TA N N E R MARTIN
GL A C KI N
ARCHITECTURE
PORTFOLIO
ALMOST SOMEWHERE RESILIENCY CENTER MAIN STREET
P R I D E T H E
P O I N T
R I P P L E
F I N D I N G
THE
V O I D S
DISORIENTATION
CARVED
READING
AND
ASSIMILATION
SPACE
ALL GENDERS WELCOME
3. 11. 17. 23. 29. 33. 39. 43. 47.
Tanner Glackin ( Spring 2020, Professor Lisa Iwamoto)
Master Plan
03
Almost Somewhere
ALMOST SOMEWHERE Master’s Thesis: Adaptive Re-Use of Newport’s Gas Stations
Excavation Axon
Intersection Design Axon
The thesis project is situated in a post-petroleum future where most gas station are becoming abandoned and obsolete The project takes the twelve gas stations and creates networks of new programs and resources to help bridge the divide. Paint on the surface of the asphalt, defined by the previous circulation of the car is used as locators, helping to define and identify these new programmatic territories. Three gas stations in the territory in the top right were chosen to be developed. Since all of the sites are designated as contaminated brownfields, the design starts with the remediating the site through excavating the contaminated soil and petroleum storage tanks This territory consists of tree programs: A skate park, a playscape, and a public health clinic. The automobile circulation lines not only act as locators but are also used to carve the site and organize the design’s program.
Section Perspective
05
Almost Somewhere
SKATE PARK Master’s Thesis: Adaptive Re-Use of Newport’s Gas Stations The first site, the skate park, uses the old circulation of the car to define the circulatory elements for the skate park. Areas where this doesn’t happen, the site’s asphalt is carved out to expose the ground underneath, allowing for local plant life to populate and reclaim the site. This reclamation is extended to the canopy where vegetation grows on top of and in the canopy structure. The designs look to reappropriate and reuse as much of the existing conditions as possible. The excavation produces a dynamic slope for skating while the recycled storage tank is repurposed into a halfpipe.
Perspective View
Axon Section
Section Perspective
07
Almost Somewhere
PLAYSCAPE Master’s Thesis: Adaptive Re-Use of Newport’s Gas Stations The second site, the playscape, related to the skate park through its active associations also redefines the notion of circulation on the site by allowing access to the canopy and creating multiple elements for climbing and sliding. A slide from the top of the canopy made of recycled storage takes goes into a pool generated from the site remediation. The brick structure underneath the canopy is turned into a trampoline, while the canopy’s cladding is cut away to allow jumpers to pass through the structure. Contaminated soil is contained with a lining, and planted over, creating mounds along the site’s edge for children to play on.
Perspective View
Axon Section
Section Perspective
09
Almost Somewhere
PUBLIC CLINIC Master’s Thesis: Adaptive Re-Use of Newport’s Gas Stations The third site, the public health clinic, uses the canopy for solar PVs which give energy to the medical equipment. If a user of the skate park or the playscape got hurt, they could quickly access the care they need. The program includes a drive through testing station in pandemic situations, quick general care, and areas for sanitation made from the recycled storage takes. Because healthcare architecture tends to be opaque and daunting, the design through the use of breaking down the brick structure and locating the general care under the canopy attempts to increase the feeling of accessibility.
Perspective View
Axon Section
Tanner Glackin ( Fall 2019, Professor Mark Jensen and Steven Huegli)
11
Resiliency Center
RESILIENCY CENTER San Rafael Community Green House and Food Pantry SECTION A 1/16” =1’-0”
SECTION B 1/16” =1’-0”
Exterior Perspective
CTION D 1/16” =1’-0”
SECTION C 1/16” =1’-0”
The community center in San Rafael, built on bay fill in a food insecure and flood-prone area, focuses on three main aspects of resiliency: seismic resiliency, flood resiliency, and food security. The building a steel frame structure on concrete piles for foundation stability. The steel structure is braced throughout for seismic stability. The building’s general program is divided into two with the greenhouse bridging the general programs on the second level allowing for the food pantry activity to happen under. The building form uses a gable roof typology that optimizes solar gain for the greenhouse.
Arial Axon Ground Floor Plan
SECTION A 1/16” =1’-0”
Passive Strategies Section Perspective
13
Resiliency Center
SECTION D 1/16” =1’-0”
SECTION B 1/16” =1’-0”
SECTION C 1/16” =1’-0”
Enlarged Building Facade Building Cross Sections
Structual Bay Model
15
Resiliency Center
Detail Wall Section
Building Component Exploded Axon
Tanner Glackin (UNCC 4th Year Fall 2016, Professor Mona Azarbayjani, Arch 4101)
17
Charlotte Cultural Center
MAIN STREET Charlotte Multicultural Center The Cultural Center considers a relationship with the existing arts district in Charlotte to create an active territory for indoor /outdoor spaces where people can meet, design, and learn about sustainability. The cultural center invites visitors to immediately feel a diverse sense of place created by open plazas, local retail, public art, and cultural activities that connect people with their passions. An atrium running through the building creates a place for social interaction, reflecting the attitude of the main street of the nearby arts district neighborhood of North Davidson.
