Architecture Design Portfolio

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Architecture Design Selected Works 2013-2016

Portfolio

By. Chenyuan Wang New Jersey of Institute Technology


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2016- Italy Venice, Chihuly Glasswork Studio

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2015- Swimming pool

2013- Newark Scholars Residence

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2016- Studio Amazon for Future

2014- Newark Bridge Challenge

2013- Harrison Station, Brick Project


CHENYUAN WANG STUDENT ARCHITECT Architecture is the field in which my passion lies. I love the challenge of researching and developing new ideas. Architecture is more than simply designing structures; architects display history through their designs and make an impact that can persist for generations. I am highly motivated to pursue this field and will use my skills and experience to my advantage while devoting myself to learning that which I do not know.

EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND - Bachelor of Architecture, College of Architecture and Design New Jersey Institute of Technology

2011 - 2016

- Highland Park High School, New Jersey

2008 – 2011

WORK EXPERIENCE - JWC Architect engineer D.P.C, founded by James Wu Chen AIA. *3D Drawing, Revit, AutoCAD, Boss assistant, etc.

2013

- Lab Assistant in Dr. Matise’s Lab of Neuroscience and Cell Development Program Joint UMDNJ &Rutgers.

2009 - 2011

ABOUT

ME

15 February, 1992

TECHNICAL SKILL - Adobe Illustrator CS6 - Adobe Photoshop CS6 - Rhino 5 - Revit 2016 - Lumion 6.0 - AutoCAD 2016 - Google Sketchup - Word, Excel, PowerPoint

LANGUAGES 10 6 8 6 10 8 10 10

- ENGLISH - CHINESE MANDARIN

6 10

2002 Ethan Lane Highland Park New Jersey 08904 New Jersey Institute of Technology

INTERESTS

CONTACT +1 732 - 485 - 1239

OTHER SKILL - COMMUNICATION - TEAM WORK - TIMING - WORK

wcy719220979@gmail.com 8 10 9 10

https://www.facebook.com/jack.wang.334


2013- Harrison Station, Brick Project In this design, I adopt the translucent building concept. To achieve this concept, I designed a tri-dimensional wall which is made of bricks but arranged with a special space structure. The wall will not block the view of people, who are catching the train in the terminal. The wall is a translucent weight-bearing wall. Some space between two bricks allows people to look through the wall.

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Washington St 2’

6’

6’

Top Floor 8’

Unit 5

2’

8’

6’ 4’

Unit 2

Space

Unit 1

3

4’

Unit 3

Unit 6

Gatering

8’

Washington St 2’ 4’

Enclose

6’

Second Floor 4’

Third Floor

Open Gathering Space

2’

Ground Floor

Washington St

I designed this four-store building, in which the ground floor is for entertainment use, the second and third floors are for living use, and the roof floor is for working use. In this design, one of the most important layouts is to set the main open gathering space and enclose gathering space on the roof floor. This layout is 1) to give an open visual field of these two units, 2) to give a refreshing feeling of working people, and 3)thus to inspire their curiosity to explore the view on this floor. In the front side of this floor, there is also reserved an outdoor field to separate the open gathering space into left and right parts, which is providing an open area for working people. There is one lift in the left and right side of this building, respectively. The right side one can only be stopped at the ground and roof floor for convenient working purpose; while the left one can be stopped at every floor. Two more details of this design, which I want to describe here, are 1) on the second floor I employed an additional bridge to connect the left and right units, and 2) on the third and roof floor I chose a circulation design instead. These two designs working together could express a dynamic arrangement of this building and better spatial mobility.

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To design this building, I followed the architectural concept and style of L'Astrolarbre and Vacant Lots, the two examples from our case study, especially the arrangement and connectivity of their unit space. For example, I employed the idea of circulation from L'Astrolarbre (Paris) and the idea of connecting two main buildings with bridges was aroused from Vacant Lots.

Washington St

2013- Newark Scholars Residence

Unit 4

Cafe

Retail

8’


4


2014- Newark Bridge Challenge Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is one of the most famous modern architecture pioneers. He admired the broad proportions, regularity of rhythmic elements, attention to the relationship of the man-made to nature, and compositions using simple cubic forms. “Less is more” is one of the most important concepts in most of his designs. Here, I also followed this concept to emphasize the beauty of simple. Started with a big rectangle, I cut it into small rectangles and combined them together to make a black small area for club. This design was lighted from an abstract – invading the new black area – intercepting the white installation space – and then combination together to make a simple building. The relationship between the white area and black area is about –invasion and combination together to have new abstract and a new opening space.

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2015- Swimming pool

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BB

CC


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2016- Studio Amazon for Future

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2016- Studio Amazon for Future

Green space

Canal and Lagoon

Ground

City

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Distribution

Site Analysis


Site Influences and Projections

Pull up

Extruded Masses

Extending Mass

Lecture Workspace

Exhibition Space

Site Format

Vantage Viewpoint

Extrude

Studio Workspace

Site Walk Circulation

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