2 Mise-en-scenes
Core Studio | ARCH2101
12 Threshold
Core Studio | ARCH3101
20 Symphony of Stone
Core Studio | ARCH1102
28 Softened Walls
Core Studio | ARCH2102
40 The Carousel
Elective Studio | ARCH4509
2 Mise-en-scenes
Core Studio | ARCH2101
12 Threshold
Core Studio | ARCH3101
20 Symphony of Stone
Core Studio | ARCH1102
28 Softened Walls
Core Studio | ARCH2102
40 The Carousel
Elective Studio | ARCH4509
A House, a stair, a stage, projecting the street in while projecting out multiple performances to the public.
Video access: https://vimeo. com/799382979
Instructor:
Andrea Simitch
The project “Mise-en-scenes” is a house designed for two couples on Cascadelia avenue in Ithaca. NY. The concept of the scheme is a continuous stair capped by a translucent polycarbonate envelope, where the stair turns into a shelf, a seat, a kitchen counter, a bed, a bar, and a chamber room.
While the structure of the stair spirals up as a continuation of the street, a series of chamber rooms protrudes out, acting as stages that visually connect to the public space. Acting as a stage, the protruding chambers are being seen from the exterior, yet they could also act as spectator seats seeing the outside: the performance of sunrise, the dance of the falling leaves, or the ensemble of the canal...Thus the house is a performance, sometimes private, sometimes public, or a mixture in between.
model featuring the protruding chambers and the continuous stair.
The concept of the scheme is a continuous stair capped by an envelope, while sometimes the stairs extrude, backs off, and touches the envelope.
Mise en scenes, 1':06'', Single channel
Video access: https://vimeo. com/799382979
A one minute film featuring the everchanging chambers in the house. As the scenery on the street projects in, the performances inside the house project out to the street.
Two months observation/research in six fourtune teller, six events, mixed realities.
Exhibited in the "Percieving the Nearby 500m" section of 2022 Hongkong Shenzhen Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture
Instructor: Hanna Tulis
The project "Threshold" is about the events I encountered, and captured near my home. All arranged in the form of the origami “fortune teller”, these series of collage explore multiple dimensions of reality through the operation of the folding and unfolding process. The operation of the origami “fortune teller” explores space and events as a process with an open outcome, multiple possibilities, and temporally open-ended results. Within the fixed combination of the fortune teller, what kind of fabulation would you conjure?
[A] clean
[B] small objects
[C] midium objects
[D] large objects
[E] barely can walk
[F] door opened
fig.1
Snapshots of exit staircase in my apartment building:
Christmas trees, two-meter-large oil paintings, giant chess pieces that only appear in sports playgrounds, and the most popular occupants, bicycles and shoe racks.
Examination charts of objects' occupancy status of each floor in the egress staircase.
Diagram showing the threshold, private and public realm in the egress staircase
Featuring a well-recorded personal research about the exit staircase in my apartment in Shenzhen, China, This is the research behind one of the fortune tellers.
The exit staircase in my apartment building is occupied by my neighbors' personal belongings, in which the "exit '' is less a public escape route, but rather a private extension of the domestic realm. Yet those objects are arranged in a restrained position to leave space for escape. Thus the landing becomes a threshold between the private and the public --- it is the neighbor's extended home, the public corridor, the storage room, the escape route, the connection between me and the neighbors I have never known, an entrance, an exhibition.
On exit sign: "My own lure was the surreal and subversive potential of the signs -- in other words, a flipping upside down of the reality around me. We had in common a desire for an altered reality, whether latently hostile to the signs or drawn toward the possibilities of what else might take their place."
-- Exit, Laura WaddellThese series of fortune teller explore multiple dimensions of reality through the operation of the folding/unfolding process:
1.Reality (an image I took)
2.Manipulated reality ( my dissection of elements relating to the event )
3.Fantasy (my fabulation based on the reality)
The fortune teller starts with an image of the exit staircase (fig.4 reality), then as one unfolds, a series of doors taken in the exit staircase is revealed (fig.5 manipulated reality). As one continues to unfold, a fantasy layer shows my imagination based on the objects outside my neighbors' doors(fig.7). Fully unrolled, the fortune teller exhibits a mixed reality.
Installation in 2022 UABB Bi-City Biennale: (photo credit: Jason Ho) Like the delivery lockers in almost all the neighborhoods in China, the installation, a magenta delivery locker contains 30 works with the prompt "perceiving the nearby 500m" including my
fortune tellers. Delivery locker is a daily device that is ubiquitous in our lives and represents the order of the government's grid management.
fig.7
The installation features packages waiting to be unpacked by viewers - since the artists were restrained by COVID traveling policy, instead they just shipped their work to the location. Also, the installation encourages the viewers to pick up any packages and play around with them, or they can even become participants and add their work to the delivery locker. Later on, the locker becomes a graffiti wall, where viewers leave comments and respond to each other. Thus the installation becomes a dialogue
fig.8
Fortune tellers on site
fig.9
Some passers-by didn't know that the courier cabinet was an exhibited work, and thought it was a storage cabinet used by the organizers of the Biennale for exhibition visitors. We can often see that the audience will put their personal belongings into the empty boxes of the express cabinet, and unconsciously, these personal belongings become exhibits in the express cabinet.
