portfolio of work - TYLER SELBY - Issue Formatted Version

Page 1

portfolio of professional and academic work 2005-2010

tyler selby M. Arch I University of Kansas 2010 816.885.6862 tylerselby@me.com



Concise Resume University of Kansas Lawrence, KS

Education

School of Architecture, Urban Planning and Design Master of Architecture I May 2010 École Spéciale d’Architecture Paris, FR Study Abroad Experience, Fall 2009

IDP 792 Hours Experience

ODBC Paris, France Odile Decq Benoit Cornette Architects Urbanistes Architectural Design Intern Fall 2009

Tyler SElby

Duke University

I am ready to explore a profession that, faced with our current Talent Identification Program University of Kansas Campus Courses: Architecture (4 terms) Product Design (2 terms) economy, is navigating many challenges and changes and as Instructor 2008 - 2009 a result asks more from everyone involved. The practice of Teaching Assistant 2007 architecture is expanding in its scope of responsibilities to provide Private Swimming Lessons great environments that connect with the people, communities and Owner, Instructor 2003 - 2006 society it serves. I am interested in a firm that not only promotes sustainability within their projects but has taken an active role to Windsboro Waves Swim Club Head Coach 2003 - 2004 promote its economic viability and sustainability as a business. I believe in taking initiative, adaptability, consistent performance and Rhinocerous 4.0 Software an expanding scope for realizing complete design solutions. I look forward to expanding my understanding in architecture that performs in reality. Previous professional experience includes design competitions and design development. I wish to build further experience in these areas of practice and expand into additional areas that I have yet to explore to the same degree. Further professional development interests include gaining experience in every part of the practice, from realizing the actual construction of a project, to securing projects and clients and exploring new income methods within an architectural practice.

Grasshopper, T-Splines, V-Ray, Maxwell Render

3D Studio Max MaxScript, Mental Ray, VRay

Sketchup 7 Maya 2010 Revit 2010 AutoCad 2010 ArchiCad 14 Processing Adobe Suite CS5 Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, After Effects, Premier Pro, Dreamweaver

Microsoft Office 2007 Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook

Windows 7 OSX 10.6

QUICKLOOK

Languages

Opposite Page

English (native USA) French (proficiency)

1 Company Headquarters reconnecting to the land it extracts from 2 Music Center, itself a central stage for performance 3 Social Housing is personal while remaining the same 4 1850s brick warehouse transformed into a center for Independent Film 5 Park turned residential towers 6 Single Family Housing finding difference within repetition 7 Thresholds of land, water and sky create rich experiences in the exploration of maritime culture 8 Office Towers dissolving at both ends 9 A homage to Salvador Dali 10 An Urban Development Proposal breaking from the past to create a new vision for Warsaw 11 Hotel as gateway to a city, a gateway to beyond the city

contact information

Tyler Selby 2844 SW Carlton Dr Lees Summit Mo 64082 816.885.6862 tylerselby@me.com


Academic rigor

Professional agility

University of Kansas School of Architecture, Planning and Design

Odile Decq & benoit cornette Architects Urbanistes

Lawrence, Kansas 2004-2010

Paris, France Aug -Dec 2009

Rigor makes use of methods and strategies for developing, assembling and executing a design to formal resolution. During my time in school I have pursued opportunity and the limits of design to maximize the academic environment for questioning the foundations of design and architecture.

With determination to realize original design intent, details were coordinated with agility to develop them into the design solution. I proved valuable in my ability to take on complex problems using flexible negotiation of my focus on several different parts of the project and tasks with the design team to realize a project through a shared interest in achievement. I enjoyed the challenging, creative and international collaborative of people that shared with me similar levels of high energy and ambitions.

PROFESSIONAL PROJECTS SELECTED 1 CONSTRUCTION DU SIEGE SOCIAL

ACADEMIC PROJECTS SELECTED 3 CITY OF LIGHT 4 XYZ + T 5 BUOYANT PERCEPTIONS 6 ROCKING THE GRID 7 HOME CLIFF HOME

2 PENTANIA


Portfolio of work

Seven projects have been chosen for this portfolio; five projects completed in design studios at the University of Kansas and two competitions completed while an intern for Odile Decq. The projects chosen have influenced my development as a designer that provide solutions to connect with our contemporary culture and engage with the people using them. Each project is rooted in a process that explores what is possible within each project assigned. I approach the design of each project by contemplating its connection and value to those that will use the spaces. Within each project I search for latent opportunities that remain hidden to others but can add tremendous value to a design proposal. Each project reflects a commitment between design intentions and the people that will use them, giving purpose to design strategies to insure each project aims beyond the materials that could be used to construct each project. Behind the formal resolution is a design process that includes many different strategies, rules, systems, algorithms and sometimes an excel spreadsheet to develop design separately from being directly tied to its form. I have explored many different methods to ensure the process is unrestricted and exists to serves the unique characteristics of each design challenge. As design methods have expanded and developed my most recent projects have incorporated several dynamic organization systems and have allowed for high levels of flexibility to exist throughout the design of the project. I continue to explore design methods and systems that utilize dynamic solutions that actively adapt to changing conditions and allow for the project to continue to adapt to the environment after construction has been completed.

