SARAH MONTAGUE
PORTFOLIO Architecture
SARAH MONTAGUE
BS in Architecture
Knowlton School The Ohio State University
CONTACTS montague.sarahmarie@gmail.com 614.563.6975
ACADEMIC WORK
SECTION 01 Charactercities
06-11
Unified Divisions
12-15
Field Meditations
16-18
Active-Passive Shelter
20-23
Honors Research Studio Sierra Club Headquarters Shambhala Meditation Center Independent Study
OFFICE WORK
SECTION 02 Gateway Restaurant Redesign
28-29
Brine Facility Decking
30-31
Sandefur Wetland Pavilion
32-35
OSU Planning and Design OSU Planning and Design OSU Planning and Design
ACADEMIC WORK
SECTION 01
Charactercities
Charactercities
Honors Research Project Team Members: Claire Ronan, Josiah Poland, & Stephen Steckel Professors: Sandhya Kochar & Dow Kimbrell Superstudio’s Supersurface sets the stage. At the end of the sixties, it appeared clear that an all-production world had been definitively supplanted by an all-consumption world. While this project is largely a globally totalizing mechanism, we are interested in the opposite. With the world blanketed in the Grid, movement would be infinitely possible. People have always been able to move and mingle with others in society, discovering along the way how personalities can interact. At its core, Architecture is now the personalities of individuals, derived from the Myers-Briggs test to produce a boxed specificity in an “over consumed� world. Specificity is produced through identity rather than the isotropic world, where sensibility is carefully injected through Hejduk-like characterizations. The intense study and definition of individual personalities cannot be employed simply to mine and isolate. This project speculates on how these characters create new social and political structures, or repel existing. https://youtu.be/6zBlpd4OldA Spring Semester 2016
07
08
Academic Work
Sixty-Four Characters developed from Myers-Briggs Sixteen Personalities
14 UNITS
14 UNITS
19 UNITS
19 UNITS
8 UNITS
16 UNITS
THINKER THINKER
PROTECTOR PROTECTOR
NURTURER NURTURER
Gathers. Observes. Processes. Ponders. Refines.
Strong faรงade. Frontline. Stores information in interior. Willing to use self to support others. Professional. Trustworthy. Dependable. Confrontational.
Responsible. Dependable. Provides emotional support. Holds others up. Vast internal space filled with rich inner world. Solid. Kind. Practical.
Gathers. Observes. Processes. Ponders. Refines.
Strong facade. Stores information in interior. Willing to use self to support others. Professional. Trustworthy. Dependable. Confrontational.
Personality Specs developed to define characters
Responsible. Dependable. Provides emotional support. Holds others up. Vast internal space filled with rich inner world. Solid. Kind. Practical.
Charactercities
Sections further define characters
Characters combine to create small scenes
Smalls Scenes grow into cities
09
Burolandshaft
Doppleganger
Nature Preserve
Underground
City of Icons
Cloud
Tower
Machine
10 Academic Work
Charactercities
11
12
Academic Work
Diagrammatic Model
Unified Divisions
Unified Divisions Sierra Club Headquarters Professor: Ashley Schafer
The challenge of the project was to create a comfortable office environment that would be inviting to the public. Early on, the project took an interest in circulation, initially examining traffic flows around the site. This interest embedded itself into the project with the public circulation and program injecting itself into and around the atrium spaces. The office space becomes peripheral using the distance of the atrium to divide the programs. The project uses shifting staircases and weighted ceilings to move and engage the public through gallery, library, cafĂŠ and garden spaces.
13
14
Academic Work
Section
Model Photo
Unified Divisions
Plan_0B
Plan_07
Plan_04
15
16
Academic Work
Field Meditations
Field Meditations Shambhala Meditation Center Professor: Isabela Gould
This project takes the idea of a silent building as one that is unimposing with its surroundings, yet inspiring in the spaces it creates. The project tries to blend with its surroundings taking on the form of a series of mounds so the building can meet the ground in gentle slopes, allowing for the landscape and roof to blend. The form also stretches out so that exterior spaces can mix with internal program. Lighting in much of the building becomes muted, coming mostly from where the mounds slip around each other and above from skylights.
