4.0

The Why Factory by MVRDV Studio Abroad

Delft University of Technology, Netherlands 08 2017- 12 2017

Faculty-led IIT Architecture Study Abroad Program

Rome, Italy and London, United Kingdom 06 2015

SKILLS Adobe Suite AutoCAD Microsoft Suite QGIS Blender animation Rhinoceros 6 SketchUp Video editing Revit Revit Grasshopper 3ds Max Sefaira

ACHIEVEMENTS LEED Green Associate, 2018 International Champion Collegiate Leadership Competition, 2018 Dean’s List, College of Architecture IIT 2013-2018 Jerrold Loebl Traveling Fellowship Finalist College of Architecture, IIT 2018 Third Year Faculty Awar d Finalist College of Architecture, IIT

L ANGUAGES Myanmar

English

Chinese

WORK EXPERIENCE Teaching Assistant at Illinois Institute of Technology ·Assisted Professors Vedran Mimica and Ron Henderson

Present

Mentor at BridgeBurma

·Mentored young high school students & college students in Myanmar who are preparing to study abroad ·Mentored current Myanmar undergraduate architecture students in US on scholarship applications, job search and professional or Present career development

Architectural Designer at Perkins Eastman

·Constructed and Edited design changes in Revit model ·Coordinated with MEPFP & all other consultants and client’s requests ·Prepared the whole set for a project from SD to CA ·Reviewed submittals 07 2018 – 04 2020

Co-Organizer at Architectural Practice Talks Chicago 践谈-芝加哥

·Reached out to and Networked with Principals & international Architects ·Organized presentations, firm tours and discussion panels for 220 Chinese and Asian architects 12 2018 – 04 2020

Leader for changing Architecture program in Illinois Institute of Technology to become STEM designated

·Gathered news about President Trump signing the bill to approve architecture as STEM in 07/2018 ·Notified the President of IIT and College of Architecture Faculty about the change ·Spread the news to all students, encouraging them to push together for the change (for architecture in IIT to be designated as STEM) ·Created and distributed petition (signed by 500+ students & community) ·Thanked everyone immensely when the change becomes approved in 02/2019 07 2018 – 02 2019

Speaker at Chicago Undergraduate Leadership Conference ·Selected from numerous young, professional leaders as potential “change-makers for tomorrow” ·Networked with other student leaders to engage in intellectually stimulating conversations

04 2019

Architectural Intern at Johnson Lasky Kindelin Architects

·Prepared design proposal drawings, marketing materials, 3D models, & construction documents ·Met with the client and zoning coordinator to discuss client requests and zoning issues 02 2017 – 05 2018

Scholar of Leadership Academy of Illinois Tech

·Facilitated and led the soph omore leadership retreats for students of IIT ·Met with IIT’s President, Vic e Provost and Representatives from the University’s Colleges ·Brainstormed, marketed and part icipated in a series of leadership seminars and training workshops 04 2015 – 05 2018

Speaker for TEDx IIT 2016 Talk

http://bit.ly/TEDxSan

·Selected from a group of approximately 40 speakers; 1 of the 2 student speakers among all the finalists ·Prepared and practiced tog ether with other 20 speakers ·Gave live speech to approx. 30,000 global viewers and an audience of over 100 in attendance 04 2016



Content

Resume

01

Bronzeville Terraces

School, 2020

02 Studio OnTheGO, The Why Factory by MVRDV 2017 03 Montessori Elementary School, 2016 04 Manoeuvre Habitation

School, 2018

05 Bailey Renovate!

School, 2016

06 Gravity Well

School, 2015

07 Other

Hand sketching

School 2015

Rendering

2014

QGIS

2015

Modeling

2014

08

Work

Perkins Eastman

Johnson Lasky Kindelin Architects 2017

Work 2018



01 Bronzeville Terraces, Chicago

Professor Brian Lee, FAIA, SOM Thesis Advisor Professor Vedran Mimica Bronzeville, Chicago IL, USA What will be the strategy for the contemporary city and who will challenge this development? We have to radically change our perception of what is a community or a neighborhood; we have to find a new definition and even a new word for what we call ‘the city’ or the ‘Metropolis,’ a name that was coined in the early 20th century. BRONZEVILLE TERRACES explore visions of a home for the 21st Century, the new workplace, and elements of an equitable and just community in Chicago. Urban density will be assumed to be valued if balanced by humanistic environments that emphasize health and wellbeing. Tangible design measures for wellness will be developed integral to a more sustainable and resilient world. High performance will come from an understanding and integration of related disciplines, research, and science. During the design process, rigorous tectonics and craftsmanship will lead to clear design intent and expression.


BRONZEVILLE WEST LAKEFRONT MASTERPLAN

BRONZEV

The Site: Zeeburgereiland, Sluisbuurt, Amsterdam, Netherlands


VILLE WEST LAKEFRONT MASTERPLAN

Metra Train Lines

THE SITE The story of Chicago’s Bronzeville district parallels America’s urban history of migration, racism, flight, segregation, and collapse. Beyond the easily generalized perceptions of unemployment, crime, blight, and societal malaise, however, vibrant neighborhoods existed then and continue today, supported by fierce community advocacy and well-meaning but inconsistent government interest. With the resurgence of downtown urbanism across the country, areas adjacent, like Bronzeville, are now considered attractive “opportunity zones” by the private sector development. Bronzeville, connected to the Michigan Avenue spine, I-94 and I-55 expressways: proximate to McCormick Convention Center, IIT, the 78, and Chinatown; and at the edge of a Lake Michigan has all the potential for renewal and growth. BRONZEVILLE TERRACES focus on the McCormick Center truck marshalling yards, adjacent to the proposed new Bronzeville West Lakefront master plan at the former Michael Reese Medical Center and Prairie Shores residential. The truck marshalling yards, 18+ acres of prime Lake Michigan frontage on Lakeshore Drive, will be available for mixed-use development with the planned consolidation of the truck servicing. Since this long site is disconnected from Bronzeville with the Metra train tracks, one of the major design solutions is to stitch BRONZEVILLE TERRACES to Bronzeville West.


: EXISTING CONDITIONS

Extends existing street to Bronzeville Terraces Site

Extends existing street to Bronzeville Terraces Site


Truck parking, logistics center

Existing to remain to connect to Truck parking, logistics center

New road to residential towers


New road activated on both sides with small businesses







1/32” = 1’ - 0”

TYPICAL STACKED FLOOR UNITS



1.1.1 Activity Catalog

The Why Factory, MVRDV, Netherlands


02 Studio OnTheGO, The Why Factory Winy Maas MVRDV, Professor John Manaves

Adaptable Architecture with Newly Designed Current Technology Delft, Netherlands with San Lae Lae Cho, Caleb Vick, Jacob Wall, Joshua MacWilliams, Kathleen Birk, Landon Vowels, Ludin Castillo, Samantha Sheppard, Stephen Yoshida

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture


Let’s take a look at the average current city....

Urban Housing LEC

t?f

t?f

The Why Factory

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

OnTheGo Urban Housing Limited-Equity Cooperative The city is not being utilized to its full potential

it is actually a compilation of semi- latent spaces

t?f

The City at 7:00

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

We consume and demand more space, but leave those spaces inactive

The Why Factory

t?f

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

The City at 14:00

t?f

The City at 17:00

The Why Factory

College of Architecture

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

Transience and Motive So OnTheGo

1

[ the refugees ] [ the individualists ] [ the divorcees ]

[ the homeless ] [ the re-enterers ]

gym 2

entertainment

What if we focus on the activation of that one activity in that one space instead?

[ the emancipators ] [ the ex-pats ]

[ the new normal ]

restaurant transience ability to get up and go

3

coffee shops grocery stores

At any moment only one activity is activating only one space

[ the nomads ]

[ the pensioners ]

bars

[ the free spirit ] So-So OnTheGo

[ the frat house ]

[ the work-placements ]

[ the brady bunch ]

[ the squatters ]

4

[ the students ]

shopping school

[ the grandparents ]

work

[ the hermits ]

home

[ the stoopers ]

5

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Our amount of places and spaces needed for daily life are dispersed and inconsistently used

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

[ the superstars ] [ the hoarders ] Not So OnTheGo motivation for change general disatisfaction, geographic pressure, economic perks, lack of access to Architecture, etc.

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The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

The Commercial Users sharing preference noise preference light preference materialism

Junior type: age: stay length/frequency: occupation/hobbies: reason for OnTheGO:

“school/no DJ-ing”

“day off/no DJ-ing”

“friday/no DJ-ing”

day 1

day 2

day 3

the emancipator 16 ~year/continuous student/DJ living on friends couch

“Sponsored by a friendly neighbor, Junior is able to move out of his friends living room and finally be able to pursue his one true passion -disc jockeying”

day 2

day 3

t?f

The Why Factory

“school+DJ-ing”

“day off+DJ-ing”

ILLINOIS TECH

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


ဥညႊ့နOnTheGo Winy Maas MVRDV, Professor John Manaves

Adaptable Architecture with Newly Designed Current Technology Delft, Netherlands

Think of a city at a given moment. Traffic jams mean most people are on the move towards work or returning home while both workspaces and living ones remain unused. During the day, suburbs and average neighborhoods stand almost empty. If one made a scan of the city, it would not be surprising to find that a big chunk of it (even a dense city) is empty, or more precisely latent, waiting for the users to activate it. The great living room in your apartment remains unused perhaps 80 or 90% of the time. The bathroom gets used for 15 min and then spends 23 hours and 45 minutes waiting to be used again, not to mention the bedroom or the storage spaces. The story can go on to most functions of the housing block or the city. This reading would be irrelevant if space would be endless and the environment would be in perfect shape. But it is not. Humans consume and demand more and more space, so the answer given since time immemorial has been to compress the living quarters of those at the bottom of society to maximum levels and give to those at the top the sensation of power by space abundance. Density indeed has come with great advantages; it has brought affordable dwelling to millions and with it transport access, infrastructure, schools and so on. But the price tag of this has meant that families have to live in fixed environments of 35m2 even in rich Europe. Can we challenge this? Now as new technology emerges we are suddenly able to locate our position, and crucially for architecture, we are now able to manipulate our space from a distance. Software and architecture seem to be merging into one. At last, it seems plausible to rethink what density means and introduce a key factor to the equation that has been largely ignored: time.


commercial opportunity

6000

Finding our test day = most intense time

4800 voxel minimum

amount of residents present

amount of residents present

5000

4000

3000

2000

0 Finding our test day = most intense time

1000

weeks

Finding our test day = most intense time

Test Day 0

52

weeks

t?f

resident attendance

The Why Factory

0

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

52

weeks

m 0

su 52 41 week

weeks Test Day Test Day residentresident attendance attendance

amount amount of of residentsresidents present present

0

t?f t?f

The Why Factory

m

su week 41

m

ILLINOIS TECH

College The Whyof Factory Architecture

su

ILLINOIS TECH


1.1.0 Methodology A unit of volume: small enough to capture articulation, but large enough for heavy computation.

30 cm

30 cm

30 cm

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The Voxel

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

35 voxels

Activity

Quantified

t?f

The Why Factory

Some people simply need more space.

