works builtworks* TAYLOR
HOLLOWAY
contact CONTACT
email:
PORTFOLIO 2013
thollowa@gmail.com
tel: pdf:
+1 505 660 9332
www.issuu.com/taylorholloway
01
works
Architectural Portfolio 2013 pride and st. peters An Architectural Typology for Housing
02
abrazo
A Place to Learn Where You Live
03
en-rainbowed Educatorium in Downtown Chicago
04
holegrain
A Publishing House
05
meditations on drawing
Drawing Techniques
Pride& St.Peter
Fall 2012 Instructors: Sam Jacob and Jimenez Lai University of Illinois at Chicago
W
hat began as an interest in articulated interior space found within Saint Peter’s Basilica, became an effort to create a new housing typology that Chicago could call its own. Pride and St. Peter evokes 17th century French master planning, the English Picturesque Landscape, the curvature of Ustad Ahmad Lahauri’s mausoleum domes, and is faithful to the lineage of the Greek Ionic column. Yet, each element has been relayed through the filter of the original governing geometry found in the plan of Saint Peter’s Basilica. The result is an architecture of grandeur and idyllic vistas that no longer belongs to princes and deities, but to urbanites residing at the corner of West Harrison and Wells.
detail, final board 5.8’ x 4.3’
1.
2.
3.
1506 Plan of St. Peter’s Basilica, Donato Bramante 1995 Still: Pride and Prejudice, BBC Section of Michelangelo’s St. Peter’s Basilica, Etienne Duperac
4. 1. 2. 3. 4.
Distill Bramante’s plan into pattern variations using rules of symmetry Allow landscape to be equal player in creation of project narrative Create sectional qualities that assert articulation of void space & surfaces Use change in scale and repetition as tools to generate new plan geometry
ABRAZO Spring 2011 Instructors: Grant Gibson & Andrew Moddrell University of Illinois at Chicago
hug. [huhg] verb, hugged, hug-ing, noun -verb (used with object) 1. to clasp tightly in the arms, especially with affection; embrace. 2. to keep close to, as in sailing, walking or in moving along or alongside of; to hug the shore; to hug the road.
T
he courtyard building is infamous for hugging space or clinging desperately to air and sunlight. A courtyard building that hugs more than a void becomes an enlivened and purposeful courtyard. Abrazo is a mixed-use housing project that is endowed with a very specific purpose for a very specific resident: children. An elementary school occupies the entire ground floor and periodically punctures the courtyard throughout all floor levels. Both the programmed and un-programmed spaces are devoted to housing children in a way that allows for independence, safety, and adventure.
Unit Aggregation
(Tetris-like) +
Small Family
+
Larger Family
Teacher
Classroom
Unit Plans
First Floor
Second Floor
First Floor
Second Floor
Teacher Studio
Classroom
north section 1/16=1’0”
view of school pod within courtyard
a. Children’s circulation b. Mechanical systems c. Structural column planes d. Total systems e. Interior & exterior skins
a.
b.
view of interior courtyard
c.
d.
e.
ground floor plan Classrooms create plinth for Abrazo while Library, Indoor playground, Dining hall, and Teacher’s lounge are located on separate housing floors.
S
pace is a necessary condition for play. -Aldo Van Eyck
street view from southeast
en-rainbowed Fall 2010 Instructor: Sarah Dunn University of Illinois at Chicago At the end of the rainbow is ___________. 1. an urban mountain 2. a new type of urbanism 3. an educatorium
e
n-rainbowed is an urban educatorium connected to Chicago’s Union Station that accommodates the living, learning, and recreation requirements of a collegiate campus within one city block. The project proposes a solution to the sprawl of the Midwestern city, which can be equated to an inland sea. A sea of trains, streets, and cars that create islands out of diverse neighborhoods, languages, and cultures. In order for interaction and collaboration to occur, within the classroom or the city, the distance between people needs to diminish. en-rainbowed connects people and priorities through pure contiguity.
The use of Simply Maps served to provide demographic data on the various populations that live along the eight train lines of the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA). Population, income and ethnicity relay a combined trend that is telling of the residents and communities at the ends of the Blue Line versus Downtown Chicago. My interest in these differen’t trends led me to design en-rainbowed to serve as an icon of a more connected city; thereby attempting to bring Chicago’s many populations together. Clark/Lake White Non-Hispanic (%Total Pop.) - 62.79% Highest Income (Median HH) - $96,100
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Irving Park White Non-Hispanic (%Total Pop.) - 97.06% Income (Median HH) - $52,000
Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) Blue Line Household Income & % White Non-Hispanic Population Total Population Income White Non-Hispanic
Existing urban condition
Existing Chicago grid
T
Circulation voids
Collapse West - East
Connect and influence
Collapse North - South
Propel by proximity.
he functions of the city can be reduced to a smaller area; increasing efficiency and freeing up green space. The model of an “Urban Mountain� isapplied to the educatorium to promote cross-programming and reduce the temporal, monetary and environmental costs associated with commuting.