The work presented does not attempt to explain design process, but serves as an introduction to initiate further discussion. I hope that I may pique your interest enough to initiate the opportunity to expand upon how I can contribute my potential as a new asset to the agency.

Typology

Location

Designed

Company Headquarters

St. Malo, France

Fall 2009

Housing Development

Lille, France

Fall 2009

Urban Development

CBD, Warsaw, Poland

Spring 2010

Independent Film Center

DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY

Spring 2009

Maritime Museum

Northerly Island, Chicago, IL

Fall 2008

CBGB Music Center

SOHO, Manhattan, NY

Fall 2007

Dali Residence

Cadaques, Spain

Fall 2007

Spreads per Project

Complete project index at end of portfolio

portfolio forward / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


1

CONSTRUCTION DU SIEGE SOCIAL Company headquarters St. Malo, France Agency of Odile Decq & Benoit Cornette

Fall 2009 Design Competition CLIENT Groupe Roullier AREA 11,100 m2 (119,600 ft 2) STATUS Second Stage of Competition; feasibility study Design Team Odile Decq, Valeria Cetraro, Christian Engles, Tyler Selby

An invited design competition, the corporation of Groupe Roullier requested a design for a new headquarters to be located within their existing industrial park in St. Malo, France.

The design consists of two formal elements, 1. Rectilinear, five story office spaces 2. A free flowing landscape to enclose offices, a restaurant, conference rooms, an exhibition museum, research facilities and greenhouses.

The conference rooms, restaurant and museum integrate within the terrain. The spaces located within the landscape allow interaction between the interior company and the exterior public to transpire.

I UCT

C fA

D RO

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ENTRY

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eh

Ru

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View 2

N Rue Franklin Roosevelt sITE pLAN 1:1000

TIES

ILI

ON

ENTRY

eXISTING hEADQUARTERS


view - rue de hochelaga

Delivery Access Parking Garage Parking Access

View 1

View 1

View 2

Rai

l

FUTURE EXPANSION

Rue Franklin Roosevelt

Company Headquarters / Odbc / Tylerselby@me.com / 816 885 6862


Contribution

Personal involvement in the project focused on executing and representing the forms that were being created through drawings and study models. Modeling was performed in Rhino and included many design iterations which helped fellow designers on the team visualize the project as a whole as we worked on the different elements of the project in 2D. Other tasks included creating day lighting studies and creating the final 3D model to be rendered by Labtop.

production facilities

hospitality exchange

work research

Space Diagram ground level

ground level

old headquarters

1:1000

elevation D - rue franklin roosevelt

1:750

Through the main entrances a perpendicular path for circulation connects the old headquarters, the production facilities and the spaces located in the new headquarters.


view - rue franklin roosevelt

hospitality exchange

work

Along the street a patterned glass facade forms a shared circulation space between the four office towers. The central gallery also provides access to the support spaces between buildings two and three.

research

Space Diagram +1 Level

+1 Level

1:1000

Section A - office towers and Multi-Use spaces

Company Headquarters / Odbc / Tylerselby@me.com / 816 885 6862 / Company Headquarters


2

Pentania Housing development

Lille, France Agency of Odile Decq & Benoit Cornette Fall 2009 Design Competition, Winner CLIENT Fonciere Logèment, Cirmad AREA 10,500 m2 (113,000 ft 2) STATUS Competition Winner, construction to begin Fall 2010 Design team Odile Decq, Gilles Ghery, Olivier Bacin,Tyler Selby

View of Collective Apartments along the street

A housing competition for Lille, France, the project includes five social housing blocks, seventeen single family houses, underground parking and a shared green space in the center.

Contribution I was personally involved in the entire process beginning with concept development to the delivery of competition boards to the client. While I contributed in every part of the project, I was responsible for developing the floor plans of the collective apartments and the final resolution of the form for the individual houses.

The multilingual working environment allowed me to improve my communications skills and my ability to accurately interpret other’s design intentions and to represent my own work using a variety of methods that did not hinge on having a shared language to communicate.

