SOPHY FELDMAN GRADUATE PORTFOLIO
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CONTENTS Academic Work
PROJECTS WERC[anyon] Erosion of land and canal as a means of accessibility M.ARCH Year 2 Spring Term, Pratt Institute 4-17
Lineation // Linerarization The ever-expanding linear housing.
M.ARCH Year 2 Fall Term, Pratt Institute
18-29
H20 Hysteria Transforming an old warehouse into a unique oyster and algae farming facility
M.ARCH Year 3 Fall Term, Pratt Institute 30-39
STUDIES Roughness The exploration of robotic extrusion of an architectural detail.
M.ARCH Year 2 Spring Term, Pratt Institute 40-45
Latent Space Object A new kind of interiority and subsequent community fostering
M.ARCH Year 1 Summer Term, Pratt Institute 46-49
Existing Space Explore the elongated elements that were pre existing in the original building
M.ARCH Year 1 Spring Term, Pratt Institute 50-51
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WERC[ANYON]
SPRING 2023
WERC[anyon] ARCH 704 DESIGN 4: INTEGRATED STUDIO SPRING 2023 CRITIC: ALEXANDRA BARKER CO-PARTNER: ROWAN PRICE
New York generates 14 million tons of garbage per year, or 12,000 tons per day. Most is sent to landfills out of state. A 2009 study shows that burning waste is greener than landfills and generates more energy. Localizing waste management reduces pollution and cost from regional transportation networks as exemplified by WTE facilities in Long Island that serve local jurisdictions. Layering public programs on infrastructural programs increases awareness of waste issues, creates a public amenity, and anticipates the increased densification of the city, where scarcity of ground-level space will prompt public spaces to continue to stratify. This strategy has been employed in downtown Tokyo where a combined WTE and recreation center has managed to clean 99% of facility emissions.
A microcosm of local pedestrian (south) and industrial (north) activities at different scales. A return of the edge to the marsh to provide space for aquaculture, a return of the edge to give access (space) to humans, passing through and staying as a guest. We are carving the ground to create erosion of land and canal as a means of accessibility, extension of the green, and canyon within our two buildings. The overall concept is canyon; a building that is also a landscape, something you need to traverse at different speeds; the building itself is broken by the canyon into two programs, but they interweave at specific times to create moments of programmatic intersectionality
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1-Digital Chunk Render
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
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2- 1/64 in Scale Site Plan
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WERC[ANYON]
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SPRING 2023
3- Rendering looking east
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
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WERC[ANYON]
SPRING 2023
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4- 1/32 in Scale Ground Plan
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
5 5- 1/32 in Scale Upper Floorplan
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WERC[ANYON]
SPRING 2023
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6- Digital Chunk Rendering
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
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WERC[ANYON]
SPRING 2023
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7- 1/4 in Scale Facade Details
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
8 8- 1/4 in Scale Rendered Wall Section
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WERC[ANYON]
SPRING 2023
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9- 1/32 in Scale Section Aa
PROJECT 1
SEMESTER 4
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10- 1/32 in Scale Section Bb
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11- 1/8 in Scale Physical Model
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12- 1/8 in Scale Physical Model Overall
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FALL 2022
Lineation // Linearization
Lineation // Linearization ARCH 703 INTERIORITIES & CONTEXTS FALL 2022 CRITIC: JONAS COERSMEIER CO-PARTNER: GEORGIOS PISSIANDIS
The tectonic ground intensifies and is derived from existing projection lines radiating from the Farragut’s unique shape as a new tower begins to spread throughout the housing complex into the urban ground. To give credit to the existing but to spread uncovered geometries not only in the landscape but throughout the housing as well, by satisfying the verticality and horizontality of Downtown Brooklyn. The various depths of this ground will result in a blurred line between building, ground, and the subterranean in a microscale, while in a macroscale blurring the line between old and new. Accounting for density we are saturated the x and y axis and are being forced to utilize the z axis. Our design reimagines the meaning of a ground plane by not only having the physical ground be the basis for our project but now using the existing building of farragut as a footprint for new growth.