Add room for comfort.

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

transitions to best fit spaces

22:15

conclusion: moves users quickly across the envelope. could be fun but requires a lot of circulation movement

t?f

Multiply by Character Materialism Factor.

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

transitions to adjacent spaces

Bunky, Yoga, Victor, Nuri, Aaminah, and Samir all change activities

t?f College of Architecture

transitions in place

The Why Factory

t?f

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

The Why Factory

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

conclusion: demands less of the circulation and leaves more space available for local movement and expansion

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Do ego spaces still accommodate the spatial imprints of the activities within?

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The Why Factory

Yolk as User Preferenced Activities

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Do ego spaces still perform as well, or better than normal activity spaces in regards to density?

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


multiple system method

People and stuff movers slides along one face of the envelope

t?f

The Why Factory

The movers can move up

ILLINOIS TECH

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

t?f

The people mover lines up with her ideal space... she gets in

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

its internal arrangement is revealed

The Why Factory

t?f

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

The Why Factory

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

...and slides up to her newly formed sleeping space.

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The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Katie arrives and gets into a space just tall and wide enough for her

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The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

the space transforms from her elevator into her sleeping quarters right in front of her eyes

t?f College of Architecture

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

she lifts through empty space until arriving at her ideal space

... and sideways

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

conclusion: provides circulation quickly without disturbing neighbors, but adds structural complexity and is a bit too vending machine-esque

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Scene: Katie just got home and needs to bed after an exhausting day of knitting

t?f

conclusion: this method requires greater overall movement to manage circulation, but is structurally and technologically more simple and keeps a smaller envelope

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


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t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

t?f

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

The Why Factory

College of Architecture

College of Architecture

Specifications: Kitchen

Specifications: Dry and Cold Storage

The Wet Planks

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The Why Factory

The Why Factory

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

Specifications: Bathroom Plank

Specifications: Kitchen

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t?f

The Why Factory

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

t?f

ILLINOIS TECH

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

The Why Factory

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture

t?f

The Why Factory

ILLINOIS TECH

College of Architecture


bit.ly/LifeOTG

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


OnTheGo, Clients Addition


bit.ly/LifeOTG

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


OnTheGo, Clients Sharing


bit.ly/LifeOTG

TU Delft, the Why Factory by MVRDV in Netherlands


OnTheGo, Commercial and Residential Sharing



OnTheGo challenged us to reflect on the problematic of maximum desires and pressing needs. What sort of organizing principle is needed to accomplish a 100% adaptability in real time to ever changing demands of temporary users? How can time be taken into account to use the maximum potential of space resources? Can we think of game software that can accommodate different temporary modes of accommodation? bit.ly/OTGProto



03 Montessori Elementary Professor Jeffery Klymson Primary Education for free, independent children Chinatown, Chicago, IL “They [misbehaviors] are merely his reactions to an environment that has become inadequate... But we do not notice that. And since it is understood that the child must do what adults tell him, even though his environment no longer suits his needs, if he does not comply we say that he is “naughty” and correct him. Most of the time we are unaware of the cause of his “naughtiness”. Yet the child, by his condut, proves what we have just said. The closed environment is felt as a constraint...” (Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence) Rather than making a child learn to adapt to his environment, this design focuses on giving the children options in their surroundings. Whether in the classroom or in the hallway, the students are always given a choice on what they want to see, act, go and explore.


New Chinatown, Chicago IL


Montessori Elementary looking South West


ဃEvolution of classrooms into a school


Chinatown Montessori School Section


Lower Level Plan Scale: 1/8” = 1’

Lower Level Plan


First Floor Plan Scale: 1/8” = 1’

First Floor Plan


Second Floor Plan Scale: 1/8” = 1’ Second Floor Plan


Juxtaposition of play and learn

Outdoor auditorium landscape

A Classroom

Nooks for self development and reflection


Music Practical Language Arts

Corridor Mathematics

Entrance Culture

Geography

Biology

Sensorial

Culture Sensorial Entrance

Geography Biology

Kitchen Practical

Language

Reading

Personal

Biology

Kitchen

Sensorial

Practical Geography

Entrance

Language

Culture

Restrooms

Reading

Personal

Sensorial

Biology Entrance

Culture

Language Geography

Kitchen

Practical

Reading

Personal

ဇFlexible Programs and Zones inside a classroom


1'

2'

10'



04 Manoeuvre Habitation Professor Wiel Arets Adjunct Professor John Manaves Zeeburgereiland, Amsterdam, Netherlands What will be the strategy for the contemporary city and who will challenge this development? We have to radically change our perception of what is a city; we have to find a new definition and even a new word for what we call ‘the city’ or the ‘Metropolis,’ a name that was coined in the early 20th century.


Provocation According to the Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations, most of the world population will live in densified urban areas by 2050. This densification of the metropolis will place further emphasis on the high-rise tower and its integration within the context of the city. A new evaluation of the high-rise tower and its relationship to the traditional horizontal organization of the city should create a new typology. This new vertical and horizontal environment will need to adapt to the demands of the metropolis and its user. Urbanization Even with the advancements of the tower, our cities are organized horizontally emphasizing streets, building blocks, plazas, and parks. The high-rise building is consistently disconnected from the fabric of the city. How can the urban quality of the city be organized into the vertical? Movement Our high-rise towers are limited to the movement of the elevator, a technology invented over 150 years ago. How can we rethink metropolis and vertical urbanisms based on a new development and mode of circulation? New technology offers vertical and horizontal movement by a patented magnetic elevator. Neighborhoods Can the high-rise tower start to develop and distinguish a range of qualities and environments? How can the high-rise integrate the culture and diversity of the city? Can it create horizontal zero-zero level conditions? The Site: Zeeburgereiland, Sluisbuurt, Amsterdam, Netherlands



Vibrant, diverse neighborhoods of Amsterdam


From the IJ river, looking north at EYE Museum and A’DAM Lookout

Albert Cuyp Markt, the most popular flea market in Amsterdam

Amsterdam, Netherlands is well known for its canals and artistic, slim houses. It is a city of vibrant lifestyles and freedom. The fun culture is seen throughout the city with bustling bars and cafes. However, the calming parks and refreshing nature is seen throughout different pockets within neighborhoods in Amsterdam as well. Neighborhoods in Amsterdam have their own unique characteristics and many are quite significantly different from one another. It is also famous for its fabulous nightlife, and the number of bikes and canals. Generally, the bars and shops are common throughout the neighborhoods with unique features of flea markets, housing styles, parks and museums distributed among each neighborhood.

I Amsterdam, Museumplein

The site of the project is on the Zeeburgereiland, specifically Sluisbuurt - northern end section of the island. This island is connected in a loop with the rest of Amsterdam by two main highways. It is situated like a gateway to the inland on the eastern edge of Amsterdam.


Business trade and Industry Parks, Public Spaces and Water

Parks, Public Spaces and Water

Shops, Malls, Hotels and Sports Area

Shops, Malls, Woods and Sports Area

Sports area and sporting buildings

Parks, Public Spaces and Water

Shops, Malls, Hotels, Pubs and Restaurants Area

Public Utility and Army Barracks

Business

Business and industrial areas

Sports building and Water bodies with recreative function

Parks, Public Spaces and Water

Parks, Public Spaces and Water

Living Areas (incl. cultural, social, medical, educational facilities)

Living Areas (incl. cultural, social, medical, educational facilities)

Development Site Non-residential Area

Living Areas (incl. facilities)

Business and industrial areas

Living Areas (incl. cultural, social, medical, educational facilities)

Natural areas (agriculture, breeding)

Living Areas (incl. facilities)

5% 3% 5% 2%

90%

10%

25% 5%

40%

50%

5%

65%

60%

5% 15%

10% 5%

75%

10%

5% 15%

85%


types: Landscape Climate Water Governance Mobility Waste Commerce Health Leisure Work Education Housing Energy Production Extraction Food

Ratio Landscape 22.46% Climate4.84% Water12.78% Governance 0.55% Mobility 0.58% Waste 0.01% Commerce 0.16% Health0.08% Leisure1.57% Work 0.26% Education 0.25% Housing 4.92% Energy4.89% Production 4.85% Extraction 0.01% Food 41.77%

AreaRatio (m²) 22.46% 213.0 4.84% 45.9 12.78% 121.2 0.55% 5.2 0.58% 5.5 0.01% 0.1 0.16% 1.5 0.08% 0.7 1.57% 14.9 0.26% 2.4 0.25% 2.4 4.92% 46.7 4.89% 46.4 4.85% 46.0 0.01% 0.1 41.77% 396.1

Area (m²) 213.0 45.9 121.2 5.2 5.5 0.1 1.5 0.7 14.9 2.4 2.4 46.7 46.4 46.0 0.1 396.1

948.2

948.2

types:

volume

landscape landscape 213.0 climate climate 45.9 2% water water 121.2 Parks, Public Spaces and Water 3% Shops, Malls, Hotels, Pubs and Restaurants Area governance governance 5.2 5% mobility mobility 5.5 waste waste 0.1 Living Areas (incl. cultural, social, medical, educational facilities) commercecommerce40%1.5 health health 0.7 leisure leisure 14.9 work work 2.4 education education 2.4 housing housing 46.7 Natural open areas for light and air energy energy 50% 46.4 productionproduction 46.0 extraction extraction 0.1 food food 396.1

* Volumes areofgiven * Volumes are given a generic height 10m.a generic height of 10m.

vol. 1 person: 50,000 persons:

for 1948.2 person: neededvol. forneeded 1 person: sq 948.2 m 47,410,000 sq m

for 50k people: vol. neededvol. forneeded 50k people: 47.4 m 1,264,000 sq m *30% for air/light *30% for air/light =61.6 m 50,000 persons Zeeburgereiland: 37 mpeople: high vol. for 100k vol.onneeded forneeded 100k people: 94.8 m Zeeburgereiland:

Westpoort

Noord

with 50% light and air:

West Centrum

Zeeburgereiland

Nieuw West

Sluisbuurt: 50,000 persons on Sluisbuurt: with 50% light and air:

Oost Oud Zuid

Zuid Oost

74 m high

123

*30% forsqair/light *30% for air/light = 336,000 m 141 m high 282 m high


137 18 0 8 66 1 10 14 1

De Pijp Restaurants Schools Religious buildings Museums Shopping stores Flea Markets Theaters Hotels Squares

3.482 km sq 28,288 people 8,100 ppl/sq km

De Pijp’s programs with 10 mins and 5 mins walking radii


With the technology of 2050 in transportation, what if the neighborhoods could exist and maintain their qualities vertically?

