Discipline: ASU Architecture Journal 07

Page 116

Ashley Ontiveros The Graft and Host

S

.H. Walkway was a project like no other. Within the context of a pandemic, it brought me back to connect with architecture and, at the same time, helped me understand the network that happens between architecture within the social, political, environmental, and economic contexts. I was assigned to design a place for study onto an existing ASU building: The Farmer Education Building. So, I called this project S.H. Walkway as a mirror of the acronyms for H.B. Farmer Education Building. At first, I didn’t understand how this project would help me see the connection between architecture and the various contexts in which it embedded itself. It wasn’t easy to start seeing all of these connections that I had to make for this project without relating to it myself. I could only become more deeply connected to the Farmer Education building before I could make any other connection. I started thinking to myself how a floating idea had to become grounded into the reality of an existing ASU building. There was a physical connection that I had to build from here to there. The fact that the site, the people, and the environment were already chosen for me intensified the need to bridge architecture to another. I wasn’t sure yet how to go about this bridge, so I visited the site.

It had been a long time since I last visited the ASU campus. As soon as I stepped in front of the Farmer Education Building, memories and emotions spilled left and right. I realized that there was already an unspoken connection I had forgotten: this was where all of the connections started. My overall experience while designing this project is a connection itself that happened subconsciously. I had met different obstacles, trying to shape my design to the contexts of the social environment and others. I constantly reminded myself that my space reflected the students already moving through the Farmer Building. I needed to keep these relationships in mind throughout the project because the design couldn’t sit alone. It had to connect with the Farmer Education Building in more than one way. I started sketching one idea after another on my tracing pad. Each iteration had a close mark to the last one, and it kept happening, sketch after sketch. Each time my heart pounded louder because I felt drawing one connection closer to the next. Then, I realized that my final decision for a design would encompass the whole nature of a connection. My project had to embody connection. How so?


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Acknowledgments

0
page 143

Junjie Wu

1min
pages 136-139

Erin Bascom

1min
pages 122-127

Yara Kamali & Andrew Synacek

2min
pages 128-131

Alexandra Shott

3min
pages 120-121

Orange Build

2min
pages 118-119

Ashley Ontiveros

3min
pages 116-117

Oriana Gil Perez

0
pages 114-115

Meriel Vogliotti

2min
pages 106-109

Udit Shah

3min
pages 110-113

Ananth Udupa

5min
pages 102-105

Smirti Jain

3min
pages 100-101

César López Rodriguez

4min
pages 96-99

Erin Bascom

3min
pages 90-93

Ronjting Jin

3min
pages 86-89

with Dellan Raish Dongwoo Jason Yeom

7min
pages 60-63

Chaoqun Lin

4min
pages 76-79

with Ananth Udupa Paul Coseo

17min
pages 64-71

Dellan Raish

0
pages 72-75

with Brennan Richards Michelle Fehler

7min
pages 56-59

with Erin Bascom Rick Joy & Claudia Kappl Joy

14min
pages 40-45

with Ashley Ontiveros Nenwe Geeso

6min
pages 52-55

with Meriel Vogliotti Karín Santiago

15min
pages 46-51

Going Beyond Spatial Connection Alexandra Shott

3min
pages 30-31

Homemade Alisa Hernandez

3min
pages 22-23

Maybe Yes. Maybe No. Elena Rocchi

4min
pages 18-21

A Parallel Connection to My Space Ashley Ontiveros

1min
pages 34-39

The Construction of Mystery and Suspense Yasmine Kattan

1min
pages 16-17

Time to Connect Marc Neveu

3min
pages 14-15
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