This project allowed me to gain experience in the complete design competition process. I worked in a tight group setting with the design lead of Odile Decq and two other designers. The environment was structured so each of us could submit new ideas and solutions to any problem on the project. Competition Winner

Construction to begin Fall 2010


Collective Apartments The concept for the social housing blocks is to create visual variety using three different apartment types in different configurations within each six story building. Strict regulations and restrictions for social housing in France guided the development of three apartment modules that would be identical in plan but versatile to allow for many different floor plate configurations to be achieved without the structure or vertical ducts deviating from a single design that remained identical on every floor of the building. Three apartment modules were developed, a single bedroom apartment, a two bedroom apartment, and a three bedroom apartment. I was personally assigned to develop and then standardize the three different floor plan modules, I begin laying out each apartment floor plan. I worked on developing the three plans to satisfy all the logistical, formal and code restrictions that were required.

Collective Housing +1 Level

1:200

Increasing Accessibility

Collective Housing - Ground Floor Cropped view of Entry Spaces 1:100

Problem The central trash collection room required two points of entry with different floor heights. Trash collectors required access at the street level (0 cm) and the residents accessed the space slightly higher (+60 cm). Typically, this is solved by a set of steps to descend to street level before accessing the trash bins. Solution Split the room to accommodate both needs of access, keeping residents at their ground floor level (+60 cm), and the trash containers stay at street level. With a depressed trash container the resident’s are only required to lift objects 50 cm off the floor to clear the lip to dispose of their waste. Accessibility A slight alteration to the angle of the trash containers allowed ample space for both wheelchairs and trash cans to navigate in and out of the room with ease. design review Odile Decq recognized this intervention as something that they had never seen or thought of for a trash collection room. It was a new solution to a passively accepted problem. Peter Bahlman remarked I had “become more French than the French.” Housing Development / ODBC / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


INDIVIDUAL HOUSES I was was responsible responsiblefor forthe the exterior exterior form form of the of the houses. houses.

Initial form study

Evolving through an evolving dialog of critique with Odile Decq, design was a process of refinement equally influenced by what was said and what wasn’t said to determine focus and direction. A form was developed to allow each house to be recognized individually while also cooperating with neighboring houses, clustered, to create a cohesive form that contributed to the site plan. The final design allows each facade to be recognized individually while also forming a repeatable pattern, and a cohesive street front.

Personal Courtyards The design for the individual houses focuses inwards to place a private courtyard in each home because shared walls between neighboring houses severely limit the ability to have exterior windows. An established central courtyard floor plan and clustered arrangement of houses became a starting point for designing the final exterior form.

Section AA

1:200


View of Individual houses along the street

Individual House, Three Bedroom LAYOUT Ground Floor 1:200

Individual House, Three Bedroom LAYOUT +1 Level 1:200

Housing Development / ODBC / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


3

City of light Urban centre Development Central Warsaw, Poland University of Kansas

Spring 2010 Proposal for mayor of warsaw AREA 861,109 m2 (9,268,910 ft 2) STUDIO CRITIC Wojciech Lesnikowski Design Team Tyler Selby, Bob Defries, Michele Aldrich


Working at the urban scale of a Soviet created mega block, design followed a typological and formal investigation for development of a new, hyper-use “city center” for the heart of central Warsaw. Large scale concepts are inspired by the historical idea of Grande Visions that utilize larger than life concepts; such as Baron Haussmann and Napoleon III’s will to transform the streets of Paris into a series of grand boulevards.

A single, unified vision informed the design programmatically and formally to create specific areas within the site that would be intensified with defined functions and density to create a highly active center. Each building’s unique identity communicates both semiotically and symbolically creating multi-directional dialogs between buildings on the site and the people of Warsaw.

Warsaw City Centre / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Site and Individual Building Development

A

F

B D

B

C

D

F

C E

A E

1 Existing Site

2 Site Use Parameters

A Warsaw Centralna Rail Station; currently in a state of disrepair, in need of

A Continuous pedestrian passage with grand boulevard that extends

replacement B Palace of Culture; Built 1955, originally known as the Joseph Stalin Palace of Culture and Science

into city. B Vertical element to screen the pedestrian view from full exposure of the Soviet tower.

C Previously Soviet parade grounds, currently used as car park

C Iconic statements provide beacon to city.

D Museum of Modern Art, currently under construction

D Corner “gateway�

E Public Park

E Low profile form to give symmetry and space for interior plaza space.

F Context, mix of high rise and old scale

F Residential tower in the park


C A

F

B E

D

3 Typological Interpretation

TRAIN STATION Connecting end Destinations.