This would help blur the conditions of ground level on different levels. Hybrids within neighborhoods can be created in their overlapping borders. By playing with the scale of neighborhood

and applying it vertically into the Sluisbuurt, the neighborhoods now become different, personalized units in a building, while the Sluisbuurt site is equilvalent as the building holding these units. Concept image of Amsterdam’s neighborhoods overlapped on top of one another


137 18 0 8 66 1 10 14 1

De Pijp De Pijp 137 Restaurants Restaurants 18 Schools Schools 0 Religious buildings Religious buildings 8 Museums Museums 66 Shopping stores Shopping stores 1 Flea Markets Flea Markets 10 Theaters Theaters 14 Hotels Hotels 1 Squares Squares

3.482 km sq 3.482 km sq 28,288 people 28,288 people ppl/sq 8,1008,100 ppl/sq km km

Programs projected at 2 scales (350 m radii and 124 m radii) on Sluisbuurt, Zeeburgereiland


137 18 0 8 66 1 10 14 1

De Pijp De Pijp 137 Restaurants Restaurants 18 Schools Schools 0 Religious buildings Religious buildings 8 Museums Museums 66 Shopping stores Shopping stores 1 Flea Markets Flea Markets 10 Theaters Theaters 14 Hotels Hotels 1 Squares Squares

3.482 km sq 3.482 km sq 28,288 people 28,288 people ppl/sq 8,1008,100 ppl/sq km km

3 Dimensional projection of stacked programs on Sluisbuurt, Zeeburgereiland


Hotels

Restaurants

Squares

Museums


Religious Structures

Schools

Theatres

Flea Markets


137 18 0 8 66 1 10 14 1

De Pijp De Pijp 137 Restaurants Restaurants 18 Schools Schools 0 Religious Religious buildings buildings 8 Museums Museums 66 Shopping Shopping stores stores 1 Flea Markets Flea Markets 10 Theaters Theaters 14 Hotels Hotels 1 Squares Squares

3.482 km sq 3.482 km sq 28,288 people 28,288 people ppl/sq 8,1008,100 ppl/sq km km

Molecular

Too Rigid Isolation of communities Strong differentiation of interstitial and neighborhood spaces


Pixelate Too Rigid Overlapping of communities Potential hybrid programs Extremely dense No room for light and air


Voronoi Flexible Overlapping of communities Potential hybrid programs Dispersion Potential for light and air 2 systems: Volume and Parameter


Soap Bubbles Flexible Overlapping of communities Potential hybrid programs Strong network Porous Potential for light and air Single system



The new city in Sluisbuurt imagines the future and projects potential trends. The new future would have an enclosed, energy efficient loop system. Clean water will go into the Zeeburgereiland and clean water will come back out of Zeeburgereiland. The photovoltaic glass of the facade will change color according to the light received, to provide the right amount of shade to the interior. Food and waste would be processed at optimal efficiency. Meat would be 3D printed and laboratory produced. Industries and robots would monopolize the hazardous productions with humans quality controlling through VR. Artificial Photosynthesis would not only be implemented with real trees but also provide solar energy and a high concentration of Oxygen to the city atmosphere. Self driving cars and drone transportation systems would provide a much more efficient method of traveling and communication. These new trajectory future systems would enforce both maintaining the identity of Amsterdam and implementing new technology into the architecture, on the planning of Zeeburgereiland.



During the second part of the 20th century, the rediscovery of the traditional city was the focus of attention. But just as the phone operates together with the computer and the e-mail to communicate, the new city, the city to come is more complex than the city as we know it so far, because our culture is simply much more complex as well. New infrastructural devices have to be developed. Perhaps the virtual realm will help the city to get a new identity, in which our constantly changing world is meeting instability. The way the World is dealing with Financial Issues and the role/position of the Bank, Property-ownership and the playground for developers and entrepreneurs are not anymore bound to one city; they relate by Stock-exchange and the International Property-development as a Global issue. We would like to speak in this respect about the city to come, the city we experience in a dreamlike condition; the un-sensational, the un-thought, the un-environment, the seemingly un-complex perception of a new reality.


One resident occupancy

Two residents occupancy (Optimal operation)

Couples occupancy

Foldable and expandable furnishing to reduce space occupied

Approx. 6’ x 9’ bathroom

Spacious and generous furnishing

Storage underneath couple bed to reduce space occupied

Approx. 4’ x 9’ bathroom

Approx. 4’ x 9’ bathroom

300 sq ft

10‘ x 20’ Unit

10‘ x 20’ Unit

Single Unit

Single Unit

Different types of units for student residents

Double Unit


Three residents occupancy (Optimal operation)

Two residents occupancy

Approx. 6’ x 9’ bathroom

Approx. 6’ x 9’ bathroom

Storage underneath bed to reduce space occupied Typical dorm room style Storage underneath bed to reduce space occupied Foldable and expandable furnishing to reduce space occupied Tight minimalist living style

05 Bailey Renovate!

300 sq ft

300 sq ft

Professor Eva Kultermann Sustainable student housing Douglas, Chicago, IL with Carolina Almeida This project aims to compete in AIA Cote Top Ten Students Competition, which focuses on different measures of innovative sustainability. The site, Bailey Hall is an unoccupied student housing, apartment building on the Illinois Institute of Technology campus in Chicago, IL. With the current trends and available housing options on campus in mind, Bailey Hall was retrofitted into a sustainable multifamily dwelling project.

Double Unit

Double Unit

Instead of fully retrofitting sustainability innovations into the old building, we decided to create a new “brother” building which will be a makers’ space that also generates green energy for its older “brother” Bailey Hall. The “brother” building not only houses a grocery store, labs, event spaces, an energy gym, open studio spaces and a roof top restaurant, but also has a rainwater harvesting tank, greywater recycling tanks, water filtering fish tanks and living machines. These innovative technologies will allow the students in the lab to learn directly as a hands-on experience. Many under-used, surrounding sites have been improved to drain stormwater, engage community or generate even more green energy!


up

elevator

Laundry

down

kitchen elevator

up

up

Gallery bridge

open studio

up down

elevator

5th Floor 1’ = 3/32� 16 Units @ 27 - 43 +1-2

?

1st and 5th Floor Plan


storage

up

elevator

laundry bean bags

down

kitchen

elevator

down

down

fish tanks for water treatement

up down

stage

ballroom

6th Floor elevator

fish tanks for water treatement

1’ = 3/32� 14 Units @ 20 - 34 +1-2

2nd and 6th Floor Plan

?


up

elevator

Laundry

down

Storage

elevator

Kitchen

up

Gallery bridge

energy running machines

constructed wetland

electricity or energy production gym

up down

energy bikes elevator

7th Floor 1’ = 3/32� 16 Units @ 26 - 42 +1-2

?

3rd and 7th Floor Plan


elevator

down Laundry

up

kitchen

down

bean bags

elevator

storage

restaurant up down kitchen 8th Floor elevator

1’ = 3/32� 14 Units @ 24 - 38 +1-2

4th and 8th Floor Plan

?


Water fea

rapeutic Gard The en

e as aco tur

E 31st street

nt me

Keating Sports Center

orting ele mf

Gl

nt me

t the base gh

New Bailey Hall

Paths curv

Grocery

Cunningham Hall

re Sto

de insi

inwards to ed Incubator Space

ures uct

Farm

ated landscape ctiv

S Michigan Avenue

permeable pavement

rain drainage, s a w

s water, Filter slo

inwards

unte mm rs

c Attra t co

act traffic attr

parking lot

had lar s ing str so

Solar energy

e nerat d from ge

or t n flo o li

blocks o ass

retention pond

sloped to drain into the pond

Gunsaulus tennis court

Carman Hall McCormick Tribune Campus Center academic buildings

5'

20'

50'

100'

200'

parking lot

Site Plan


average use of electricity byBailey

2.6 million gallons used by residents

2.1 million gallons harvested rainwater

100%

80%

rainwater harvest 9,600 sq ft

25% distributed .5 million gallons

kWh per year

spring + summer winds

growing beds fish tanks

energy immediately used

energy supplied to the electricity

processed water distributed to site

community farm

summer + spring breeze

radiant steam heating

compost collector

therapeutic garden

cooling energy saved

windows placed high on NE side to exhale warm air out

energy gym

living machines

excess energy can be supplied back into the school system

10%~60%

15%

out of total energy consumed

solar heating

blackwater and greywater storage

vertical wind turbines

harvesting rainwater from site, waiting to be purified

35%

efficiency for conventional generation

into electricity

into other uses

resultant energy used to pump water

photovoltaic triple-glazed glass

sprouts hydroponics

85% reused 2.9 million gallons

rooftop garden for growing

wind turbines

filtered water storage rainwater harvest 66,000 sq ft

32,000

kWh per year

distribution tank

engagement to the community through means of growing

wind energy

780,000

heat recovery steam from Illinois Tech

70% efficiency for pressure steam system

photovoltaic glass

250,000

kWh per year

cool air being inhaled into the double glass windows placed low on the SW side facade to inhale the cool breeze

mechanical room in the basement

60% efficiency for solar heating system

Sustainable Technology integrated in the Energy Plus New Building that supports the Existing Student Housing

11

11

12

12 10

1

10

9

8 7

large car parking lot the only use for parking cars

7

terrazzo paving on ground floor no light into the basement

5

3

4 7

6

2

5

3

1

8

1

6

2

9

4

1

large car parking lot solar panels roofing generate green energy while shading cars

7

glass blocks in the terrazzo on the edge of the building allow light to the basement

large lawn, high solar in summer bordered with native plants, grown with reused greywater community farm for organic growing natural landscape slopes down to retain stormwater

8

innovative glass-and-dark-brick-screen trombe wall on south and west sides for solar heating simple brick pattern facade for east and north sides

2

large lawn, high solar in summer occasionally used for frisbee

8

uninsulated facade, exposed floor slabs, uninsulated windows, poor ventilation

2

3

abandoned playground

9

an isolated building

3

retention pond for storing excess stormwater before transferring to living machines to be purified for reuse

9

sustainable energy generated from “battery” building fed into renovated student housing

4

permeable paving with natural pattern taken from usual routes

10

varying corridor with large social space for gathering and small, quiet nooks for private studying four varying floor plans with communal kitchen for choice movable furnishing for students’ personalization of rooms high sound proofing for high quality privacy in the units

4

thinly paved, concrete walkways (mostly unused)

10

dark, narrow corridor with no social space for gathering large, strict, repetitive floor plans for very high privacy low sound proofing

5

grass and trees around entrance

11

beautiful views on rooftop (unaccessible)

5

public plaza for gathering with native, wild plantings

11

beautiful views on rooftop accessible through the rooftop or rooftop cafe in incubator building solar panels roof generate solar energy while also harvesting rainwater for reuse

6

area with trees

12

no sustainability integrated

6

therapeutic garden to destress students and community members connection to the community with inviting flowers