North Building Section
NW Model Axon
SE Model Axon Parti Building Model
Program and Building Design The Eco-Regional Cultural Center is home to a diverse set of programs that include offices, studio space, classrooms, a small auditorium, and a restaurant that has a view to the Uptown district. The variety of applications in the building, as well as the various spatial qualities, ensures that the building will be able to outlast its current program and will be flexible to program changes in the future. The open atrium serves to connect the building and become a place where both occupants of the building and people passing through the site can intermingle. The pockets of resting space within the atrium provide for places where people circulating through the area can stop to relax and enjoy the shade provided by the overhead louver system.
19
Charlotte Cultural Center
Dominant Circulation
Occupation and Building Connection
Native Plant Landscape Incorporation
Voids Defined by Circulation
South Section
Paralled Techtonic Space
West Section
Paralled Steriotonic Space
A.
B.
Atrium Perspective C.
D.
North Elevation
A.
Roof PV panels and atrium louver system.
B. Glulam structure using biodegradable glue and wood sourced from local tree farms. C.
High performance triple pane glass window systems to increase insulation in the building.
D. Recycled plastic panels for building facade.
West Elevation
Interior Perspectives
Rain water collected ont he roof and filtered partly by the south facing green facade and artifical wet land.
0perable windows and cross ventilation systems passively cools and ventilates the buildings interior
Roof surface area covered with PV system that reduces the buildings carbon emissions by 80 ton of carbon a yera by producing 194.076 kwh/hr
Case Active Bioremediation System on some interior walls to help improve interior air quality.
Geothermal heat pumps uses an earth loop to help extract heat out of the ground to help heat the building water and air reducing Co2 emissions by 82.82 tons a year
Water Regeneration and Use
Rain
Solar Roof
Potable
Water
Site Runoff Grey Water
Green Facade
Black Water
Rain Garden/ Artificial Wetland
Sewage Irrigation
Cistern
Site Plan Gallery Wall Section
Tanner Glackin (2rd Year Grad UCB Fall 2018, Professor Paz Gutierez, Arch 201) Tanner Glackin ( UC Berkeley Fall 2018, Professor Paz Gutierrez, Arch 201)
Musuem Buidling Sections
23
Candle Stick Point Master Plan
Project Elevatopm
P R I D E
P O I N T
Concept Model
CANDLESTICK POINT MASTER PLAN Pride point is an urban design proposal for Candle Stick Point in SF including an archeology museum to be positioned and designed somewhere on the site. The proposal focuses on the lack of connectivity and accessibility throughout the site. Rather than developing a plan that will bring in outside companies and subsequently people into the area, which would lead to the gentrification of this lower income neighborhood, the proposal focuses on the lack of recourses and connection to the waterfront that the current residences face. An infrastructural network is used to connect current neighbor hoods to different parts of the site as well as the waterfront. Pop up shops and start-ups created by people in the local community are designed to appendage to the infrastructural paths. Distributed along one of the main sections of the network, the history museum creates interventions that disturb the circulation, making the passerby view particular areas of the broader site that are of historical significance to the existing community. These museum instillations serves as a reminder for visitors of the site that the history, legacy, and occupation of the existing community is to be preserved. 2100 Year Site Plan
Museum Sections
Site Sections
25 Candle Stick Point Master Plan
0”
Museum Section
Exterior Renderings
Museum Section
Museum Sections 1/16” = 1’ - 0”
Museum Section
Axons of Inaccessible Instances on Site
Sections of Inaccessible Instances on Site
Diagrams of Inaccessible Instances on Site
Inaccessible Road Section
27 Candle Stick Point Master Plan
Inaccessible Peir Section
Inaccessible Stair Section
Demographic Site Section Model
Demographic Site Section Model
Site Massing Iterations
Layered Demographic Site Section
Demographic Site Section Model
Tanner Glackin ( Springl 2019, Professor David Baker, Carol Galante, Arch 202)
29
Roof Perspective
T H E
R I P P L E
Massing Diagram
ROCKRIDGE AFFORADBLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
Multi-Family Section
The Ripple is a 100% affordable housing development located on two parcels adjacent to the Rockridge BART station. It consists of two buildings: a 126 unit multi-family building and a 45 unit LGBTQ-affirming senior building. Twenty-six percent of units are set aside for formerly homeless families. Operated by Mercy Housing, the Ripple provides housing for households earning 30-60% AMI, with an average building AMI of 44.7%.