RETAIL GALLERY

Moving to encounter Resistance.

4 Site Parameters become

5 Resulting in proposed Design Typologies

A Continuous path for movement.

Interface for connecting grande with pedestrian scale

HOTEL

Representing rail and retail as single experience, bringing city to the edge of the train platform.

HYBRID CONTINUOUS LIFE LINE

A

Becoming guest, becoming more.

Gateway to the city

building as medium for communication

ICON SUBLIME LIGHTHOUSE

B

OFFICE TOWER

Screening element to shade city from full exposure of soviet tower

Solid porosity to open up ground level for pedestrian experience

SCREEN / BACKGROUND

C

Creating enclosure for the open plaza within the site

contrasting the retail gallery to provide all inclusive retail experience

AUTONOMASSING CONTAINER

D

to create a space for the exhibition of fashion and design

museum as inter-connector to surrounding buildings of related functions instead of secluded archive

CONNECTOR DUAL USE CORRIDOR HYBRID

E

HYBRID UNNATURAL GROWTH

F

Assemblage of Individual Pieces

DEPARTMENT STORE

(facade) Forming (amorphous) Mass

Fashion MUSEUM

Iconic node for concentration of connections

RESIDENTIAL TOWER

Becoming Singular

(indiv. residents buy into single identity of object as condo tower, single object as condo tower becomes individually identifiable with each)

PUBLIC PARK

provide a transparently crystalline tower for living in the city

incorporate without loss of existing quality

Tower in the park tower is the park park gains enclosed spaces under green landscape for expanded capabilities for warsaw’s long winters

Warsaw City Centre / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Economies of Difference rooftop wind turbine

. Tower Disappears

Rigid Environments

3.3m

5m

5m

Four identical towers equal saving time and money but it comes at the expense of visual character. Maximizing the economy of difference meant breaking down the tower to the last divisible unit, the office space module. Using the repetition of the office module, difference would be achieved throughout the towers.

Single Office Module

x62

11n 6n

Dynamic Environments

.

Tower Dissolves

.

sky offices

central core

Floor Plate Configurations

Dynamic Environments

sky lounge

Rigid Environments

x62

Floor Plate grid

. Interior assemblage of modules

open lobby increased daylight

.

.

Office Space Companies can expand organically based on need and availability of adjacent modules both vertically and horizontally. An office that primarily provides work for other offices within the tower could imagine a vertical thread of adjacent modules that act as a vein through the tower.


mass Towers High-rise Office Space 4 Towers x 59 Floors AREA TOTAL 389,400 m2 (4,191,467 ft 2) HEIGHT 280 m

Tower Dissolves

Tower Disappears

The generic quality allows the office towers to function as rows of towers that together act as a screen to blend in with the urban context while also obscuring view of the Soviet tower to become a backdrop for the other hotel and residential towers on the site. Individual office spaces remain personally identifiable from a distance while remaining anonymously part of the total composition for everyone else.

The mirrored finish reflects the sky to disappear into the clouds.

The tower’s form dissolved to create an open ground plane for pedestrian movement.

The Facade

Exterior Facade of panels

Three different panels are used to reflect the interior form and combine to form different qualities of reflection and transparency. A clear glass panel is used starting at the base of the tower. Building up the tower, clear panels are replaced with tinted panels that are replaced with reflective panels further up the building facades.

Warsaw City Centre / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


park towers High-rise residential condos 2 Towers TOWER A - 96 Floors TOWER B - 112 Floors Retail/ Offices 7 FLOORS 10 FLOORS Apartments 33 FLOORS 38 FLOORS Luxury Condos 43 FLOORS 52 FLOORS 82,680 m2 (889,960 ft 2) 96,680 m2 (1,040,655 ft 2) AREA TOTAL 179,360 m2 (1,930,615 ft 2) HEIGHT 335 m 392 m

Sharing the Green

Tower is the Park

1 Surface transformation

Working from the typology of the residential tower that was required to exist within a large urban park, the design became a question of how the two typologies could accentuate the other instead of competing for land and visibility. A two-way gradient was created uses difference and repetition to integrate the park and tower into a single form. The use of two gradients ensure each of the two programs are in the process of becoming the other alowing the design to go beyond placing a tower within a beautiful park.

2 Distribution of Program

1 The tower allows the park to have a strong vertical orienting device to attract people from all over the city extending the visual cues of the park beyond the directly adjacent buildings and streets. 2 As a result of overlapping the park’s surface with the high rise tower, the design takes advantage of the mixed uses on the site to create opportunities for the two different typologies to adding value to both of the site’s functions. 3 Lastly, the park benefits from the residential towers because each resident is directly invested in keeping their backyard enjoyable, safe and clean; relieving a burden that the city currently is completely responsible for.