12

“battery” building (incubator building) uses high, innovative technology to generate green energy while requiring low energy itself provides flexible, multi-purpose spaces for social events, hang-out, formal, informal occasions

Before and After


rate solar energy while also harvesting rainwater for reuse

or building) nology to generate green energy while requiring low energy itself pose spaces for social events, hang-out, formal, informal occasions

Ulmus Patriot

Quercus Imbricaria

Sassafras Albidum

Iris

Sassafras Albidum

Ulmus Patriot

Lonicera

Eutrochium Maculatum

Dalea Purpurea

Juncus

Lobelia Siphilitica

Schizachyrium Scoparium

Lobelia Siphilitica

Liatris Spicata

Activated Landscape

Site Section and Landscape

Filters Waters

Vegetation Slope Drain to Pound

Path

Vegetation

Path

Vegetation Slope Drain to Pound

Path

Vegetation


PV Solar Installation Butterfly Roof

Restaurant Kitchen

Swiss Chard

Peas

Energy Production Gym

Fish Tanks Ballroom

Lettuce

Open Studios Leek Greywater and Blackwater Storage Laboratory

Kale

Living Machine Showcase Event Spaces Brussels Sprouts

Small Group Meeting

Rainwater Storage Tank Workshop

Grocery Store

Farm

Filters Waters

Activated Landscape

Incubator Building

Connection Path Energy Connector

Bailey Hall


ၤေခေိနFacade Option 1

ၤေခေိနFacade Option 2

ၤေခေိနFacade Option 3

East Elevation

East Elevation

South El

South Elevation


1 Awning Window

2 Window Framing

3 Single Pane Laminated,

3

1

Low-E Glazing

2

4 Flashing

4

5 Pre-Manufactured

Window Box Frame Anchored to Masonry Wall, Light Weight Metal

5

6

6 Window Framing 7 Double Glazed Glass 8 Awning

7

9 Wood Window Box

10 Double Wythe Open

Weave Mansory Wall

8 9

10

1 Single Pane Laminated,

2

Low-E Glazing

2 Double Wythe Open

Weave Mansory Wall

3 Triple Pane Laminated,

3 4

1

5

Low-E Glazing

4 Window Framing

5 Awning Window 6 Kawneer 1600

Curtain Wall Sys.

7 Existing Concrete Slab

8 Steel Angle

9 Aluminum Ventilation

6

Louvers

7

10 Steel Shelf Angle

11 Separating Plate for

Louvered Ventilation for Inlet at the Top Outlet at Base

10

9 8

Wall Section Technology Detail


Night Perspective



N M e

N Leavitt Ave

ke au ilw e Av

A CT

Bloomingdale’s Trail

ue

Bl ne

Li Art

Starbucks

Art

Bar

Basketball Art Art

Stairs

Art

Pool Table

Volleyball Stairs

Sk Cafe’

Site Plan 21’-0” Scale Site Plan, Wicker Park

1/64” - 1’

N Leavitt Ave

Canopy


06 ြမေလငအပGravity Well Professor Michael Glynn

kate and Bike Park

Cultural Center for diverse communities Park 567, Chicago, IL How can architecture influence the balance, speed and flow of economic, social, and political aspects of our society? Located on the border of Bucktown and Wicker Park, Park 567 is overlooked by Ward 2 of Damen station and Ward 1 of Western station. Unlike the busy, lively communities around the Damen station of blue line, it exists merely as a bypass where mostly only the Bloomingdale’s users pass. Since it is an entry point to the infamous Bloomingdale’s trail, the segregated site which is currently divided into mainly 3 sectors by Milwaukee Avenue, Leavitt Street, the Bloomingdale’s Trail, and the CTA train, can be brought together by readjusting and reallocating the existing flows.

N M e ke

au ilw e Av


One of the ways looked into was an attraction like gravity where nearby users would be attracted and drawn to the proposed hub. They would be either slowed down due to the attention to the hub which includes cafes’, art, miniature sports and so on, or be completely engaged in the activity in which case they would stop and stay. There are also ramps through the hub which provide multiple access to the Gravity Well. Not only will the design bridge the segregated site, but also reorganize or even encourage the flow of political, recreational information and people in a certain direction while gravitating towards the central proposed gathering center. This will in turn recreate a close, socialized community, bringing art and culture back to the Wicker Park Neighborhood.


Political Boundaries

Ward 32

Logan Square

Ward 2 Humboldt Park Political boundaries amongst wards and neighborhoods

Ward 1

West Town


1’

1’

1’

N Leavitt Ave

Bloomingdale’s Trail

2’

N M e

ke

au ilw

2’ e Av

2’

Art 2’

Starbucks

3’

2’

Art

Bar

Basketball Art Art

Stairs

Art

Pool Table

Volleyball Stairs

N M k au ilw

3’

ee

N Leavitt Ave

Cafe’

Scale

1/16” - 1’

e Av

Bloomingdale’s Level 21’-0” 2’

2’

Elevated Main Plan


N

N Leavitt Ave

Bloomingdale’s Trail

M e

ke

au ilw e Av Picnic Area

Green roof

Stage

Green roof

Stairs

N e

ke e Av

Roof Plan

1/16” - 1’

au ilw

Scale

N Leavitt Ave

M

CTA train’s height 32’-0”


Opportunities

Highest Opportunities

Lowest Opportunities

Highest Opportunities

Lowest Opportunities

Programs’ Relationships


East Elevation

South Elevation

North Elevation

Scale

1/16” = 1’ 0”


Section Scale

1/16” = 1’ 0”

East Elevation


Wall Section Scale

1’-1”

Wall Elevation Scale 1

3


The Why Factory, MVRDV, Netherlands


07 Other Prof. Leslie Johnson, Lukasz Kowalczyk

Radial Cartographies London, England & Rome, Italy

Professor Joel Putnam

Design Communications III

Professor Kindon Mills

Lafayette Park by Mies van der Rohe Detroit, MA

Professor Lukasz Kowalczyk

Design Communications II

with Jaehyuk Chang, Arlene Hayes, Jacob Wall


Thickness depends on the weight and number of cars

Radius depends on the volume of water ow

Outlets depend on the location and capacity

Depth depends on the location of the manhole

Rendering


3d Modeling


QGIS


Threads in the Fabric

Norrebro District, Copenhagen, Denmark 1:100

The interior circulation of the Norrebro's megablocks is mainly interpreted as vertical. Each two or three units share a core stair. Therefore, the stairs allow the vertical neighbors to interact and meet each other more often than those living on the same floor a couple units far. All the units have multiple stairs which open up to the inner courtyard and the outter streets with the facades equally treated on both sides.

Modeling



08 Work Perkins Eastman Architects Marassi Address & Vida Resorts

Client: Emaar Marassi, Egypt

Ramu Ramachandran, Steven Burgos, Mohammad Dehnee


NO.

ISSUE

DATE

H15

L6

L4

H13

EWS-03

EWS-03

3 A-211

MECH. 634

SEAL RS-01 EWS-02

EWS-01

A - 101B

A - 101A

HR-01

4 A-211

A

B

GYM 295

EWS-03 EWS-01 EWS-04

DN

GF CI

N

HOTEL LOBBY 455

HR-03

2 A-210

KEY PLAN

BUILDING EXTERIOR WALL SETBACK 12M

EWS-05

3 A-210

5 A-210

4 A-210

DN

J4 5008

A S46

2 A-211

85

J45207 -2014 A S4685

PROPERTY LINE

DN 1 A-211

HOTEL

DELUXE 554

Owner: EMAAR MISR FOR DEVELOPMENT, S.A.E. H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT

HOTEL LOBBY SECTIONAL 3D-VIEW 1

2

Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A. Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222

HOTEL LOBBY

SA LOBBY

MEETING&EVENTS

EWS-03

RS-01 HR-01

MT-02

Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003,

HR-03

HR-01

EWS-04

Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS. PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE

BUILDING SETBACK LIMIT (25M)

1 : 100

EWS-02

Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315. DUBAI, UAE PARKING

HOTEL ENTRANCE SECTION

EWS-03

Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD. DUBAI, UAE

SERVICED APARTMENTS

CORR.

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

PROPERTY LINE

1 A-210

WTS-03

PROJECT TITLE:

HR-03

EWS-02

WC

WC

MEP

ADDRESS MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H9)

FIREPIT

MARASSI, EGYPT UP

PROJECT No: 70070.00 DRAWING TITLE:

OVERALL ENTRY LEVEL FLOOR PLAN SCALE:

1

1 : 500

A-101

ENTRY LEVEL 1 : 500

HOTEL LOBBY SECTIONAL 3D-VIEW 2

1

HOTEL LOBBY + PARKING SECTION 1 : 100

100% DESIGN DEVELOPMENT 08/31/2018

KEYNOTE LEGEND Key Value EWS-01

BASIS OF DESIGN: VS-1 LONG SPAN CURTAIN WALL GLAZING AND SUPPORT SYSTEM BY INNOVATION GLASS LLC USING POINT SUPPORTED GLASS WITH CAST ALUMINUM FITTINGS. STEEL REINFORCED IF REQUIRED. 25 MM INSULATED GLAZING UNIT WITH GL-01, OR GL-02 AS PER DRAWINGS WITH ALUM. FINISH TO BE PER MT-02 AND MT-03 PER DRAWINGS.. BLADE SHAPED MULLION ENGINEERED DEPTH TO BE 200 MM. APPLICATION: AT LOBBY AND TERRACE AREA GLAZED WALLS TALLER THAN 4000 MM

EWS-02

ALUM STOREFRONT FRAMING SYSTEM WITH 25 MM CENTER-SET INSULATED GLAZING UNIT WITH GL-01. ALUM. FINISH PER MT-03. FACE WIDTH 50 MM, SYSTEM DEPTH 100 MM INTEGRAL ALUMINUM ENTRANCE DOOR SYSTEM WHERE INDICATED. APPLICATION: AT GARDEN AND ENTRY LEVEL GLAZED WALLS ONLY, WHEN HEIGHT OF WALL IS LESS THAN 4000 MM FOR AIR AND WATER PERFORMANCE. ALUMINUM BALCONY SLIDING DOOR SYSTEM WITH SYMMETRICAL FIXED AND OPERABLE PANELS, WITH 25 MM INSULATED GLAZING UNIT WITH GL-01. ALUM. FINISH PER MT-01. SILL RECEIVER FASTENED TO RECEIVER PLATE, SILL DAM MOUNTED AT MAX. 6 MM HEIGHT ABOVE FINISH FLOOR ELEV. BOD: ALUMIL SUPREME S700) LIFT & SLIDE SYSTEM W/ LOW PROFILE, CONCEALED DRAINABLE SILL TRACK, GL-## GLAZING AND ALUM FINISH TO BE MT-01 and MT-03 PER DRAWINGS.