What does marble, or a bus stop sound?
ARCH1102 | Spring 2021
Instructor:
Sasa Zivkovic and Felix Heisel
Teaching Assitance:
Oonagh Davis
Located right above the waterfall of the Nature Trail in Lansing, New York, the bus stop is a threshold of nature. Inspired by the overlying rock bed and waterfall down in the gorge, the project appears as a composition of colorful interlocking marble pieces stacked and interlaced together. The marble pieces come in four modules, where three horizontal modules form the roofs and walls, and one vertical module acts as a column that stitches the whole project together.
Site analysis of the bus stop and its peripheral views of the gorge.
Sound calendar diagram showing the difference in height of the gorge in section.
The bottom score represents the loudness of the
waterfall throughout the 12 months, starting from the silent light lines (as the water is frozen) in winter to loud, bold lines in the summer. The interpreted sound of the bus stop is the range of the dashed lines.
Site model showing the bus route
fig.5
Featuring the angle and trace of the tile saw, a facade system is applied to the horizontal modules, which forms a water tunnel that allows rainwater
to cascade down, creating a hidden, intangible stitch that simulates the sound of the waterfall and weaves the sound of the bus stop into the peripheral site.
Video access: https://vimeo. com/799383190
When the water flows over the marble, the stone surface is temporarily polished, where water activates the color and texture of the marble, triggering a transitory yet intimate moment that could only be seen in the rain.
Scrap pieces produced during the production become mosaic flooring, acting as a visual cue that leads visitors to the gorge. As visitors trample on the floor, the marbles rub against each other and make a rattling sound.
Notes on archive:
"The activity of archiving is an engagement, an interruption in a settled field, which is to enter critically into existing configurations to re-open the closed structures into which they have ossified." --
Stuart Hall, Constituting An Archive
How to construct a living archive on the land that has a painful history of Gayogohó:n ǫ ’ (the Cayuga Nation) dispossession?
Instructor:
Tom Carruthers
Situated in the historical district of Seneca Falls, NY, the library is a community hub that aims to construct a living archive. Achieved through bridging, the concept of the project is a series of fenestrated walls linked by transparent volumes. Thickened walls appropriate the dimension of the historical site. Moments of the program are understood to be both physical and metaphorical bridges that engage and critique the past to generate provocative spaces.
Site analysis of the town Seneca Falls showing the historical district in its relationship to the town and our site (Labeled in A zoomed out map showing the locations of our site in relation to the six sovereign
fig.4
correlating to the red lines (A) in fig.3, this concept diagram shows 2 systems in the design scheme: a series of walls and trangressing glass volumns.
fig.5
correlating to the arrowed major entry ciculation (B) in fig.3: the visual percpetion of the wall changes as one approximates the archive.
The spacing of the walls appropriates dimensions from Seneca Falls’ Main Street, and the program’s relational bridges foster blurred indoor and outdoor activities, generating a soft space within the hardened territories.
+5m
double glazing: 8 mm toughened glass + 12 mm cavity with perforated ST. STL. Interlayer
Operable aluminum louvers
150/50cm steel RHS Gutter metal sheething adjustale 18mm steel rod
laminated safty glass with reflective film on inner surface
Light-diffusing soffit in lam. safety glass
Triple pane glass
Structural glass floor construction: IGU
structural sealant air space perforated ST. STL. interlayer IGU setting block
ST.steel channel
solar control alum. louver maintainance catwalk
A film about an office, a playground, or a never-ending machine.
Film access: https://vimeo. com/799380331
Instructor: Christopher Battaglia
The Carousel is an independent film about mundane activities in an office. Like a never-ending machine, the office operates like a gigantic elevator, where a series of plates runs up and down, as all utilities are summarized in a single vertical bundle based on the stream of the movement. The project is inspired by Bernard Halfner’s Linear City, in which a network of traffic and communication infrastructure is located in a linear urban structure to maximize efficiency. In my project, the human becomes the infrastructure where one’s individuality is merged into the architectural machine. The mechanism of the office also operates with dynamic movements as of those carnival rides, through spinning, lifting, and diving, portraying the office as an amusement park, or a playground. The uncanny juxtaposition of playground and office sets the satire of production operation and human labor.
The film has two sound channels. The Carousel music rhymes with the carnivalesque movement of the lifting and revolving office mechanism, romanticizing the
office space into a playground. Ikeda’s electronic micro sound sampling resembles the robotic keyboard sound relating to the act of labor. The eerie juxtaposition of office and play achieves a strong, accumulation effect, connoting a sense of sullness and tediousness, a characteristic element of the modern industrial world.
Two major scheme of the machanism: a revolving stage and elevating plates.
Back drop of the office, as the machine elevates between land, ocean, sky, and the outer universe.
reference of carnivals. Image source:
(fig.11) Kid's carousel A.M., Margolies, John, Seaside Heights, NJ, 1978
(fig.12) Luna Park Amusement Scene, W.A.Horan, Johnstown, PA