3 mutually added Value


corner inn Hotel

The interior atrium opens to put the city on display for hotel guests and displays activities taking place inside the hotel.

to Central Train Station and Retail Shopping Gallery

65 Floors, 15 “Lily Pads” AREA 97,350 m2 (1,047,867 ft 2) HEIGHT 270 m

LED video surface covers the interior curve of the hotel’s facade

bands of stainless steel reflects the led video surface

Urban Gateway Opening up the corner at the pedestrian level resulted in a hotel that is formed by a tower of two legs; one contains the hotel and the other one provides support. As an urban gateway and iconic marker, the hotel has several functions beyond providing a place to call home for the night. The hotel forms a node that connects both the city of Warsaw and visitors to the city.

Support leg that allows linear movement

to underground metro and parking

to Public Transportation street trams, busses, taxi

to City

Interior Atrium “Lily Pad Colonies” Platforms fill the hotel’s atrium space with an arrangement of floor plates that could be developed into the different types of spaces for gathering and social occasions within a hotel. A “lily pad” is found every four floors, gradually becoming larger as the event spaces are placed higher in the tower. Each four floor section forms a “colony” with a single center gathering space with four floors of hotel rooms surrounding and overlooking the space.

Warsaw City Centre / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


4

xyz + t Independent Film Center Dumbo, Brooklyn, New York University of Kansas

Spring 2009 Building Reuse AREA 5618 m2 (60,476 ft 2) STUDIO CRITICS Robert Riccardi, Dominique Davison

The study of film led to an investigation into the nature of time as an ordering system and foundation for creating an experience through a series of events. During initial conceptual research clarity was found through an analysis of the film Slumdog Millionaire (2009, Oscar Winner) Studying the film in relation to time, the three characters weave through a non linear series of events as the movie jumps between characters and different events in each of their lives. This study allowed insight into my own studies of perception, time and space to find clarity to formulate an internal understanding of the different natures of time and events that exist both within and completely outside of time. Contrasting time as a linear series of events a Moment, in which time stands still, creating a situation where the past, present and future were all collapsed into a single point. Behind the single point lies the experience, using a physical object to give life to a moment. For example the cinematic story requires the simple medium of film to be projected. These objects are often not representative of the incredible experience performed. Experience in the Film Center would be achieved by creating an infrastructure where opportunities for making, viewing and learning about film would occur. The project site, located between the Manhattan and Brooklyn bridges in Dumbo, would provide the setting to tell the story of development for the design of the Film Center as well as the adjacent park.


INDEPENDENT FILM CENTER / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Prepared Assembly Operating within the existing timber structure and masonry walls, floor levels are pushed and pulled vertically at points located in the structural matrix creating ramps that provide circulation and interaction between the floor levels. Floor levels connect vertically throughout different areas of the building; connecting spaces with similar or connected uses to provide building occupants convenience when these spaces are used in conjunction with or in a series of tasks. Existing matrix of Timber structure


Spaces in Motion Distinct experiences are possible from a mixture of circulation options that transgress through interdepartmental spaces. Each purposeful visit to the Film Center provides opportunity for the interaction with other functions of the building.

Theater 2 - On Screen audience Cut out from the brick facade, a large window is positioned at the same location of the theater’s screen which exists behind the facade. Inside, visitors waiting for the feature film can watch the live action taking place in the street. People in the street take part in a live cinema that preludes the actual film. During the film the connection is severed, the screen, black out curtains and speakers slide in place to enclose the theater.

INDEPENDENT FILM CENTER / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


View through the film center’s plaza

Day, Southern facade Film center Plaza 1 Sloped Facade redirects the sun and warmth to the public plaza below.

2 Passive Chimney effect creates buffer of fresh circulating air between facade and glazing

Facade in undeployed, folded position in plaza 3 Sloped Angle of the facade provides protection from the sun during summer months. Layered relationship facilitates passive heating in the winter and passive cooling in the summer.

West Elevation of Folded Facade

Passive Facade Section Diagram


view from east river of park and film center

Night, screen for outdoor theater Film center Park

Facade in deployed position, unfolded in the park’s bay

Facade Deployed into Park Sliding out, the curtain facade reveals itself: a screen for the viewing film in the park. The panels, created as independent pieces, link at hinged spines to create a series of panels. Exceeding in flexibility, single points of contact glide along an overhead rail. The surface, a perforated screen interwoven with elastic material ensures a taut surface in any folded position. Steel members within the screen provide an infrastructure to hold the bolt-inplace speaker systems, PV panels and LED Video panels.