EWS-03

EWS-04 EWS-05 EWS-06 EWS-07 EWS-08 EWS-09 GL-01 GL-02 HR-01 HR-02 HR-03 MT-01 MT-02 MT-03 MT-04

RS-01 RS-02 ST-01 ST-02 SU-01 SU-03 WD-01

NO. 1

DATE --

ISSUE --

Keynote Text

PRE-ENGINEERED FOLDING AND SLIDING EXTERIOR DOORS BY NANAWALL OR EQUAL, WITH 25 MM INSULATED GLAZING UNIT WITH GL-01. ALUM. FINISH PER MT-03. APPLICATION: AT EXTERIOR GLAZED WALLS POOL BAR AND SPECALITY RESTAURANT 250 mm TOTAL NOMINAL THK EXTERIOR CONCRETE MASONRY UNIT WALL WITH CEMENT STUCCO FINISH PLASTER 2 MM THK. REINFORCED AND ATTACHED AS PER STRUCTURAL ENGINEER. SU-01 TO MATCH EWS-05, SU-03 ALUMINUM SCREEN MOUNTED ON ALUM FRAMING, ALUM FINISH TO BE MT-03 AND MT-02 PER DRAWINGS ALUMINUM - PAINTED SCREEN TO BE MT-02 STONE CLADDING ON EWS-03 WALL. HANDSET ST-01 (1000*200*50 MM) STONE PANELS INDIVIDUALLY MOUNTED W/ SS #316 ANCHORS ONTO REINFORCED MASONRY OR IN-SITU CONCRETE WALL BACKUP WITH AIR & WATER BARRIER MEMBRANE (VAPOR PERMEABLE). LOW-E GLAZING, BASIS OF DESIGN "###" TARGET PERFORMANCE RANGE: U-VALUE 0.29, TRANSMITTANCE: 70, REFLECTANCE IN-OUT: 11-13, SHGC: .39 SHADOW BOX DETAIL, GLAZING TO MATCH GL-01 STEEL HANDRAIL W/ 20X40 MM STL POSTS (100 MM O.C.). W/ UV PROTECTOR FINISH PER PT-01. (ALTERNATE ALUMINUM HANDRAIL SYSTEM AS DETAILED). STEEL HANDRAIL W/ 20X40 MM STL POSTS (100 MM O.C.). W/ UV PROTECTOR FINISH PER PT-03. (ALTERNATE ALUMINUM HANDRAIL SYSTEM AS DETAILED). GLASS RAILING SYSTEM, GLAZING UNIT WITH GL-01, WITH STEEL HANDRAIL W/ 10X30 MM STL POSTS (1100 MM SEPARATION FROM CENTER TO CENTER). W/ UV PROTECTOR FINISH PER PT-03 ALUMINUM FINISH PER PT-01; ALL ALUMINUM FINISHES IN THE BEACH FRONT ENVIRONMENT TO BE 3-COAT 70% PVDG CUSTOM COLOR, FINISHED WITH CLEAR COAT SEALER. COATED ALUM FRAMING AND MULLIONS, FINISH PER PT-02; ALL ALUMINUM FINISHES IN THE BEACH FRONT ENVIRONMENT TO BE 3-COAT 70% PVDG CUSTOM COLOR, FINISHED WITH CLEAR COAT SEALER. COATED ALUMINUM FRAMING OR MULLIONS, FINISH PER PT-03; ALL ALUMINUM FINISHES IN THE BEACH FRONT ENVIRONMENT TO BE 3-COAT 70% PVDG CUSTOM COLOR, FINISHED WITH CLEAR COAT SEALER. EXTRUDED ALUMINUM VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL LOUVER FIN SYSTEM WITH INTERNAL REINFORCEMENT AND PRE-ENGINEERED ATTACHMENT DETAILS. INSTALL PANEL USING CONCEALED FASTENERS. BASIS OF DESIGN: ‘FORTINA’ AS MANUFACTURED BY BN INDUSTRIES , COLOR TBD FROM MANUF FULL RANGE. (OTHER EQUALS: VERSATILIS BY WOODN. APPLICATION: ALUM. AND WOOD LOOK FINS VARIOUS HORIZAONTAL AND VERTICAL INSTALLATIONS 1.5MM REINFORCED WHITE TPO OR EQUAL. ROOF MEMBRANE OVER INSULATION OVER SLOPED CONCRETE TOPPING OVER STRUCTURAL CONCRETE SLAB. ROOF W/ PROTECTED MEMBRANE ROOF SYSTEM INSTALLED OVER RIGID INSULATION, SLOPED CONCRETE TOPPING ON STRUCTURAL CONCRETE SLAB. BOD: AMERICAN HYDROTECH'S "MONOLITHIC MEMBRANE #6125-EV-FR". STONE WALL BASE ON GARDEN AND ENTRY LEVELS, 50MM MIN THICKNESS, HONED FINISH, UNFILLED STONE WALL BASE ON GARDEN LEVEL AT THE PARKING GARAGE, 50MM MIN THICKNESS, UNFILLED EXTERIOR STUCCO - SKIM COAT CEMENT PLASTER FINISH SYSTEM ON CONCRETE AND MASONRY / IN-SITU WALL BACKUP, FINE SAND FINISH (PT-01 FINISH) EXTERIOR STUCCO - SKIM COAT CEMENT PLASTER FINISH SYSTEM ON CONCRETE AND MASONRY / IN-SITU WALL BACKUP, VENETIAN FINISH (PT-03 FINISH) 10 MM THK. NATURAL TIMBER FACED EXTERIOR CLADDING PANEL. INSTALL PANEL USING CONCEALED FASTENERS AND PERFORATED REVEAL SPACERS.ON GALVANIZED COLD FORMED STEEL STUD FRAMING MEMBERS 100 DEEP, SPACED MAX 400 MM O.C. O PER STRUCTURAL ENGG. BASIS OF DESIGN: ‘FAÇADE’ PANEL AS MANUFACTURED BY PARKLEX, SILVER COLOR (OTHER EQUALS: PRODEMA, ICE GRAY COLOR). PANEL INCLUDES A TREATED VENEER WITH PVDF ANTI-GRAFFITI OVERLAY AND EVERLOOK PROTECTION FILM ON HIGH DENSITY PRESSURE LAMINATED TIMBER COMPOSITE PANEL CORE MEET EN 438-6:2005 WEATHERABILITY AND EN13.501 / NFPA FOR FIRE RESISTANCE APPLICATION: WOOD LOOK FINS AT BALCONY DIVIDERS

SEAL

A

B

KEY PLAN

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

Owner: EMAAR MISR FOR DEVELOPMENT, S.A.E. H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A. Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222 Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD. DUBAI, UAE Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315. DUBAI, UAE Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003, Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS. PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE PROJECT TITLE:

ADDRESS MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H9) MARASSI, EGYPT

PROJECT No: 70070.00 DRAWING TITLE:

AXONOMETRIC VIEW BOH AND SPECIALTY RESTAURANT SECTION

SCALE:

ISOMETRIC VIEW

A-400 100% DESIGN DEVELOPMENT 08/31/2018

HOTEL AXONOMETRIC VIEW 01

ALL DAY DINING SECTION


ROOF 21.300

EWS-03

L1

9

9.1

1 A-306 10.1

1 A-210

2 4 A-306 A-440 11

10

EWS-03

HR-03

12

1 A-408

13

EWS-04

14

MT-02

EWS-07

DATE

NO.

4 A-405

15

2 A-307

17 17.1

EWS-02

EWS-02

17.2

18

EWS-02

0.400.50

35

18.1

19

19.1

RS-02

20

20.1

RS-01

0.20 0.30 0.90

0.90

EWS-01

SECOND LEVEL 14.400

3.45

3.18

3.45

EWS-03

0.75 0.30 0.80

3.45

3.45

2.25

1.55

KEY PLAN

4.70

SA GARDEN LEVEL 4.050 1.55

3.45

1.55

KEY PLAN

2.40

ENTRY LEVEL 7.500

3.15

A

EWS-01

HR-03

A

ENTRY LEVEL 7.500

B

VESTIBULE 422

EWS-01

SEAL

SEAL

B

FIRST LEVEL 10.950

MT-01

2.62

3.45

18.80

3.45

7.20

FIRST LEVEL 10.950

0.30

18800

SECOND LEVEL 14.400

0.30 0.90

FEMALE

2.30

3.45

2.25

3.45

THIRD LEVEL 17.850

3.20

4.15

THIRD LEVEL 17.850

3.45

ROOF 21.300

7.30

HR-01

GARDEN LEVEL 2.500

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

0

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

32

18.80

EWS-04

HR-03

3.45

ENTRY LEVEL 7.500

SA GARDEN LEVEL 4.050

16

4 A-405

17.1

2 A-307 3.90

4.15

17.2

0.35

3.10

18

18.1

0.70

3.45

20.1

0.35

3.45

Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT

0.70

950 2.02

IT 302 OFFICE 504

3.00

1.90

1.15

L4

ELEV. LOBBY 500

2 A-304

PROJECT No: 70080.00

1.00

5.70

SP. DINING ELEV. LOBBY 462

7.500

1.15

1.79

3.02

1.15

3.66

1.12

CORR. 509

DRAWING TITLE:

HOTEL LOBBY AREA - SECTIONS

4.64

2.30

2.15

8.50

FRONT DESK / RECEPTION 516

3.10

4370

STOR. 489

12.45

HOTEL LOBBY 455 7.500

CORR. 498 7.500

TOILET 515 7.63

7.60

1.73

2.42

2.60

1.32

1BD 094

APARTMENTS LOBBY 444

10.10

RETAIL 555

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE

DESIGN DEVELOPMENT

4.08

HA HC

HB

4.40

HA.8

4.40

HA.8

HB

HC

HD

2.0

4.40

4.40

4.40

4.40

3.63

0.80

2.06

NO.

2.8

4.40

4.40

4.40

4.40

DATE

ISSUE

4.40

13.08

HA

4.15

0.25

4.15

0.83 0.83

0.80

A-303

SECOND BEDROOM

2.0

0.80

5.40

0.65

2.10

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE 7.35

W1

0.80

HA.8

4.28

0.50

1.22

2.68

1.32

9.35

0.25

4.4

4.40

4.15

2.06

2.90

4.40

3.74

2.4

HA

4.40

5 0.25

4.15

1 : 100

SCALE:

NOVEMBER 2ND, 2018

1 : 100

HD

LOBBIES AREA PLAN - ELEVATION

DESIGN DEVELOPMENT

8.42

ENTRY LEVEL - LOBBY AREA

ISSUE

PROJECT No: 70080.00

2.97

1

NOVEMBER 2ND, 2018

VIDA MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H3)

DRAWING TITLE:

FRONT DESK / RECEPTION 249

H15

A-306

PROJECT TITLE:

MARASSI, EGYPT

RETAIL 279

L6

1 : 100

Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003 Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS, PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE

1.25

BAR 529

3.78

1.66

OFFICE 305

20.20

TOILETS 641

PROJECT TITLE:

VIDA MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H3)

8.50

ST-3 306

2.00

TOILETS 640

VESTIBULE 443

3530

2.15

PANTRY 532

Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD, DUBAI, UAE. Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315, DUBAI, UAE.