Senior Living Section Perspective Building Axon
Senior Building Interior
Exterior Building Perspectives
31 Rockridge Affordable Housing Development
Multi- Family Interior
Building Podium
Unit Design Plan
Building Courtyards
es
Ave
Building Program
Colle
ge A v
e
Mil
Keith Ave
e r Av
afte
Sh
Site Plan
Building Unit Types
Tanner Glackin (UNCC 3rd Year, Fall 2015, Professor Peter Wong, Arch 3101)
33
Dallas Warehouse
F I N D I N G THE
V O I D S Dallas Warehouse “Finding the Voids� is designed as a microcosm of the city Dallas. Inspired by Perry Kulper, the warehouse treated the project as a free plan, mapping the programmatic spaces throughout the project. While scaled based on area requirements, the occupiable pavilions trace contours through the formal layers of the programmatic relational, structural, and the columnar system to establish its form aesthetic. These business occupancy areas create voids within a dense fabric of shelving units. Conceptually, the pavilions represent the significant monuments/ buildings in the city of Dallas that are voids in the mundane sprawl of the city. The path running through the building is a metaphor for the Trinity River in Dallas, cutting through the grid of the city.
Exterior Building Perspective
Ground Floor Plan
35
Dallas Warehouse
Site Plan Model
Site Plan
City Scale Building Location
Abstract Massing Building Model
Exploded Building Axon
Structural Building Model
South Building Elevation
North Building Section
North Building Elevation
SE Building Section
37
Dallas Warehouse
Structural Bay Model
Structural Bay Model Top View
Structural Bay Model Detail View Structural Bay Section/ Elevation
Tanner Glackin (Tongji U 4th Year, Spring 2017 Professor Mei Qing Arch 4102)
39
Shanghai Jewish Refugee Museum Extension
West Elevation/ Section
DISORIENTATION AND
ASSIMILATION Shanghai Jewish Refugee Museum Extension The project focuses on reflecting the experience of the Jewish refugees who entered into China, fleeing from persecution in the late 1930’s and early 1940’s. The concept of the building’s design, inspired by Lebbeus Woods and the Nanjing Massacre Memorial, focuses on translating the emotional experience and process of the refugees through the circulation of the building. The quality of the space progresses from violent and chaotic to calm and complete. The change in the spatial character reflects upon the Jewish refugees’ feeling of disorientation and emotional despair when first arriving in Shanghai until their eventual settlement and assimilation. The intersecting planes create a variety of experiences that reflect those of the Jewish refugees through spatial conditions as one circulates through the building.
Entrance Hand Drawn Perspective
Interior Hand Drawn Perspective
1. Tessellation Model Iteration
2.
3.
Folded Model Iteration
Twisted Strips Model Iteration
41
Shanghai Jewish Refugee Museum Extension
Conceptual Circulation Diagram
Exploded Building Axon
Ground Floor Plan
East Building Section
Second Floor Plan
Restored Building Wall Section
Tanner Glackin (UNCC 3rd Year, Spring 2016, Professor Dale Bentrup, Arch 3102)
Exploded Building Model
43 Charlotte Public Library
Program Priorities Site Requirements
Staff Area
Entry and Public Area
Human Occupation
View
Community Amenities
Support Areas
C A R V E D READING
Materiality
Natural Light
Artificial Light
Collections Storage
S PA C E S
Sound
Charlotte Public Library The Charlotte Public Library’s design sought to create a dynamic and passively daylit space where people could read and learn. The act of carving out areas was used as a conceptual method to achieve this goal. Light cannons at either end of the building brought natural light into the building, indentions in the walls create occupiable places to read, and a stramp (stair ramp) connects the top to the ground floor through using a handicap-accessible method to navigate the building.
ded by the overhead louver system.
North Building Perspective
Entrance Perspective
North Building Section
Parti Model
East Building Section
Passive Daylighting and Ventilation Strategies
Penetration of Daylighting
45
Charlotte Public Library
Ground Floor Plan
Basement Floor Plan
Exploded Building Axon
West Wall Section
Panel Frame Axon
47
Restroom Exhibit Installation
All GENDERS WELCOME Bathroom Exhibit to Advocate and Inform the Public on Gender Neutral Restooms The bathroom installation was a group effort of multiple individuals in QED (Queers in Environmental Design) and funded by a CED Diversity Platform Grant. The purpose of the installation was to inform the public on the importance of gender-neutral restrooms. The outside of the exhibit consisted of research of local and global design precedents for gender-neutral bathrooms while the inside displayed student’s experiences with the lack of gender-neutral/ gender accessible restrooms in the CED. The exhibit itself was designed in the size of an ADA complaint gender neural bathroom stall. Leading the design and construction of the exhibit, I made it so that the exhibit was comprised of prefabricated panels that could be easily assembled and disassembled on site.