Guided through a single rail, the panels are divided into a train of structural elements enabling mobility of screen facade to deploy into the park for films. top connection detail

INDEPENDENT FILM CENTER / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


5

Buoyant Perceptions Maritime Museum Northerly Island, Chicago, Illinois University of Kansas

Fall 2008 MCA Steel Competition AREA 6223 m2 (66,990 ft 2) STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

The Maritime Museum uses thresholds derived from maritime and museum culture. The thresholds allow for perceived breaks in space which encourage looking anew to create a total maritime museum experience that connects the maritime culture with each visitor’s culture.

air

above

Vertical Threshold of museum

exhibition space “inside”

water

Entry Lobby “outside”

below

Program as threshold

3 exhibition air space

Burnham Park Harbor

The threshold creates a crossing over into a space conceived as different but is placed within the bay to connect with maritime culture.

Entry Lobby

“inside” water

4

Maritime culture resides adjacently between land and water; water and air. In between, exists the vessel, which relies on laws of buoyancy to remain carefully balanced within both air and water.

2

Northerly IslanD

The exhibition space disconnects from reality to create an experience that’s focused on deriving knowledge from artifacts of the past. A threshold adjusts focus and perception as one enters the exhibition space. Visitors adjust to the museum’s space in an attempt to connect to a culture that may be foreign to that of the visitor. The exhibition spaces’s threshold creates a false disconnect when in reality it is a part of the water’s surface within the harbor of sailboats.

above

“outside” below Support Spaces

Horizontal Threshold of maritime

1

A dialog between land, water and air formally becomes four main open spaces; two interior and two exterior. restaurant

offices

classes

exhibition space “inside”

research

delivery docks

Entry Lobby “outside”


museum‘s entrance

maritime museum / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


exterior skin

structure

Boats On Display Two openings in the elevated deck allow for a boat to be installed in the lobby and a larger boat to be installed above the exhibition space. The remaining exhibition space is column free and open to be developed by the museum’s curator.

TO W

ER

LOBBY

OPEN DECK

EXHIBITION GALLERY

5 TO W TO W

ER

ER

EXHIBITION GALLERY

LOBBY

OPEN DECK

LOBBY

6

EXHIBITION GALLERY

3 TO W

ER

7

8

LOBBY

9

XHIBITION GALLERY

4

11

open deck, overlooked by tower of classrooms, restaurant and offices

Interior of lobby reveals the second facade OF SUPPORT TOWER


TO W 3

ER

EXHIBITION GALLERY

2

LOBBY

OPEN DECK

4

1

formal elements

1 2 3 4

Support spaces within the tower

THRESHOLD SPACES Entry Lobby, Event Space deck Exhibition Space

Tower spaces

TO W

ER

LOBBY

EXHIBITION GALLERY

5 Restaurant 6 Auditorium 7 Classroom 8 Coat Check TO 9 Front Desk W ER 10 OFFICES 11 Restoration Lab OPEN DECK 12 Research Library Library vertically links classrooms and restoration lab

LOBBY

EXHIBITION GALLERY

TO W

ER

LOBBY EXHIBITION GALLERY

to G

aller

y

2

1

above; isometric section Threshold + Tower Spaces

maritime museum / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


6

Rocking the Grid CBGB Music Center

Lafyette and Housten, Manhattan, New York University of Kansas

Fall 2007 Renewal of the CBGB AREA 3990 m2 (42,948 ft 2) STUDIO CRITICS Peter Pran, Rene Diaz

The design process began with the question of how interaction between the public and privately owned spaces could overcome the typical disconnect and create a shared space between people within the SoHo area as well as those inhabiting the Music Center. Given such a highly visible location, the design for the CBGB Music Center utilized the power of projection to connect with the people of Manhattan. The building’s facade recedes from the limits of the site to dissolve the threshold as a clear line to create a shared space between the Music Center’s interior and the streets surrounding it. The experience of a building begins long before actually entering inside the building’s envelope.

^ ^

Typical Facade Exterior envelope wraps disconnected interior spaces.

Expanded Facade Lobby provides shared space to connect public street with private spaces inside.

^ ^ ^ ^

Distributed Facade Lobby space is distributed into adjoining spaces to directly connect street and inner building spaces. Both street and interior form a single, shared space that does not require a third intermediary space.

Openness The street flows into the building allowing the ground floor to extend into public space creating a gradient that distributes “entry” that is similar to sound, perceptual and unique to each person.