7.500 VESTIBULE 422

1 A-305

Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS, PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE

DATE

3.80

L2

Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003

NO.

19.1

0.35

BOH ELEV. LOBBY 461

H11

Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315, DUBAI, UAE.

SCALE:

15 4.15

1050

L1

Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD, DUBAI, UAE.

GARDEN LEVEL 2.500

14

1 A-408 4.15

Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222

2.45 4.40

DOOR TO LOCK-OFF ROOM

2.00

HB 4

0.75

1.05

A

0.62 0.59 1.66

2.8

B

3.00 2.25

4.40

3.30

BATHROOM

3.74

4.15

4.40

1.70

MASTER BATHROOM

2.8 3.0

1.20

0.63

0.80

0.25

4.15

4.1

2.00

4.2

2.7

0.30

SEAL

1.86

1.70

3.63

8.93 LIVING

2.70

0.25

2.4

4.15

4.40

0.33

HC

SEAL

A

10

1 : 100

2.83.0

4

4.1

4.2

4.4

HOTEL - EXECUTIVE SUITE

9

1 : 100 9

5 7

10

HOTEL - DELUXE 1BD SUITE B 1 : 100

KEY PLAN

11

4400

8

N

B

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT G

11 KEY PLAN

4.40

11

10

4.40

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

4.40

115 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10003 T. +1 212 353 7200 F. +1 212 353 7676

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE

W1

Owner:

W1

W1

W1

W1

HN

HQ

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE 3.00

1.10

0.90

3.50

3.85

Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222

Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT

HP.5

6.58

2.04

1.52

5.20

0.30

HA

Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT

1.90

Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A. Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222

2.91

7

1.55 0.65

1.85

HO

HOTEL - DELUXE 1BD SUITE

6

1 : 100 HE

HN.6

9.35

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT TYP.

5

1 : 100

HD

HH

HG

4.40

4.40

2.14

2.13 0.75

Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315. DUBAI, UAE

HP

HO 0.53

5.40 1.05

0.48

PROJECT TITLE:

Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003,

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT E 1 : 100 HI

4.40

Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS. PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE

HH 4.40

PROJECT TITLE:

2.25 0.27

HC 8.20

2.62

2.17

1.18

2.50

VIDA MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H3)

9.60

1.55 1.37

1.35

0.55

HB

Acoustics & Security and Access Control INFOSIGHT CONSULTANTS DMCC 1402, BB1 TOWER, MAZAYA BUSINESS AVE. JUMEIRAH LAKE TOWERS, PO BOX 309137, DUBAI, UAE

Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD. DUBAI, UAE

2.35

HO

1.15

3.79

Signage, Graphic and Wayfinding Design RUSSELL DESIGN 115 5TH AVENUE, 3RD FLOOR. NY, NY 10003

1.55

1.85

4.40

1.00

Spa Consultant THE WELLNESS THE BINARY TOWER, BUSINESS BAY, OFFICE P314 & P315, DUBAI, UAE.

4.28

0.80

HA.8

1.55 0.53

2.04 4.65

5.04

2.85

HN.6

Food & Laundry Equipment: CKP MIDDLE EAST CONSULTANTS UNIT 903, AL MANAL TOWER, SHEIKH ZAYED ROAD, DUBAI, UAE.

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE

W1 4.15

2.0

2.0

CONSTRUCTION WORK POINT, ALIGN TO STRUCTURAL GRIDLINE

W1

2.0

2.0

4.96

5.01

4.96

MARASSI, EGYPT

HD

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT F

PROJECT No: 70070.00

7.10

9.10

8

7.10

7.10

DRAWING TITLE:

AXONOMETRIC VIEW HOTEL SIDE A

1.85

DRAWING TITLE:

2.42

ENLARGED UNIT PLANS

1 : 100

1.40

1.05

1.10

2.7

0.73

NOVEMBER 2ND, 2018

4

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT D 1 : 100

3

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT C 1 : 100

2

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT B 1 : 100

SCALE:

2.00

3.0

0.53

3.0

DESIGN DEVELOPMENT

4.00

2.7

0.53

2.00

2.7

2.00

A-301

4.00

SCALE:

HOTEL LOBBY AND SPA & GYM SECTION

ADDRESS MARASSI BEACH HOTEL (H9)

2.40

MARASSI, EGYPT

PROJECT No: 70080.00

Owner: EMAAR MISR FOR DEVELOPMENT, S.A.E. H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT

W1

HN

H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT

4.40

LOBBY 546

1.55

BOH HOUSEKEEPING 643

HOUSE KEEPING 463

MARASSI, EGYPT

3.45

HOTEL LOBBY 455

OFFICE 504

FIRST LEVEL 10.950

4.15

1.28

3.45

MT-03 EWS-01

13

4.15

7075

SECOND LEVEL 14.400

12

2 4 A-306 A-440

7.77

HR-03

11 4.15

575

EWS-01

10

1 A-306

3.43

EWS-06

3.45

EWS-07

GYM 295

10.1

4 A-409 13.80

4.20

THIRD LEVEL 17.850

9.1

11.67

HR-01

HR-01

4.40

MECH. 634

9 4.10

1.78

ROOF 21.300

3.45

EWS-06

EWS-07

CORRIDOR 394

2.90

RS-01 EWS-03

EWS-02

H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT

3.25

L6

35

H10

Landscape: RABBEN/HERMAN DESIGN OFFICE 833 DOVER DRIVE, SUITE 9. NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663, U.S.A Exterior Lighting: AWA LIGHTING DESIGNERS 61 GREENPOINT AVENUE, SUITE 306. BROOKLYN, NEW YORK 11222

8.80

L4

HR-03

1 : 100

4.40

H13

EWS-02

HOTEL AND SA LOBBY ELEVATION 1

2

H/Q AT EMAAR MISR SALES CENTRE. MOKATTAM, CAIRO, EGYPT Construction Manager: TURNER INTERNATIONAL MIDDLE EAST LTD. SQ. #1153, MINISTERS SQUARE, BUILDING #9. CAIRO, EGYPT

4.40

L3

EWS-05

Owner:

Local Architect / Civil / Site / Structural & MEP: ECG ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS GROUP S.A BUILDING 2, BLOCK 10, EL SEFARAT DISTRICT. NASR CITY, CAIRO 11765, EGYPT

L2

EWS-01

1.18

GARDEN LEVEL 2.500

EWS-01

Owner:

4.75

1.55

SA GARDEN LEVEL 4.050

L1

ISSUE

21

EWS-04 3.45

L2

4 A-409

ISSUE

0.400.50

DATE

NO.

1

HOTEL - DELUXE UNIT A 1 : 100

3.0

1 : 100

A-501 100% DESIGN DEVELOPMENT 08/31/2018





Perkins Eastman Architects Heritage Community of Kalamazoo

Client: HCK Kalamazoo, Michigan

Dennis Ryan, Robert Chorazy, Steven Burgos



DOOR TYPES DOOR WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

DOOR WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

EQ

EQ

EQ

5"

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

7" 5" 2' - 2"

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

10"

10"

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

EQ

A

B

C.1

C.2

D

E

F

SINGLE DOOR - FLUSH

SINGLE DOOR - STILE & RAIL W/ GLASS

DOUBLE DOOR - FLUSH

DOUBLE DOOR - DOUBLE PANELS

SINGLE DOOR - BIFOLD DOUBLE PANEL

DOUBLE DOOR - BIFOLD DOUBLE PANEL

SINGLE DOOR DOUBLE PANEL

2

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

2

SINGLE DOOR POCKET DOOR - DOUBLE PANEL

K

L

SINGLE DOOR

OVERHEAD ALUMINUM COILING DOOR

EQ

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

GL

2

EQ

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

0' - 6"

0' - 10"

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

0' - 6"

G

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED. 1' - 4"

OUTLINE OF POCKET JAMB

HT REFER TO SCHED.

EQ

001A A 002 A 003 C.1 004 B 005 A 005A A 006 C.1 007 C.1 008 C.1 009 C.1 010 B 011 C.1 012 C.1 013 A ST1-00 A ST2-00 A ST3-00 A FIRST FLOOR 150 N 152 A 153 A 154 A 155 A 157 A 158 A 159 A 160 M 161 M 162A 162B 162C 162D 164A B 164B B 169 K 170A K 170B A 170C A 172 A 173 A 174 A

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

OPENING REFER TO SCHED.

EQ.

LOWER LEVEL 001 L

M

N

DOUBLE DOOR - STILE & RAIL W/ GLASS

DOUBLE EGRESS DOORFLUSH WITH VISION

VARIES

1' - 6"

VARIES

VARIES

MOTOR ENCLOSURE

4"

GL

7' - 0"

VARIES

2"

HT REFER TO SCHED.

VARIES

2"

2"

2"

VARIES

2" VARIES 2"

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED. 2"

01

02

05

06

07

DOOR AND FRAME SCHEDULE - UNIT DOORS NUMBER TYPE WIDTH

HEIGHT

U1 U1a U1b U1c U2 U3 U4 U5 U6 U7 U8 U9 U10

3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0"

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 2' - 6" 3' - 0" 5' - 0" 6' - 0" 5' - 0"

6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8" 6' - 8"

F F F F B F G F D D E E C.2

DOOR OPENING MATERIAL SCWD SCWD SCWD SCWD ALUM HCWD HCWD HCWD HCWD HCWD HCWD HCWD HCWD

FINISH

THICKNESS

PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* MFR PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED* PRIMED*

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8" 1 3/8"

TYPE 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01

FRAME MATERIAL

FINISH

HM HM HM HM ALUM WD WD WD WD WD WD WD WD

DETAIL JAMB

HEAD

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED MFR PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

7/A-522 7/A-522 7/A-522 7/A-522 5/A512 1/A-522 9/A-522 1/A-522 11/A-522 11/A-522 11/A-522 11/A-522 1/A-522

SILL

9/A-521 9/A-521 9/A-521 9/A-521 1-2/A-512 3/A-521 12/A-521 3/A-521 10/A-521 10/A-521 10/A-521 10/A-521 3/A-521

FIRE RATING HARDWARE ELECTRICAL 20 MIN. 20 MIN. 20 MIN. 20 MIN.

2

11 29 30 31 03 26 32 27 33 33 34 34 37

HEIGHT

MATERIAL

FINISH

FRAME

THICKNE SS

TYPE

REMARKS 3, SHLAGE WIRELESS CYL. LOCK 3, SHLAGE WIRELESS CYL. LOCK 3, SHLAGE WIRELESS CYL. LOCK 3, SHLAGE WIRELESS CYL. LOCK 13,16 - SEE A-210 FOR MORE INFO 1 9,22 1 9, 23 9,23 9, 23 9,23 1

DATE 06-19-2020 06-25-2020

ISSUE CD ADDENDUM #02 CD ADDENDUM #03

DETAIL

MATERIAL

FINISH

HEAD

JAMB

8/A-523

9/A-523

SILL

FIRE RATING HARDWARE

ELECTRICAL

REMARKS

24' - 0"

8' - 0"

ALUM.