These gestures begin to extrude out and emphasize how these arms may continue forever in response to mass housing. This allowed for the spaces in between to support locally within each tower to allow for courtyard conditions to support each building. In investigating high density housing the LoLux Care proposes an integrated housing community that serves foster children, children that await to be placed in foster care, and young adults who have experienced foster care in the past. It supports alternative intergenerational models of housing and living, including grand families, and considers the special needs of older caregivers. A model in which we can accompany our design to allow for new generations and promote a sense of community within the ever-expanding linear housing.
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13- Digital Chunk Render
PROJECT 2
SEMESTER 3
14 14- 1:1000 Scale Site Plan
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Lineation // Linearization
FALL 2022
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15- 1:1000 Scale Exploded Site Plan
PROJECT 2
SEMESTER 3
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16- 1:1000 Scale Site Physical Model 17-1:1000 Scale Massing Physical Models
18- Material Explorations
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Lineation // Linearization
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FALL 2022
19- Digital Chunk Render
PROJECT 2
SEMESTER 3
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Lineation // Linearization
FALL 2022
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20- 1:500 Typical Floorplan
PROJECT 2
SEMESTER 3
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21- 1:500 Scale Physical Model 22- 1:1000 Scale Exploratory Casting Models
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Lineation // Linearization
FALL 2022
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23-1/8 in Scale Physical Chunk Model 24-1/8 in Scale Physical Chunk Model
PROJECT 2
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25- 1:100 Detailed Unit Plans 26- 1:100 Detailed Duplex Condition
SEMESTER 3
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Lineation // Linearization
FALL 2022
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27- 1:500 Longitudinal Section
PROJECT 2
SEMESTER 3
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FALL 2023
H20 HYSTERIA
H20 Hysteria ARCH 805 STORYBOARDING SPACE FALL 2023 CRITIC: ABIGAL COOVER
In the year 2000, an adaptive reuse project was initiated in Red Hook, with the aim of transforming an old warehouse into a unique oyster and algae farming facility. Additionally, the project features a courtyard water park that seamlessly integrates with the surrounding environment. The brilliance of this water park lay in its dual purpose: it not only provided recreational enjoyment for both children and adults but also played a vital role in supplying water to the park itself, using it as a power source. Ultimately, the project is all about creating a captivating visual spectacle and an ephemeral play space that would leave a lasting impression on visitors and residents alike.
This project serves a significant community-building function. Upon arrival, the water park greets guests with a vivid display of colors, effectively blurring the lines between signage and the water slides themselves. The visual spectacle of the water park is designed to be visible from a distance, piquing curiosity and enticing people to draw nearer to appreciate its clarity and artistry. One of the intriguing aspects of the project is its ability to generate a sense of ambiguity. It challenges perceptions by blurring the distinction between an amusement park and a water park, creating a distinctive landmark in the existing urban fabric of Red Hook. In fact, the water slides themselves doubled as eyecatching signage, making them an integral part of the park’s identity.
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28- Preliminary Digital Storyboard
PROJECT 3
SEMESTER 5
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29- Final Drawing Storyboard
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FALL 2023
H20 HYSTERIA
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30- 1/8 in Scale Physical Model
PROJECT 3
SEMESTER 5
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31- 1/32 in Scale Overall Building Plan
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H20 HYSTERIA
FALL 2023
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32- 1/8 in Scale Detail Plan
PROJECT 3
SEMESTER 5
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33- 1/8 in Scale Detail Plan
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H20 HYSTERIA
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FALL 2023
34- 1/8 in Scale Section Perspective
PROJECT 3
SEMESTER 5
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35- Storyboard Character Log
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H20 HYSTERIA
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FALL 2023
36- 1/8 in Scale Physical Model
PROJECT 3
SEMESTER 5
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37- 1/8 in Scale Physical Model
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ROUGHNESS
SPRING 2023
Roughness ARCH 704 DESIGN 4: INTEGRATED STUDIO SPRING 2023 CRITIC: POYAO SHIH
This course investigated design through fabrication tools and processes. I was tasked with creating and building an architectural element in large scale to explore the intersection between materials and details, in my case a column capital. My column was integrated with robotic research on 3D clay extrusion and slicing. This project began with the analysis of sectional qualities that could be derived from extruding and closing parts up in height to then further going back to the design and strategically slicing to reveal certain moments and qualities of the design. In the end this column is made of modules to help aid in the fabrication process and allow for mass production at a repetitive feasible scale without failure. Once the five modules are finished with their extrusion process, which each baseline extrusion is the same to further the production level, they will each undergo their own slicing processes.