Spring Semester 2014
17
18
Academic Work
Structural elements reflect the scale of the train tracks.
Massing is divided by a the route of a historic train track.
Field Meditations
Massing Study_01
Massing Study_02
Massing Study_03
Plan_02
Final Massing
19
20
Academic Work
Active-Passive Shelter
Active-Passive Shelter
Team Members: Lucas Cameron,Corey Phelps, Clayton Cross,
Mark Maltese & James Snyder Department Advisors: Peter Anderson, PhD & Justin Diles, M. Arch This was collaborative project between Knowlton School and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. The goal of the project was to explore the possibilities of the emerging material technology of Shape Memory Alloys (SMA) at an architectural scale for use in sustainable design. A small single person shelter was designed to maintain a relatively comfortable and uniform interior environment using only the ambient environment. The design modifies existing passive Trombe wall design with SMA-actuated ventilation that would extend the range of external temperatures the Trombe system can regulate. Autumn Semester 2014 - Spring Semester 2015
21
22
Academic Work
1 INTERNAL TROMB WALL VENTS FIBERGLASS ON WOOD
3 EXTERNAL TROMB WALL VENTS PHASE CHANGE MATERIAL (PCM)
2 EXTERNAL VENTS
Scale Model
Vent Prototype
Active-Passive Shelter
OPERATIONAL OVERVIEW
Flow diagrams for each temperature range designed to maintain the temperature near the occupant at 72 degrees.
COLD: Direct circulation from the habitation space to the trombe wall occurs.
WARM: Direct circulation remains cut off and cross vents open in the habitation space.
CNC Frame Fabrication
COOL: Direct circulation is cut off minimizing the heat exchange from trombe wall.
HOT: Direct circulation remains cut off, cross vents continues and the Trombe wall is flushed.
23
24
Academic Work
HABITATION STRUCTURE
TROMBE WALL STRUCTURE
1/2” PLYWOOD FRAME 6 SEGMENTS
FOAM BACK
1/2” PLYWOOD FRAME SOLID
4X4 WOOD 3/4” PLYWOOD FLOORING
Designed to be cost-efficient, lightweight, & transportable by dividing into 6 sections and separating the delicate trombe wall from the rest of the frame.
Foam Paneling
Foil Protection Layer
Fiberglass
Active-Passive Shelter
Wooden Frame
Fiberglass Trimmed
Segmented
Finished Sample
25
OFFICE WORK
SECTION 02
28
Office Work
Gateway Restaurant Redesign OSU Planning and Design
The Gateway was interested in restructuring its retail spaces to create a more successful space. The study focuses on combining three existing restaurant and retail spaces into one larger, more profitable, restaurant space.
Gateway Restaurant
DN
1,378 SF
1,860 SF
909 SF
UP
Existing Plan
- demo
Demo Plan
OFFICE 90 SF
MEN’S
WOMEN’S
125 SF
125 SF
BAR
430 SF
762’-4”
DN
KITCHEN 560 SF
763’-9”
P RAM
PATIO 365 SF
LOUNGE
OPEN SEATING
350 SF
DN
New Design
2146 SF
29
30
Office Work
3 9 " 4
1 2'-1 " 2
1" 1'-31" 1'-34 4
1 7'-10 " 4
8'
7'-5" 1'-23 4"
3 9 " 4 3'-11
2'-11
9 " 16
9 " 16
2'-10
1" 1'-516
1 " 16
2"x6" STRINGER TYP. 4"x4" Post TYP.
1" 1'-516
2"x6" BEAM TYP.
5" 1'-316 5" 1'-316 3 9 " 4
1'-215 16"
3 6'-9 " 4
1 5'-3 " 4
1'-215 16"
1 7'-10 " 4
50'
13 " 16
15 1'-215 16"1'-216"
9"
Brine Facility Framing Plan 0
2'-10
1" 1" 1'-44 1'-44 1 3'-1 " 2
100'
1 3'-1 " 2
1 3'-0 " 2
2'-10
13 " 16
1 DN
1'-2" 1'-2" 3'-63" 4 1"x4" Rail TYP.
4
3
1'-1"
1"x6" Decking TYP.
