Stanford Dwayne Barnes III University Address 1521 Disston St Tallahassee FL, 32310 919.452.5135 sdb12@my.fsu.edu
Permanent Address 1010 Professor Place Durham, NC 27713 919.544.4353 Xscobar@gmail.com
Connect with me on Linkedin.com Find My Portfolio on www.behance.net/stanford
Objective
To obtain a landscape design, uban design/planning, or architecture position with the opportunity for professional growth and development within the design industry.
Skills Hand Drafting Expirienced with Autodesk Software - AutoCAD 2012 - Land F/X Plugin - Revit Architecture 2012 Proficient with Microsoft Office 2010 Suite
Familiar use of Adobe Creative Suite 5 for Landscape Rendering and document construction - Illustrator - Photoshop - InDesign Skilled in Google SketchUp 8
Education
Florida State University / Florida A & M University Enrolled in Graduate courses in preparation for Postgraduate education under the fields of - Urban and Regional Planning - Transportation Planning Graduate Institution to be determined April 2012 - Landscape Architecture Master of Landscape Architecture - Architecture Master of Urban Design Course completion April 2012 Beginning Graduate Education Fall 2012
Florida A & M University Landscape Design & Management Bachelor of Science Graduated December 16, 2011
Relevant Coursework Architectural Design 1.1 -2.2, The Building Arts, Theory in Architecture, Intro to Technology of Architecture, Architectural History 1, Architectural Structures 1, Landscape Plants I & II, Turf Grass Culture, Botany and Botany Lab, Landscape Studio I – IV, Landscape Graphics III, Intro to Agricultural Sciences, Arboriculture, History of Modern Landscape Architecture, Site Improvement and Drainage, Pests of Ornamental Plants, Elementary Surveying, Principles of Environmental Entomology, Professional Administration, Soil and Water Conservation, Landscape Contracting, Nursery Management, Nature and Properties of Soils, Transportation Planning and Issues, Landscape Construction Documents, Computer Applications of Architecture, CADD for Architecture, History of Landscape Architecture
Work Experience Architect of the Capitol US Botanic Garden Washington D.C. Intern June 2009 - August 2011
Duties - Planting design and research - Aiding in the Bartholdi Park Restoration Project - Increasing sustainability via the installation of drought tolerant plant material throughout Bart Park
Extracurricular Activities Delta Sigma Omicron Jan 2009 - Dec 2011 Disability Student Organization Florida A & M University - Vice President - Chairman of Architectural Barriers Committee - Ensuring that the facilities and grounds of Florida A & M University meet ADA standards for students with physical disabilities.
Student Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects Florida A & M Student Member of the Urban Land Institute (Inactive) Student Member of Congress for the New Urbanism (Inactive)
Aug 2009 - Present Aug 2009 - Present Jan 2010 - Present
Japanese Gardens
Gardening Styles
Manipula ng Perspec ve & Scale
Chaniwa (Tea Garden)
Tsukiyama (Hill and Pond Garden)
Influenced mainly by Zen Buddhism and can be found at Zen temples of medita on. The main elements of Karesansui are rocks and sand, with the sea symbolized not by water but by sand raked in pa erns that s mulates the feeling of rippling water. Plants are much less important, and some mes nonexistent in many Karesansui gardens. Rocks and moss are used to represent ponds, islands, boats, seas, rivers, and mountains in an abstract way.
Chaniwa Gardens are built for holding tea ceremonies. The tea ceremonies are held in a tea house which lies within the garden. In this gardening style, guests are required to move over a roji or “dewy path” that circumnavigates the garden finally ending at the tea house. The roji leaves the observer with a sense of fulfillment and an apprecia on for their surroundings. Once guests arrive to the tea house, they purify themselves with water from the Tsukubai (stone basin).
Tsukiyama gardens typically feature an ar ficial hill combined with a pond and a stream and various plants, shrubs, and trees. Such gardens can be viewed from various vantage points as you stroll along the garden paths, or appreciated from a par cular temple building or house on the grounds. Tsukiyama gardens o en copy famous landscapes from China or Japan, and they commonly strive to make a smaller garden appear more spacious. This is accomplished by u lizing shrubs to block views of surrounding buildings, and the garden's structure usually tries to make onlookers focus on nearby mountains in the distance.
Large stepping stones make a “lake” of gravel traversable
A moss covered stone in the middle of the rippled symbolically represents an island among the waves of the ocean
Making Space Appear Smaller
Forcing Forc cing g Perspect Perspective p ive
View from above
Small trees make the nearby waterfall seem larger
Large Tree
Large tree
Middle Ground Small tree
Mounding Shrubs in the middle ground
Middle Ground Not Obscured
Small Tree
Making space appear Larger Small Tree View from Above
Large planter in the forground
mounding stones Large tree and bushes obscure middle ground
Garden Elements
As well as an aesthe c func on, this dry riverbed aids runoff in heavy rain.
