Sarah Sienna Towe
Interior Design Portfolio
C ontent Commercial 1.1 Nokia Office
Hospitality 2.1 Crystal de Roche Hotel
Product Design 3.1 On Track
Addendum 4.1 Design Link 4.2 Winds of Change in the White City
Resume
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Intriguing Image
COMMERCIAL
Nokia Office
Nokia is a leader in the fields of network infrastructure, location-based technology and advanced technologies with a governance model designed to encourage inovation and growth. Their mission is to connect people to technology, other people. Finland is the home of both Nokia and Marimekko which express the innate Finnish desire to connect people with these attributes. Marimekko prints will illustrate this and add a fun Mod flare to Nokia’s office. Nokia is comprised of three parts; Nokia Networks, Nokia Technologies, and Here. These parts create departments that while separate, still have flow between them to foster a creative culture. Biophilia is incorporated in the design in allignment with the goals of Nokia to connect people with the environment. This is achieved by incorporating the Marimekko prints and living plants in the office. That bring nature into the office increases productivity and reduces stress. By taking care of Nokia emplyees, they retain talent crucial to sucess.
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Copy
Training/ Boardroom
Office Space Lobby
Server Core Breakroom
Wellness Lecture
Common Kitchen
Cafe/Lounge
Large Meeting
Office Space
Copy
Small Meeting
Primary Core Proximity
Secondary Core Proximity Tertiary Core Proximity
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Game Room
Medium Meeting Small Meeting
Pantry
Office Space
Copy
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Each region of the building is color-coded to distinguish different departments of the building based on the make-up of the company.
TEKNION RESIDENT SYSTEM
Here Nokia Networks Nokia Technologies
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Legend 1 - Lobby 2- Resident Seating 3- Touchdown 4- Collaboration 5- Game Room 6- Break Room 7- Lounge Space 8- Heads Down Space 9- Copy/Print 10- Cafe 11- Common Kitchen 12- Large Conference Room 13- Medium Conference Room 14- Small Conference Room 15- Mail/Copy 16- Wellness Room 17- Phone Room 18- Lecture Hall 19- Training/Boardroom 20- Product Playground
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LEGEND 1 - LOBBY 2 - RESIDENT 3 - TOUCHDOWN 4 - COLLABORATION 5 - GAME ROOM 6 - BREAK ROOM 7 - LOUNGE SPACE 8 - HEADS DOWN 9 - COPY/PRINT 10 - CAFE 11 - COMMON KITCHEN 12 - LARGE CONFERENCE ROOM 13 - MEDIUM CONFERENCE ROOM 14 - SMALL CONFERENCE ROOM 15 - MAIL/COPY 16 - WELLNESS ROOM 17 - PHONE ROOM 18 - LECTURE HALL 19 - TRAINING/BOARDROOM 20 - PRODUCT PLAYGROUND
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PERSPECTIVE VIEWPOINT
18 TEKNION COLLABORATION/LOUNGE SYSTEM
ORANGE COLOR SCHEME
11 10
2
BLUE COLOR SCHEME
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3
15 4
4
2
9
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3
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1 20 TEKNION TOUCHDOWN SYSTEM
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5 13 17 19 7
8 7 3 2 9 4
3 14 N GREEN COLOR SCHEME
NOKIA FLOOR PLAN SCALE 3/32” = 1’
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The Lobby welcomes guests to a playground for visitors to test product whikle they wait.
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The workstations are clean and have adequate natural lighting and adjacency to flora to fulfil biophilic needs.
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The cafe is warm and inviting. with orange prits as well as Unika Vaev pieces keepin the sound from interrupting work Marimekko prints combined with Shaw flooring, Bernhard ancillary, and Teknion workstations combine to create an energetic composition.
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HOSPITALITY
Cr ystal de Roche
Located in the trendy Chelsea neighborhood of New York City, the Crystal de Roche hotel caters to the crowds with fresh tastes for the boutique hotel. The hotel’s first floor includes the lobby, cafe, and a “small bites” bar and restaurant. The Basement pool is a seductive cave with a swim up bar and dance floor to showcase the design’s affinity for the use of crystals. The hotel includes four floors of rooms that are shaded by a facade made up of varrying degrees of translucency and linticularity to distort the city and room views from the inside and out as if peering through crystals.
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Wallpaper: Derived from a macro-image of The Giant’s Causway.
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3D Printed Tile: Derived from The Giant’s Causway.
Wallpaper: Derived from a micro-image of rock.
Facade: Derived from the molecular structure of opal.
These diagrams of the outside of the building illustrate the conditions of light and views for the upper floor windows. Using this analysis, the facade is organized to provide shade and distorted views where neccessary. This prevents voyers
from
peering
into
rooms, sun damage on the furniture and keeps heating and cooling costs down.