3'-11" DN
DN
2
2
2" Thick Stair Stringer TYP. 2"x6" Stringer TYP.
DN
3'-213 16"
1" 52
3
12" Conc. Base Existing
DN DN
5
2'-8"
2"x6" Beam TYP.
5
4"x4" Post TYP.
4 12"x8" Conc. Base TYP.
0
50'
1
Brine Facility Architectural Plan
4
100'
0
Brine Facility Section 4 30'
60'
1"x4" Rail TYP. 2" Thick Stair Stringer TYP. 1"x6" Decking TYP. 2"x6" Stringer TYP. 2"x6" Beam TYP.
1'-2"
1'-2"
3 1'-2" 3'-64"
3 1'-2" 3'-64"
3'-63 4" 1'-2"
1"x6" Decking TYP.
1'-1"
2"x6" Stringer TYP. 2"x6" Beam TYP.
1" 52
12" Conc. Base Existing
1'-1"
1'-2"
1'-1" 1"x4" Rail TYP.
1" 5'-84
1" 5'-84 7" 3'-416
1" 1'-42
2'-8"
2'-8"
12" Conc. Base Existing
12" Conc. Base Existing 4"x4" Post TYP.
4"x4" Post TYP.
12"x8" Conc. Base TYP.
12"x8" Conc. Base TYP.
3 0
Brine Facility Section 3 30'
5 60'
0
Brine Facility Section 5 30'
60'
Brine Facility
31
1'-2" 3 1'-2" 3'-64" 1'-1"
1"x4" Rail TYP. 2"x6" Kicker TYP. 2"x6" Stringer TYP. 2"x6" Beam TYP.
1" 5'-84
1"x6" Decking TYP.
11"
2" Thick Stair Stringer TYP.
2'-8"
12" Conc. Base Existing
12" Conc. Base Existing
4"x4" Post TYP. 12"x8" Conc. Base TYP.
1 0
Brine Facility Section 1 30'
60'
Brine Facility Decking OSU Planning and Design
Design and drawings for an small safety decking to be completed around OSU Brine Facility. The project was to be completed by OSU Facilities inhouse maintenance.
32
Office Work
Sandfur Pavilion
Sandefur Wetland Pavilion OSU Planning and Design
The Sandefur Wetland Pavilion sits on the edge of the park overlooking the experimental wetlands and the Mesocosm Compound. It provides an interface between the park and the public allowing visitors a glimpse of the living laboratory that the wetlands provide. The primarily wooden structure was originally built in 1999 and is overdue for some maintenance. There is also a desire to create a more private outdoor research classroom below the structure while enhancing the public experience in the public outlook above.This project explores initial designs Existing Structure that would facilitate a classroom space and update the pavilion.
33
34
Office Work 02 - Second Floor 12' - 0"
CURTAIN WALL _B
01 - First Floor 0"
SOUTH ELEVATION SCALE_ 1/8” = 1’-0”
RF - Roof 26' - 2"
CURTAIN WALL _C
02 - Second Floor 12' - 0"
CURTAIN WALL _D
01 - First Floor 0"
EAST ELEVATION SCALE_ 1/8” = 1’-0”
RF - Roof 26 - 2"
02 - Second Floor 12' - 0"
CURTAIN WALL _E
01 - First Floor 0"
NORTH ELEVATION SCALE_ 1/8” = 1’-0”
RF - Roof 26' - 2"
Sandfur Pavilion
2'
6'-5"
35
2'
2'
2' 1" 4'-2 2 2'
2'
2'
6"
2'
2'
2'
2'
6"
2'
2'
URTAIN WALL_D
ALE_ 1/4” = 1’-0”
1'-8 3" 4
2'
15'-5 1" 8
65" 16
65" 16
2'
2'
2'
2'
11 11" 16
2' 4'-2 1" 2 2'
-10"
10'-10"
2' 4'-2 1" 2 2'
2' 85°
76°
1'-4 15" 16
2'
65" 16
2'
2'
65" 16
2'
65" 16
2'
2'
2'
19'-015" 16
CURTAIN WALL_E SCALE_ 1/4” = 1’-0”
NOTE: METAL TEXTURE NOT TO SCALE