The roji to this tea house traverses over an algae covered stream.
In the background of this Tsukiyama garden, one will find an ar ficial hill that tricks the mind into thinking it is a mountain.
Waterfalls
Water Basin
Paths
Streams
Lanterns
Bridges
Common Plant Materials Trees & Large Shrubs
Japanese Maple Acer palmatum
Medium-sized shrubs Small Shrubs & small trees
Cherry Plum Prunus cerasifera
Japanese holly Ilex crenata
Chinese Juniper Juniperus chinensis
Vines
Japanese Wisteria Wisteria floribunda
Water Plants
Water lily Nymphaea
Bamboo
Planting design research Board Japanese Gardens
Karesansui (Dry Landscape)
Black Bamboo Phyllostachys nigra
lde - 001 Landscape Plants II
Chinese Redbud Cercis chinensis Stanford Dwayne Barnes III ORH 3515 Duke
Star Magnolia Magnolia stellata
Japanese Camellia Camellia japonica
Rose Daphne Daphe cneorum
Climbing Hydrangea Hydrangea peƟolaris
Japanese Iris Iris ensata
Japanese Gardens
Yellow Groove Bamboo Phyllostachys aureosulcata
Ponds
Koi
Gates
Research Board Layout
Landscape Plants II Spring 2009
Adobe Illustrator
Spring 2009 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
The Sam & Jackie Hand Residence 506 Williams St. Tallahassee FL lde- 002 Landscape Studio I Hand Residence Functional Diagram Sketch Prismacolor Pencil
Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
6
10
12
6
A/C
11
13
1
Grass Joint Paved Driveway
15
6
Lamp
Patio Lawn
Pavillion
Williams
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3 6 7
5
1
1. Ligustrum lucidum 8 2. Liquidambar styraciflua 3. Quercus virginiana 4. Magnolia Grandiflora Dry Riverbed (Smooth stones) 5. Cornus florida 6. Prunus serrulata Basement 7. Pinus access 8. Acer palmatum 9. Cinnamomum camphora 10. Malus floribunda 11. Lagerstroemia fauriei 12. Hydrangea scandens 13. Wisteria frutescens N 14. Gelsemium sempervirens 15. Liriope muscari
The Hand Residence 506 Williams St. Tallahassee FL
2 Lawn
Street
New Deck
7
Wood Storage
14
LDE - 003 Landscape Studio I
Lantern
Hand Residence Master Plan Hand Drawn Micron Pen
Fall 2009 Designer
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Stanford D. Barnes III
Lafayette Park Tree Attrition Solution Plan Tallahassee, Fl lde- 004 Landscape Studio III Lafayette Park Tree replacement plan Adobe Photoshop cs5 Adobe Illustrator cs5 Fall 2010 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Overflow Parking
Garage
Dumpster
Nandina Cherry Trees service drive
Mulch
SerpenĆ&#x;ne Brick Masonry Wall
Liriope
Herb Garden
Brokaw McDougall house City of Tallahassee, fl
Gathering Area
Turf
A/C Units
Elevator
Crepe Myrtle
Crepe Myrtle Cherry Trees
Crepe Myrtle Parking
Crapapple Mulch Benches
Green Joint Paving
M Live Oak
Azaleas
ee
uk
os icc
Turf
Pond
Hyrangea
Liriope Turf
N
1:16
Carolina Jessamine
Mulch
Turf
Gate
lde - 005 Landscape studio IV McDougall House Master Plan CaD DrAwing
North Meridian
AutoCAD
Spring 2011 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Structural & Contour Model Corner of Monroe & Tennessee St Tallahassee FL ARCh - 006 Arch Studio 2.1 Mixed Use Development Structural Model Sketch Google Sketchup
Fall 2007 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Florida A & M South Campus Site Massing ARC - 007 Arch Studio 2.2 Famu South Campus Site Massing BIM Drawing Revit Architecture
Summer 2008 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Campus Conference Room Florida A & M University arch - 008 arch Studio 2.2 Conference room BIM Rendering 3d Perspective Revit Architecture Summer 2008 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Campus Cafe Florida A & m university arch - 009 Arch Studio 2.2 Campus Cafe 3D Model
BIM Rendering Revit Architecture Summer 2008 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III
Sections
Embarcadero Arts center San Francisco, CA
Elevation
ARCh - 010 CADD for ARCH Line Drawing Photo Manipulation Revit Architecture Photoshop cs5
spring 2012 Designer Stanford D. Barnes III