Music Center / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Updated ad for Maxell, original c.1979

The distribution of sound occurs along a smooth gradient across space. The music center extends the experience beyond the building footprint to encourage a shared experience with an extended audience of spectators.

Elevation


The tower complete building

The Marquee

central tower

1 Creates enclosure for ground level.

2 Provides practice spaces and artist lounge.

3 Active communication to engage public.

WORK

PARTITIONED OFFICE SPACE

LEVEL 6

WORK

OPEN OFFICE SPACE

LEVEL 5

BAR + RESTAURANT

LEVEL 4

DINE PRACTICE

ARTIST’S TERRACE

PERFORM

AUDITORIUM 500 SEATS

CONNECT SECTION

PRACTICE ROOM

AUDITORIUM LOBBY

MERCHANDISE SHOP

ARTIST GALLERY

LEVEL 3

LEVEL 2

RR

LEVEL 1

PROGRAM DISTRIBUTION

26

8

8

25

15

26 16 26

15

5

14

5

5

(Shaded Area)

15 13 LEVEL 3 LEARN

LEVEL 6 WORK

10

12

25

8 5

11

24

7

5

21

22 23

LEVEL 2 WATCH

8

LEVEL 5 WORK

9

20

8

19

5

17 18

LEVEL 1 ENTER

LEVEL 4 EAT

1 LOBBY 2 CAFE 3 GALLERY 4 BOOKSTORE 5 STORAGE 6 ELEVATORS 7 ESCALATORS 8 RESTROOMS 9 EVENT RESTROOMS 10 AUDITORIUM LOBBY 11 AUDITORIUM 12 BACKSTAGE 13 RAMP TO STUDIO 14 RECORDING STUDIO 15 CLASSROOMS 16 TERRACE 17 RESTAURANT LOBBY 18 BAR AREA 19 DINING AREA 20 KITCHEN 21 OFFICE LOBBY 22 RECEPTIONIST’S DESK 23 WAITING AREA 24 WORKSPACE 25 CONFERENCE ROOM 26 EXECUTIVE OFFICE FIRESTAIRS OPEN TO BELOW GREEN SPACE

Music Center / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


7

home cliff home Dali Residence Cadaques, Spain University of Kansas

Fall 2007 Home for a star competition AREA 464 m2 (5000 ft 2) STUDIO CRITIC Peter Pran

Dali believed we should use “the spontaneous method of irrational knowledge based on the critical and systematic objectifications of delirious associations and interpretations...� He proposed a tourism of sanity into the realm of paranoia; a state of delirium that eventually lead to Surrealism.


Spending most of his youth in Cadaques, Spain, Dali always remained close to the sea and a Spanish cliff side was chosen for the site which had similar qualities to the cliffs Dali included in his paintings.

On approach, the house is very simple and unimposing.

With a design concept of a house melting into the sea the form was achieved through multiple physical models. Ultimately, the form was decided by the nature of melting clay after subjecting a bar of the material perched upon a found piece of concrete. After fiften minutes in the oven the clay bar melted into the desired form.

Melting Clay

master Bedroom

The house’s three floors transition from public spaces at the top where the entrance is and becomes private as the floors reach toward the sea. A mutated box frame gives stability to the cantilevered structure. The glass facade screens out the sun by using glazing that appears opaque to the light waves.

Hearth and EAting area

1. Top LEVEL

-1. Middle LEVEL

-2. Bottom LEVEL

Section

DALI HOME /Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Project Index 2005 - 2010 by studio a, f-s, U-V University of Kansas SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE, PLANNING AND DESIGN b-d

Odile Decq Benoit Cornette Architects Urbanistes

E

École Spéciale d’Architecture

t personal Project

by PROJECT A

City of light

k

Urban Centre Development Spring 2010 LOCATION Central Warsaw, Poland Studio Critic Wojciech Lesnikowski Design Team Tyler Selby, Bob Defries, Michele Aldrich

Fall 2007 Location Cadaques, Spain STUDIO CRITIC Peter Pran l

B

Spring 2007 Location Downtown Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

Housing development

c

m

Spring 2007 STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

Multi-Use Building Redevelopment

D

Construction du siege social Company Headquarters

n

gathering upon rooftops

Ad-Hoc Based Social Gathering Surface

Partition investigation

o

xyz + t

Spring 2007 LOCATION 10 th and Iowa Street, Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan p

Fall 2006 LOCATION Marvin Grove, Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Steve Padget q

Basketball Courts + Canopy

Spring 2009 LOCATION Dumbo, Brooklyn, New York Studio Critics Robert Riccardi, Dominique Davison