This diagram of the facade illustrates the placement on the building’s side. This idea led to the iteration below, where the degrees of light and view allowance are shown darker for less view and light and shown lighter for more light and views. These hexagonal openings are either linticular, lumisty, clear, frosted or opaque.
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The FF&E reflect the qualities and the geometry of rocks, crystal aand gems which adds a whimisical aire.
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Hotel Upper Floor - Hotel Rooms 1
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Hotel Upper Floor - Hotel Rooms 2
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Hotel Basement Pool and Lounge
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LEGEND: 1. POOL 2. SWIM UP BAR 3. DJ / DANCE FLOOR 4. LOUNGE AREA 5. ADA BATHROOMS 6. SHOWER/GROTTO
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PRODUCT DESIGN
On Track
GOAL:
Sit . Move
• Provide a comfortable and ergonomically correct seating Sit . Stand . Create a multi-purpose/functional piece of furniture Move . Repeat . • Provide ease of access to technology and its components
20-20-20 20-20-20
Every 20 minutes look up and Every focus 20 minutes on somelo thing 20 feet away thing 20 feet away for 20 seconds.
EQULIBRIUM The legs, feet, and back must have contact with a surface to achieve equilib rium. Improper equilibrium puts pressure on other parts, causing discomfort.
ISCHIAL TUBEROSITIES The two parts of the pelvis on which 75% of the body’ s weight is placed furniture (accessories) when seated. The skin and tissues between the bone and the seat has 40-60 psi.
MOVEMENT To prevent many of the problems of discomfort, we must have some move ment. It is natural and healthy to shift position which increases circulation and prevents blood clots.
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Keeping You ON TRACK Every Slide Of The Way
53" 43"
39.5"
46"
43" 39" 35" 31" 27"
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Worksurface Track System
Lycra Roof
Aluminum inu in um m d Framed Roof
Veneer Or Titanium Dioxide paint in personal branding applications.
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ADDENDUM
D esign Link
Design Link in Sna Jose is in need of renovation to inspire the employees and to encourage the company’s growth. This redesign of the office is a practice in Revit, where I have learned how to create construction documents that convey my design proposal for the company. By using the company’s logo and direction, this design meets the needs of the program while creating an inviting space that is both sensible and stylish with attributes like the mural seen at left.
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ADDENDUM
Winds of C hange in the White City “The most marvelous exhibit of modern times, or ancient time has now just closed successfully at Paris whatever you do is to be compared with that. If you equal it you have made a success, if you surpass it you have made a triumph, if you fall below it you be held responsible by the whole American people for having assumed what you are not equal to” – Chauncy Depew, U.S. Senator and President of the New York Railroad Company. This quote by Chauncy Depew serves as
point of pride also for the entire country. The World’s
an example of the pressure architects
Fair has a long standing history of being known for great
Burnham and Root were under when designing
feats of architecture. When Prince Albert was tasked
the World’s Fair in Chicago just after the Paris
with The Great Exhibition in 1850 by Queen
Exhibition had unveiled the Eiffel Tower, which
Victoria he chose Joseph Paxton’s design for The
set the bar high for creating something
Crystal Palace. A builder of greenhouses by trade,
monumental that would put Chicago on the
Paxton took this knowledge to build what was
map as a rival with New York in prominence.
essentially an iron and glass greenhouse on a
The challenge was greater even, that the
tremendous scale and using the resources of the
exhibition is to be the 400th anniversary of
industrial revolution. When it was unveiled in 1851
Columbus’ discovery of America and so this
it was a thing of awe, just as every World’s Fair
was a
needs to be.
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The Devil in the White City highlights the planning and construction of two difficult building projects and the varied solutions to them are examples of the strides made in architecture, labor and social issues, and technology. Throughout the book, the author Erik Larson takes the time to explain to the reader the step by step details of the design and construction of both serial killer Dr. Holmes’ mansion, designed for discretely killing tenants, and the now renowned Chicago World’s Fair Exhibition at Jackson Park designed by Daniel Burnham, John Root, and Frederick Olmstead. He uses quotes, first, and third person narratives to tell the reader of design ideas, implementation issues, and construction solutions. Many of these designs and solutions are reflections of inventions of the time or are catalysts for new inventions. For example the problem of how to build in the sandy water-logged “gumbo” ground of Chicago and the solution by Root of multiple layers of steel and cement for the footing of larger structure to prevent significant sinking, which keeps both the fair and Dr. Holmes’ structures afloat. Holmes’ mansion is at one point deemed unsafe because of the sinking footing, forcing him to explore new avenues, like Root’s design. Root had discovered this while building the Montak building. Load bearing iron and steel frame of internal structures make taller buildings more possible than the traditional method of having the weight on the perimeter of the building. Burnham described Root in chapter 2 as a genius saying “I’ve never seen anyone like him in this respect, he would grow abstracted and silent and a far away look would come into his eyes and the building was there before him. Every stone.” His design allowed for larger structures in need of this new footing but larger also meant a need to get people up the floors where Elijah Graves Otis came in with the invention of the elevator. An invention more directly linked to the Chicago World’s Fair is the invention of spray paint. The decision to paint the entire park’s buildings white and in such short time lead to the painters attaching gas pipes to hoses with which they sprayed. The main attraction that was meant to wow visitors was an invention from George Washington Gale Ferris, the Ferris Wheel that stood 264 feet tall and almost as tall as the Statue of Liberty. This attraction was a needed addition as the architects needed something to rival The Eiffel Tower wit without actually building a tower or something else that would be redundant.