MFR

0" N/A

06

ALUM

MFR.

45 MIN.

02

YES

3' - 0" 3' - 0" 6' - 0" 3' - 0" 4' - 0" 4' - 0" 8' - 0" 6' - 0" 6' - 0" 6' - 0" 3' - 0" 8' - 0" 6' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0"

8' - 0" 8' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01 02 07 01 01 02 02 02 02 07 02 02 01 01 01 01

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PT. PT PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

10/A-523 12/A-523 10/A-523 12/A-523 5/A-521 8/A-521 2/A-521 SIM.1/A-521 SIM. 2/A-521 SIM.1/A-521 SIM. 11/A-521 10/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 5/A-521 8/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 2/A-521 SIM.1/A-521 SIM. 11/A-521 10/A-521 5/A-521 8/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521 11/A-521 10/A-521

45 MIN. 45 MIN. 45 MIN. 45 MIN. 45 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN.

18 14.1 05 23 16 16 05.1 05.1 05.1 05.1 23 05.1 05.1 21 09.2 09.2 09.2

YES

5' - 8" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 6' 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 6' 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 4' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0" 3' - 0"

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 10' - 0" 10' - 0" 10' - 0" 10' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM ALUM. ALUM. SCWD SCWD SCWD SCWD ALUM. ALUM. HM HM HM HM SCWD SCWD SCWD

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED MFR MFR STN STN STN STN MFR MFR. MFR MFR. PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED STN STN STN

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

02 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 02 02

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM ALUM ALUM

PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. MFR. MFR.

ALUM ALUM. ALUM ALUM. HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

MFR. MFR. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

2/A-522 9/A-521 6/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521 6/A-521 9/A-521 1/A-521 8/A-511 8/A-511 8/A-522 5/A-522 5/A-522 5/A-522 8/9/A-511 8/9/A-511 6/A-521 6/A-521 3/A-523 7/A-523 6/A-521 6/A-521

60 MIN. 45 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 45 MIN. 90 MIN. -

01 01 01 01 01 01 01 01 03

3/A-522 7/A-522 4/A-522 2/A-521 2/A-521 4/A-522 7/A-522 2/A-521 10/A-511 10/A-511 6/A-522 6/A-522 6/A-522 6/A-522 10/A-511 10/A-511 4/A-522 4/A-522 4/A-523 4/A-523 4/A-522 4/A-522 7/A-522

9/A-521

20 MIN.

08 21.1 21.1 24 20 23.1 21.1 20 13 12 35 35 35 35 10 10 19 19 06 06 25 25 24

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

ALUM HM HM HM HM HM

MFR PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01 01 01 01 01

ALUM HM HM HM HM HM

MFR. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

10/A-511 2/A-521 1/A-523 2/A-521 11/A-523 2/A-521

8/9/A-511 1/A-521 2/A-523 1/A-521 6/A-523 1/A-521

90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN.

07.2 09 07.2 09 07.2 09

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 8' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 01 01

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

7/A-522 4/A-522 4/A-522 2/A-521 4/A-522 7/A-522 2/A-521 2/A-521 2/A-521 2/A-521

9/A-521 6/A-521 6/A-521 1/A-521 6/A-521 9/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521

45 MIN. 90 MIN. 45 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN.

24 21.1 36 20 22 21.1 20 09 09 09

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 8' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01 01 02 01 02 01 01 01 01 01

HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM HM

PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

7/A-522 4/A-522 2/A-521 4/A-522 2/A-521 4/A-522 7/A-522 2/A-521 2/A-521 2/A-521 2/A-521

9/A-521 6/A-521 1/A-521 6/A-521 1/A-521 6/A-521 9/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521

45 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 45 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN. 90 MIN.

20 21 24 36 20 22 21.1 20 09 09 09

7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM HM HM HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4" 1 3/4"

02 01 01 01 01 01

HM HM HM HM HM HM

PT. PT. PT. PT. PT. PT.

4/A-522 7/A-522 2/A-521 4/A-522 2/A-521 2/A-521

6/A-521 9/A-521 1/A-521 6/A-521 1/A-521 1/A-521

45 MIN. 90 MIN.

22 21.1 20 21.1 09 09

3

90 MIN. 90 MIN.

6' - 0" 6' - 0"

HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01

HM HM

PT PT

7/A-522 7/A-522

9/A-521 9/A-521

90 MIN. 90 MIN.

14 14

13 13

7' - 0" 7' - 0"

HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01

HM HM

PT. PT.

10/A-505 10/A-505

10/A-505 SIM.

90 MIN. 90 MIN.

14 14

13 13

6' - 0" 6' - 0"

HM HM

PAINTED PAINTED

1 3/4" 1 3/4"

01 01

HM HM

PT. PT.

7/A-522 7/A-522

9/A-521 9/A-521

90 MIN. 90 MIN.

14 14

13 13

ST1-01 B 3' - 0" ST1-01A A 3' - 0" ST2-01 A 3' - 0" ST2-01A A 3' - 0" ST3-01 A 3' - 0" ST3-01A A 3' - 0" SECOND FLOOR 252 A 3' - 0" 253A A 3' - 0" 253B C.1 6' - 0" 255 A 3' - 0" 257 C.1 6' - 0" 258 A 3' - 0" 259 A 3' - 0" ST1-02 A 3' - 0" ST2-02 A 3' - 0" ST3-02 A 3' - 0" THIRD FLOOR 352 A 3' - 0" 353 A 3' - 0" 354A A 3' - 0" 354B C.1 6' - 0" 355 A 3' - 0" 357 C.1 6' - 0" 358 A 3' - 0" 359 A 3' - 0" ST1-03 A 3' - 0" ST2-03 A 3' - 0" ST3-03 A 3' - 0" FOURTH FLOOR 457 C.1 6' - 0" 458 A 3' - 0" 459 A 3' - 0" 459A A 3' - 0" ST2-04 A 3' - 0" ST3-04 A 3' - 0" T/CATWALK ST1-04A A 3' - 0" ST1-04B A 3' - 0" T.O. WALL ST1-04C A 3' - 0" ST3-05A A 3' - 0" T/ LOWER RIDGELINE ST3-05B A 3' - 0" ST3-05C A 3' - 0"

DOOR FRAMES REFER TO INTERIOR ELEVATIONS FOR TRIM SIZES

WIDTH

MOTORIZED AND INSULATED; PROXIMITY SENSOR. KEY FOB READER AT EXT. INTERIOR SENSOR TO ALLOW FREE EXIT. 4, 13, 16 13, 16

5"

5"

5"

DOOR HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

10"

5"

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED. 5"

DOOR HEIGHT REFER TO SCHED.

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

6"

6"

6" GL

1' - 0" 2' - 2"

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

WIDTH REFER TO SCHED.

4"

NO. 1 2

DOOR AND FRAME SCHEDULE - COMMON AREA DOOR NUMBER TYPE

2

11/A-511 11/A-511

11/A-511 11/A-511

-

5/A-523 5/A-523

11/A-511 5/A-523 5/A-523

11/A-505 11/A-505

3, 13, 16

YES

13, 16

05-29-2020 10-18-2019 04-05-2019

100% CONST. DOC. 100% D. DEVELOPMENT 100% SCHEMATIC DESIGN

3, 13, 16 13, 16

YES

13, 15, 16 13, 15, 16 13, 15, 16 2, 8

3 3

4, 13, 15, 16, 19 13, 15, 16, 19 21, SPECIALTY WOOD DOOR W/ PULLS 21, SPECIALTY WOOD DOOR W/ PULLS 21, SPECIALTY WOOD DOOR W/ PULLS 21, SPECIALTY WOOD DOOR W/ PULLS 13,15,16,19 13,15,16,19 2 2 13, 16 13, 16 12 12 3, DOOR AND FRAME TO BE A RATED ASSEMBLY INCLUDING GLASS 13,16,18,19 15 13,15,16,18 15 13,15,16,18 15

SEAL

3

KEY PLAN

3 The Rookery 209 South LaSalle Street Suite 400 Chicago, IL 60604 T. +1 312 755 1200 F. +1 312 755 1155

15 15 15

Owner: HERITAGE COMMUNITY OF KALAMAZOO 2400 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

3

3 Construction Manager: MILLER-DAVIS COMPANY 1029 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

15 15 15

Civil / Site: BYCE & ASSOCIATES, INC. 487 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

15 15 Landscape: JOHNSON HILL LAND ETHICS STUDIO 412 LONGSHORE DRIVE, ANN ARBOR, MI

Structural: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

1

Mechanical & Plumbing: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

Electrical: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

Food Service: FOOD FACILITIES CONCEPTS, INC. 1100 WASHINGTON AVENUE, CARNEGIE, PA

1

PROJECT TITLE:

HERITAGE COMMUNITY OF KALAMAZOO

GENERAL NOTES

C:\REVIT LOCAL\HCK_Central_r.chorazy.rvt 6/25/2020 2:38:21 AM

CONTRACTOR TO PROVIDE ROUGH-IN AND CONDUIT FOR ALL ELECTRICAL DEVICES INDICATED ON DOOR SCHEDULE AND NOTED ELSEWHERE IN CONTRACT DOCUMENTS. CONTRACTOR TO PROVIDE ALL DOOR HARDWARE DEVICES INCLUDING LOW VOLTAGE INDICATED ON DOOR SCHEDULE , DOOR HARDWARE SCHEDULE, AND SPECIFICATIONS. CONTRACTOR TO ALERT OWNER AND ARCHITECT OF ANY CONFLICTS OR OMISSIONS DURING BID PHASE AND PRIOR TO ROUCH-IN.CONTRACTOR IS RESPONSIBLE FOR DELIVERING A FULLY FUNCTIONING SYSTEM THAT CONFORMS TO OWNER'S AND MANUFACURER' S REQUIREMENTS. CONTRACTOR IS RESPONDIBLE FOR COORDINATING A PRE-INSTALLATION CONFERENCE TO ENSURE ALL OWNER EXPECTIONS ARE MET.