Fall 2006 LOCATION KU Campus, Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Steve Padget

Fall 2006 Location KU Campus, Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Steve Padget s

Spring 2006 LOCATION KU Campus, Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITIC Anne Patterson Design Team Tyler Selby, Jodie Schiro

Parking Garage Facade + Building Sign age

t

Winter 2006 PERSONAL PROJECT

Sustainable Grocery Store Pre-Engineered Building Systems

j

u

The wallflower

MULTI FUNCTION PRODUCT Fall 2005 MODES Steps, Chair or Table MATERIAL 2’x4’x 3/4” MDF Sheet (1) STUDIO CRITIC Bruce Johnson Design Team Tyler Selby, Jodie Schiro

Rocking the Grid CBGB Music Center

Fall 2007 LOCATION Lafyette and Housten, Manhattan, New York STUDIO CRITICS Peter Pran, Rene Diaz

Divergent, Convergent lines Coffee Table

Neighborhood Co-OP

Spring 2008 LOCATION East Lawrence, Kansas STUDIO CRITICS Nils Gore

On-site escape

Guest House for Visiting Professors

Calculated visibility

Fall 2008 LOCATION 1018 Baltimore, Kansas City, Missouri STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

exposed Critique Public Jury Space

Buoyant Perceptions Fall 2008 LOCATION Northerly Island, Chicago, Illinois STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

i

Pickup game space

Independent Film Center

Maritime Museum

h

Extruded columns Classics Museum

r g

Campus link

Pedestrian Bridge

Fall 2009 LOCATION 2nd Arrr. Paris, France Studio Critics Isabel Herrault, Wojciech Lesnikowski Design Team Tyler Selby, Eudora Tan, Antoine Fichaux f

Weaving Wall 1

Spring 2007 STUDIO CRITIC Richard Farnan

Fall 2009 LOCATION St. Malo, France Design Team Odile Decq, Valeria Cetraro, Christian Engles, Tyler Selby e

Weaving Wall 2

Partition investigation

Paris nord Est

Fall 2009 LOCATION 19 th Arrr. Paris, France Collaboration with OMA Design Team Odile Decq, Christian Engles, Tyler Selby Focus Design Development of Entrance Spaces

Literary exposure Branch Library

Pentania

Fall 2009 LOCATION Lille, France Design Team Odile Decq, Gilles Ghery, Olivier Bacin,Tyler Selby

home cliff home Dali Residence

v

double stacked articulation Sculpture Re Fabrication

projects listed in reverse chronological order

Fall 2005 SCALE MODEL 1:12 Sculpture Seventh Decade Garden IX-X by Louise Nevelson STUDIO CRITIC Bruce Johnson


by scale

Sm

Med

(1000-10,000 ft2)

Lg

(10,000-50,000 ft2)

5 projects 113,000 ft2

6 projects 29,000 ft2

XL

(50,000-150,000 ft2)

4 projects 359,000 ft2

(1mil ft2+)

1 project 9.3 Million ft2

by type Cultural

Office Space

Fashion Museum Film Center Maritime Museum Music Center Library Classics Museum Jury Space

Housing

Office Towers Corporate Headquarters Lobby Space

Residential Tower Social Housing Single Family Housing Guest House Artist’s Home

124,000 ft2

119,000 ft2

194,000 ft2

Infrastructure Rooftop Social Spaces Pedestrian Bridge Basketball Courts 54,000 ft2

Retail

Grocery Store Hotel

Box sizes and space totals do not include buildings within Warsaw City Centre project because of the shear scale and low resolution of interior space development relative to all of the other projects within my body of work.

12,000 ft2

by location lille, FR housing development Chicago, IL Maritime Museum

Lawrence, KS 7 Projects M. Arch I University of Kansas

NYC Music Center Film Center

st. Malo, FR Corporate Headquarters

Paris, FR Rooftop Gathering Spaces Office lobby space Kansas City, MO Parking garage facade

Warsaw, PL City Centre

Cadaques, Spain Dali’s Home

Student of ESA Intern for ODBC

Project index / Tylerselby@me.com / 816.885.6862


Contents contain the work of Tyler Selby. Comprising seven projects, this portfolio includes work performed while pursuing the M.Arch I at the University of Kansas and design competitions completed while an intern for the agency of Odile Decq in Paris last fall. Each project varies in scale but never in ambition. Ambitious investigation allows for the exposure of previously dormant opportunites that become engrained in the design strategy of each project. Tyler currently searches for the opportunity to further his understanding of the profession of architecture, including the entire process of a practice, and contribute to the success of a collaborative work environment.


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