The design of itself of this project I wanted to focus of bringing a light quality to something that is inherently heavy and structural. I aimed to do this by emphasizing the carved fluted language that exist in each module. I hoped that this carved nature would also help to feel as if the columns are diversified if they are at seen from different perspectives.
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38-1/2 in Scale Physical Model
STUDY 1
SEMESTER 4
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39- 1/4 in Scale Detail Drawings
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ROUGHNESS
SPRING 2023
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40-1/2 in Scale Physical Model Robotic Printing in Process
STUDY 1
SEMESTER 4
41 41- 1/2 in Scale Physical Model Robotic Printing in Process
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ROUGHNESS
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SPRING 2023
42-1/2 in Scale Elevation Drawings
STUDY 1
SEMESTER 4
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SUMMER 2022
LATENT SPACE OBJECT
Latent Space Object ARCH 648D ALTERED ESTATES: SPECULATIONS SUMMER 2022 CRITIC: DAVID ERDMAN, HART MARLOW, JEFFERY ANDERSON CO-PARTNER: ROWAN PRICE
Among the top 15 most rapidly densifying cities, Singapore can be considered an acute urban archipelago. We have chosen to look more closely at the density that exists in this specific city. Singapore’s current population is 5.7 million over 280 square miles. So what happens as cities densify in the 21st century? In building upward, and engaging the z, the existing begins to act as another kind of ground from which spaces are excavated. In the context of this course we have become familiar with these qualities as Latent Space Objects, or highly interiorized vertical spaces, a concept we also have referred to as “interiority”. We found these to be prevalent across Singaporean architecture, specifically in HDB public housing. Space Objects occur naturally with the help of architectural decisions and the existing environment surrounding. For example, Vertical pressurization is an existing typology for housing, but we found the frequency of this precise subtraction to be characteristic of Latent Space Objects native to Singapore.
We propose an intervention which establishes a destination on top of the existing, triggering a capillary action that moves people upwards to both private spaces and public flex spaces. This is considered a new ground level, the entry of which is no longer at grade, but rather at ground. Amongst the upward movement we have designated two paths, one that is an express entry to the sky lobby and one that is a slower paced path to the public space. This allows for a new kind of interiority and subsequent community fostering that is bolstered and maintained by the flexibility of the proposed addition. Ultimately, we have built upon concepts that already exist in Singapore, and used them to perpetuate the narrative of figure and ground to include proactive design for density
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43- Photogrammetry Model Video Still
STUDY 2
SEMESTER 2.5
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44-Exploded Programmatic Diagram
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LATENT SPACE OBJECT
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SUMMER 2022
45- Exterior Night Render
STUDY 2
SEMESTER 2.5
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SPRING 2022
EXISTING SPACE
Existing Space
ARCH 612 ADVANCED MODELING & DRAWING SPRING 2022 CRITIC: CATHERINE WILMES
The beginning of this project began with using the existing space from Higgins Hall, located in Brooklyn, New York. This served as raw geometric data that contained many void spaces. These voids were able to function as the interstitial spatial regions for development. With the use of the preexisting architectural conditions and the interstitial freedom I was able to extract the unexplored moments which created an inside, outside spatial quality. The idea, also, in these particular chunk models was to promote a sense of circulation and interiority while also feeling confinedtoasmallspaceandcreatingalmostinhabitablemoments.
Throughout the context of this project I was able to explore the elongated elements that were pre existing in the original building and build upon this notion to further exaggerate the longevity. This project gave a sense of freedom in walking the fine line between reality and what might not seem normal, as seen in the twenty feet long window.
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46- Digital Chunk Render
STUDY3
SEMESTER 2
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47- Exploded Isometric Drawing
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SOPHY FELDMAN GRADUATE PORTFOLIO
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