2400 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI 49001

DOOR CONTROL & ACCESSORY LEGEND (REMARKS)

DOOR SCHEDULE ABBREVIATIONS ALUM SCWD HM PTD PRE-FIN GL AO KF WD HCWD FG STN

PROJECT No: 71411 DRAWING TITLE:

1. PRE-HUNG DOOR 2. DOUBLE-EGRESS 3. WIRELESS ELECTRONIC LOCK (BATTERY) 4. KEY FOB READER (HARD WIRED) 5. DOOR CLOSER 6. AUTO OPERATOR 8. MAGNETIC HOLD OPEN 9. CASED OPENING 10. DELAYED EGRESS 11. FIRE SHUTTER DOOR 12. KICK PLATE (SIZE TBD) CORRIDOR SIDE 13. INSULATED 14. STANLEY SENSOR 15. PANIC HARDWARE 16. WEATHER SEAL 17. CONTINUOUS HINGE 18. EXIT ONLY 19. DOORS ON STOREFRONT OR WINDOW WALLS 21. PIVOT HINGE 22. POCKET DOOR 23. BI-FOLD DOORS

ALUMINUM SOLID CORE WOOD DOOR HOLLOW METAL PAINTED PRE-FINISHED GLAZING (TEMPERED) AUTO OPERATOR KEY FOB READER WOOD HOLLOW CORE WOOD DOOR FIBER GLASS STAINED

DOORS SCHEDULE

SCALE:

As indicated

A-010 ISSUED FOR BID AND PERMIT 05/29/2020

NO.

DATE

ISSUE

10-18-2019 04-05-2019

100% D. DEVELOPMENT 100% SCHEMATIC DESIGN

E

B

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

G

C.L. OF COLUMN

C.L. OF COLUMN

H

OT MD O N 6-4-2014

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

ED

"PAVE-900-E"

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

BAS

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

P

SEAL

A

"PAVE-900-E" BAS

ED

ON

T MDO 6-4-2014

23

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

1

A

STORAGE RM. 012

B

21.8 INSIDE FACE OF FND.

26

25

KEY PLAN INSIDE FACE OF FND.

-01 CG

2 INSIDE FACE OF FND. C.L. OF COLUMN

F. RISER ROOM 002

26

21.3 3

25

2

21.6

1

3 4 The Rookery 209 South LaSalle Street Suite 400 Chicago, IL 60604 T. +1 312 755 1200 F. +1 312 755 1155

27

24

21.4 21.1

4

BOILER ROOM S 003

5

CG-01

23

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

5

STAIR 3 ST3-00

O.3

21

-01 CG

22

O.4 20

24

66 22

UP

21

65

17.2 -01 CG

64 UNE AT ED

7

Q.3

Q -01 CG

Q.2

10

9

FD

TRASH RM. 006

59

X

K

J

STORAGE 013 STAIR 2 ST2-00

ELEV 1 LOBBY 004

60

V 18 19

L

ELECTRICAL ROOM 005

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

30

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

8

ELEV 2 LOBBY 010

32

STORAGE 009

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

9

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

10

Structural: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

11 Electrical: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

C.L. OF COLUMN

34

CG-01

FD

12

PARKING 001

57

Landscape: JOHNSON HILL LAND ETHICS STUDIO 412 LONGSHORE DRIVE, ANN ARBOR, MI

Mechanical & Plumbing: IMEG CORP. 1100 WARRENVILLE ROAD, NAPERVILLE, IL

33

CG-01

CG-01

58

17

Civil / Site: BYCE & ASSOCIATES, INC. 487 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

C.L. OF COLUMN

31

TRASH RM. 011

18

STORAGE RM. 007

Food Service: FOOD FACILITIES CONCEPTS, INC. 1100 WASHINGTON AVENUE, CARNEGIE, PA

CG-01

13 PROJECT TITLE:

HERITAGE COMMUNITY OF KALAMAZOO

STORAGE RM. 008

56

C.L. OF COLUMN

55

54

53

52

51

50

49

48

47

46

45

44

43

42

41

40

39

38

37

36

35

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

D C

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

C.L. OF COLUMN

F

C.L. OF COLUMN

I

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

C.L. OF COLUMN

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

C.L. OF COLUMN

N

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

O

C.L. OF COLUMN

T

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

14

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

15

2400 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI 49001 PROJECT No: 71411 DRAWING TITLE:

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

U

1 / A-100B

16

1 / A-100A

P:\71411\Design\Consultants\COORDINATION MODELS\OUT\2020-05-01 Coordination Model\HCK_Central_detached.rvt 5/1/2020 2:11:02 PM

U.1

7

CG-01

C.L. OF COLUMN

M

8

PARKING 001

61

29

19

1 / A-100A

AV XC

63

STORAGE CUBBIES 4' -0" X 4' -0" X 8' -0"

PARKING 001

Construction Manager: MILLER-DAVIS COMPANY 1029 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

6 17.1

62

28

20

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

Y

1 / A-100B

CAST IN PLACE CONCRETE STAIR W/ METAL WALL MOUNTED HANDRAILS

6

? ?

-01 CG

21.5

Owner: HERITAGE COMMUNITY OF KALAMAZOO 2400 PORTAGE STREET, KALAMAZOO, MI

INSIDE FACE OF FND.

CG-01 C.L. OF COLUMN INSIDE FACE OF FND.

LOWER LEVEL FLOOR PLAN OVERALL SCALE:

1

LOWER LEVEL FLOOR PLAN - OVERALL 3/32" = 1'-0"

3/32" = 1'-0"

A-100 INTERIM CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENT 03/27/2020


UNIT

UNIT

OFFICE

LAUNDRY

ELEC

TOILET

OFFICE

PANTRY

DINING - 28 PRS.

MARKETING OFFICE

LOUNGE - 16 PRS.

MEN'S

WOMEN'S

KITCHEN

BILLIARD ROOM

ADDED SHADING DEVICE

SCREEN WALL CASUAL DINING - 56 PRS. FORMAL DINING - 44 PRS. LOUNGE

BAR LIBRARY LOUNGE - 10 PRS.

PORTE COCHERE CEILING + LIGHT TO BE UPDATED

SCREEN WALL

CART ROOM

WINTER GARDEN - 19 PRS.

VESTIBULE RECEPTION

RECEPTIO

STORAGE

STORAGE MULTIPURPOSE THEATRE ROOM - 36 PRS.

MAIL LOUNGE - 5 PRS.

MAIL ROOM

MULTIPURPOSE CARD ROOM 40 PRS. LIBRARY - 8 PRS. AUDIOLOGY AND PODIATRY

STORAGE CLUB ROOM

ART ROOM - 12 OR 16 PRS. WOMEN'S TRAINER'S OFFICE

MEN'S

OFFICE CLINIC

CLINIC

WAITING ROOM MASSAGE

THERAPY

1

PROJECT: 351 West Hubbard Street, Suite 708 Chicago, IL 60654 T. +1 312 755 1200 F. +1 312 755 1155

FIVE STAR PREMIERE RESIDENCES OF TEANECK

DRAWING TITLE: TOWN CENTER OPTION 2A DATE:

Project Issue Date

GYM/ FITNESS

1ST FLOOR PLAN_ OPTION 2A 1/16" = 1'-0"

SALON

SALON


NOT IN SCOPE # SEATS

ROOM NAME

44

FORMAL DINING

56

CASUAL DINING

12

WINTER GARDEN

6

LOUNGE

118

TOTAL

CART STORAGE

VESTIBULE

LOBBY

ON

E

Perkins Eastman Architects

MAIL LOUNGE

2

Five Star Premiere Living Residences

1ST FLOOR PLAN_ OPTION 2B

Client: Five Star

1/16" = 1'-0"

Teaneck, NJ, USA Joseph Hassel, Ramu Ramachandran, Steven Burgos

0'

8'

16'

32'

PROJECT NO.

48'

SCALE : 1/16" = 1'-0" NORTH

69870.01.0

SCALE:

1/16" = 1'-0"

DWG. NO.:

O-02


Existing Trees and Shrubs

FOUNTAIN

S W

MONUMENT

PLAZA LEVEL S.F.: 2,950 SF EXTERIOR SEATING: 150 - 200 UPPER LEVEL SITE PLAN 31-33 EAST RIVERWALK JUNE 30, 2017

N


Livi ng Wa ll

Johnson Lasky Kindelin Architects

Service Window

BEER TASTING ROOM 190 SF

LEGEND DECORATIVE SCREEN WITH GRAPHICS / BRANDING RESPECTED MONUMENT/MEMORIAL AREA FUTURE DROP OFF / PICK UP FOR CHICAGO BREWERIES TOUR


Partial replanting with Hops and Barley

lic b

Hig

h ta

ble

enc

bar

h

Existing Trees and Shrubs

sea

ting

Wa ll

Pub

Livi ng

Future Awning

Bar

SUSTAINABLE FEATURE HIGHLIGHTS ● ● ● ● ●

HIGH QUALITY FURNITURE RECLAIMED WOOD INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR EXTERIOR PLANTINGS & LIVING WALL PLANTING OF HOPS & BARLEY MAIN INGREDIENT OF BEER IS WATER; FOCAL POINT: LAKE MICHIGAN WATER IS WHAT MAKES CHICAGO BEER EXCEPTIONAL ● DISPLAY OF 4 COMPONENTS OF BEER ◦ WATER ◦ HOPS ◦ GRAIN (BARLEY / MALTS) ◦ YEAST

RESTAURANT / EXHIBITS

Beer Tanks Exhibition Area

Beer Tanks Exhibition Area

Beer Tanks Exhibition Storage for rent

Elevator RESTROOMS

Dumbwaiter

RECLAIMED WOOD DIVIDER

INTERIOR S.F.: 5,000 SF EXTERIOR S.F.: 1,700 SF EXTERIOR SEATING: 90 - 100 LOWER LEVEL SITE PLAN 31-33 EAST RIVERWALK JUNE 30, 2017

LEGEND

WALK IN COOLER AND DRY STORAGE

N

KITCHEN

LANDSCAPING / PLANTERS IN RECLAIMED WOOD/METAL HOW BEER IS BREWED AND BREWING EXHIBITS (ROTATE INVITATIONS TO LOCAL BREWERIES) EXHIBITS ON HISTORY OF CHICAGO BREWING BREWING EQUIPMENT OF ALL SIZES (FIRST FOR EXHIBITS, EVENTUALLY OPERATIONAL FOR WINTER USE / CORPORATE EVENTS / ATTRACTIONS)



Gaillardias Blanket Flower ARIZONA SUN

Personal Client’s Front Yard Chicago Suburbs, IL The front yard is in need of replacing the soil and the grass. Weeds and dying evergreen trees needed to be removed.

Echinacea purpurea ‘White Swan’ ConeFlower

Measurements for the yard were made. Meetings in-person as well as online were made to show precedents and discuss design ideas. Professor Bulcheri from Hoerr Schaudt Landscape Architects supervised and mentored the process. Meticulous research was made on the available local plants, suitable for the client’s soil. Careful selection was made among the different local species, based on the client’s request to choose hardy plants. Additional research was made on the spacing between each of the plants.

Sporobolus Heterolepis Prairie Dropseed


Cornus alba ‘Bailhalo’ IVORY HALO

Thuja Occidentalis Arborvitae EVERGREEN

Buxus Boxwood EVERGREEN



“Good Architecture lets Nature in”



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