Before.
After!
ground floor plan
A
dministration
Elev. 170ft
Elev. 350ft
S
ports & Wellness
Elev. 600ft
L
iving
Elev. 391ft
A
cademia
R
Elev. 175ft
ecreation
Eighth Floor Plan. This particular floor contains three programmatic functions: Sports and Wellness, Living, and Academia. The banded condition allows for integration of all aspects of campus activity and saves the student body time as the various campus programs aren’t subject to separate floors or buildings. Opposite: Programmatic Floor Plans
SECTION
adjacent
strata
puzzle
plan
adjacent
strata
puzzle
strata
puzzle
FACADE
PLAN
section
monolith
adjacent
Facade and Program Arrangement Study
north section
Interior scenario of Living, located within the yellow ‘band’ of the educatorium, adjacent to Sports & Wellness, characterized by the green ‘band’. Opposite: Interior model views of Living, Academia, and Recreation
holegrain
Spring 2010 Instructors: Penelope Dean, Andy Moddrell, Ryan Palider University of Illinois at Chicago
T
he shortest distance between two points is a straight line. Within a cube, the shortest distance between opposite corners is a diagonal line. Similarly, the most direct way to convey a message to a wide audience is also a line, a line of text. The efficiency of the diagonal line is what governs the circulation within holegrain, a mat building programmed as a publishing house. Large open areas and dense floor plates are separated by an expansive, diagonal circulation ramp; yet, this large ramp acts as an artery as it allows movement from the ground floor to the the rest of the model in a single act of ascension. Printing and production occurs on one half of the building that provides expansive, open areas. The writing and editing work for the publications all occurs on the opposite side of the building which is characterized by similar layouts and floor to ceiling glazing that allows for the infiltration of natural light. Here single floor transitional hallways enable proximity for offices and promote cohesion among the users occupying the five floors.
M
odel making techniques using pliable pvc, foam, paper, and metal wire, began as investigations of form and became studies of process, plan, section, and the diagram.
Plan and Section / Figure Ground Studies
Envelope Strategy & Circulation
Program & Structure
Technique
Technique, cont.
Final model photos: Site detail, South facade, & Diagonal circulation
West
East
South
North
Elevations highlighting structure Opposite: Sixth floor plan
Meditations on Drawing Fall 2009 Instructors: Paul Preissner, Laura Fehlberg, Julie Flor University of Illinois at Chicago
E
xplorations in curve geometry led to the generation of surfaces and complex volumes. My particular interest lent itself to the development of systems of repetition. Meditations on Drawings is a redux look at accumulative pattern compositions as well as investigations of incremental variation through experimentation that I developed in my coursework.
builtworks* 01
Architectural Portfolio 2013
no, you see me. now you don’t.
Academic Seminar Design
02
building blocks
Academic Seminar Design
03
pride & st. peter
(chair)
04 05
adornment Jewelry Design
Hands On Disaster Response
Not-for-profit Work
no, you see me. now you don’t.
An exercise in inferring narratives from a selection of descriptive geometries and movable props. Materials: Cast Acrylic & Poplar Technology: CNC & Laser Cutter
6"
12"
orientation A
orientation B
(building blocks)
These blocks serve as a first attempt to mediate the differnece between reduced geometric forms in architecture and the ever-evolving children’s toy. Materials: Birch plywood Technology: CNC & sandpaper
Pride & St. Peter (chair)
In lieu of an architectural model, this particular architectural studio included the creation of an architectural object that represented the intent of my design at midterm. The chair relates to my exploration of symmetry and 17th century French decor found at the Palace of Versailles. Materials: Reclaimed wood chairs, plywood, cotton batting, fabric.
jewelry design
Selection of recent necklace and bracelet designs.
Materials: Cast Acrylic, acorns, semi-precious stones, metal wire, ribbon, found objects, glass beads.
Hands On Disaster Response
During the summer of 2010 I participated in the Transitional Schools Program orchestrated by Hands On Disaster Response in Léogâne, Haiti. A total of twenty schools were built over 25 months; providing 3,000 students and 219 teachers with safe learning and working environments in their communities. The “disaster-resistant” schools that were constructed utilized a unique hand rendered concrete wall forming process. If an earthquake were to occur, the concrete walls of the school would create debris only the size of a chain-link fence diamond; virtually eliminating the possibility for injury and ensuring ruble removal without heavy machinery. While in Haiti I also developed a construction manual outling how to build these earthquake specific walls for Hands On Disaster Response’s future projects.