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In Chicago at the time many people were flooding in, in search of work, and finding that they could find it in construction as the city grew. The parallel story lines of Holmes and the fair show the problems and the strides in treatment of the labor force as well as the change in women’s lifestyles. “Never before in civilization have such numbers of young girls been suddenly released from the protection of the home and permitted to walk unattended upon the streets and to work under alien roofs.” With all of these people coming from across the country looking for work, they were in need of homes as well. That’s where Holmes came in, advertising jobs in his shops on the first floor of his mansion of horror and rooms with hidden body chutes and secret acid lined metal closets. Mainly, these were women who were initially entranced by his charm only later to find there was something not quite right about him. The beginning of the book points out this problem in a March 30, 1890 public warning in the help-wanted section of the Chicago Tribune by an officer of the First National Bank stating “ our growing conviction that no thoroughly honorable business-man who is the side of dotage ever advertises for a lady stenographer who is a blonde, is good-looking, is quite alone in the city, or will transmit her photograph. All such advertisements upon their face bear the marks of vulgarity, nor do we regard it safe for any lady to answer such unseemly utterances.” Not just women were coming in of course, many men seeking work had found work in construction with the city growing at such a tremendous rate. Problems persisted amongst the labor force like low wages and safety, high turnover rate and poor treatment. This is demonstrated in both the construction of Holmes’ mansion and in the construction of The White City (The World’s Fair Chicago). Holmes pays his men low wages and avoids payments by making up mistakes in workmanship to keep his costs low and keeps a high turnover rate to conceal the true nature of the building’s horrors. Many of these problems are noted in the book as happening at Jackson Park and throughout the city. Protests and unions come from the troubles, creating better wages and working conditions that did not exist before the World’s Fair.
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In a story and a city that brings the horror of death and the fascination seen in things like the unveiling of The Ferris Wheel, you end it satisfied that the Holmesâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; reign of terror is over and that the Worldâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s fair has left its mark on the history of the United States. For the reader who lives for intrigue and mystery, they have the story of Holmes. For the reader with a desire for highly descriptive writings on historical designs, they have Burnham, Root, and Olmstead. And for those who require both, those artistic or design minded folks who love a good murder mystery, we have The Devil in the White City.
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Sarah Sienna Towe 2317 Foothill Rd. #4 Pleasanton, CA 94588 (805) 455 - 2445 s.towe624@outlook.com deskcritique.com
Objective
Work Experience
My objective is to obtain a position where I can further develop my skills while also learning more about the different facets of the design world. One area in particular I hope to experience as I work in any position is writing, since I not only love to design but I enjoy writing about the world through the lens of design.
SideMark – Santa Clara, CA - Design Intern (May 2015 - Present) - Learning design practices in a furniture dealer. . The Hopyard Alehouse and Grill – Pleasanton, CA - Server (August 16 2014 - Present) - Time management, working in a team, customer service. Concannon Vinyards – Livermore, CA - Host (July 1 2014- August 5 2014) - Learned about wine production, sale, and varietals.
Skills Sketch Up AutoCAD Revit Adobe Creative Suite Microsoft Office Modo Painting / Sketching Space Planning Leadership Public Speaking Writing
Soft Skills - Proficient - Proficient - Learning - Proficient - Proficient - Beginner - Proficient - Proficient - Learning - Proficient - Proficient
Volunteer Work Interior Design Student Organization - Studio Manager IIDA Member IIDA Race to Design 2015 - Winner Design Village 2012 Competition - Participant Blood Donor: O+ Hiker References available upon request.
Works well under pressure.
Friendly disposition.
Good at identifying problems and taking appropriate actions.
Education San Jose State University - Aug 2013 - May 2016 - BFA Interior Design
Diablo Valley College - Jan 2012 – May 2013
Santa Barbara City College - Aug 2009 – Dec 2011
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Thank You
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Sarah Sienna Towe s.towe624@outlook.com (805) 455-2445