Zechariah Fung Architecture Portfolio Fall 2018

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PORTFOLIO 2018

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ZECHARIAH S FUNG

EDUCATION University of Arizona: {2014-2019} Bachelors of Architecture: -CAPLA Minor in Spanish -College of Humanities

LANGUAGES

zechariahsfung@gmail.com 602-471-0097 @zsfphoto

WORK EXPERIENCE Spring Fling: {2018} -largest student run carnival in the United States -event marketer, graphics, photographer, customer relations Architecture Research Assistant: {2017-} “GEMS bench” -spatial application of digital fabrication + active evaporative cooling -eggcrate CNC bench design + fabrication Gould Evans: {2018}

English - native Spanish - advanced/fluent Cantonese - heritage

Phoenix, Arizona -summer internship -conceptual rendering, site model design, furniture takeoffs, detailing, marketing materials, BIM modeling, Critical Complexity: {2018}

AWARDS

“AMPS Conference: Critical Practice in an Age of Complexity -Student Tech Assistant + Event Photographer

ARA Student Housing Competition: {2016-2017} Archon Prize: {May 2017}

OUTREACH EXPERIENCE

Richard + Bauer Architects Prize: {Dec. 2017} Design Excellence: {May 2018}

SKILLSET fabrication: -3 years of wood shop, metal shop, casting -3d printing, laser cutter, 4 axis CNC mill file writing and execution software: advanced: -autodesk revit, adobe photoshop, adobe illustrator, adobe indesign, adobe lightroom, rhino 5, maxwell 4 render intermediate: -autodesk autocad, microsoft word/ excel/powerpoint, grasshopper, ladybug/ honeybee for rhino, sketchup photography: six years experience -portraiture, event photography, landscapes, cityscapes

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AIAS + Freedom by Design: {2017-2019} Eboard Member: 4th Year Representative -Grassroots 2017 + Forum 2017 Freedom by Design Development Manager {2017-2018} -managing funds, client contract negotiations, fundraising through private donations + public grants -volunteered as a welder, painter, floor installer on previous project -Hasan School Shade pavilion: design, drawings, and build Freedom by Design Director: {2018-} -finding new client, managing relations Youth Summer Mission Project: {2009-2016} volunteering on the White Mountain Apache Reservation -community outreach, building maintenance, cooking, cleaning, working with children Segovia Study Abroad: {2015} six weeks in Segovia, Spain -IE University in Spanish culture and literature -Segovia, Cordoba, Granada, Madrid, Barcelona, Avila, Salamance, Leon, London, Bath, Cardiff


TABLE OF CONTENTS

i

tucson culture station

4-11

ii

unitarian unviversalist campus

12-21

iii

urban agriculture pavillion

22-27

iv

garfield bungalow

28-33

v

professional work

34-36

vi

freedom by design

37

vii

photography

38-39

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TUCSON CULTURE STATION A culture center must carry an understanding of the historical context of the city’s built environment, specifically the neighboring Tucson Station, which served as the city’s main economic nexus and connection point until the arrival of the I-10. The station celebrates local materiality, the economic legacy of the train, and the resounding presence of the Santa Catalinas in the sky. It does not act to serve as a displacement of the existing station and its program but as a complement. The proportion of the form is derived from existing site datums established by traffic flow and the arrangement of the Station’s masses.



site plan

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The Tucson Culture Station draws upon existing site datums and the existing linear palette to create an extension that celebrates the existing yet suggests contemporary applications within this framework. The frame and partition system allows for flexible layout in a rapidly changing downtown.

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2f plan

3f plan

ROOF 48' - 0"

LEVEL 3 33' - 0"

LEVEL 2 18' - 0"

LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

section c

LEVEL -1 -15' - 0"

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A cultural center must embody the values of the place; Tucson, like most American Cities is built around a grid. There is ingenuity and potential within that grid framework and the ‘rivers’ of circulation that bisect them. The site meets at a critical intersection of freight, culture, and business.

urban analysis

section a

8


ROOF 48' - 0"

LEVEL 3 33' - 0"

LEVEL 2 18' - 0"

LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

LEVEL -1 -15' - 0"

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future possibilities - passenger train revival

summer solstice: 81° @ noon

equinox: 54° @ noon

winter solstice: 27° @ noon

SCREEN 58' - 0"

ROOF 48' - 0"

LEVEL 3 33' - 0" covered patio

lightshelf

lightshelf

lightshelf

covered patio

perforated copper facade

LEVEL 2 18' - 0"

stack effect

LEVEL 1 0' - 0" in-slab drain

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section b - passive strategies

in-slab drain

LEVEL -1 -15' - 0"


water + landscape management

structure

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p enclosure applications

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UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CAMPUS Building within the wilderness requires extreme care, particularly within the confines of Saguaro Natural Preserve. This Land Ethic requires an phenomenological response to fauna and flora in the same manner as responding buildings and infrastructure in the city. Naturalist and philosophical reading by Aldo Leopold, Jay Appleton, and Gaston Bachelard provide precedent for crafting experience and built response. The design synthesizes this ethical response and the Unitarian Universalists’ ritualistic program.



site plan

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15


site sections

site panorama

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2332

2339 23 33 34

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solar response capturing the summer solstice

panoramic views macro focus elevated position on site

protection

micro focus introspective campus

water channeling enriching the land scape

234

0

174° 24°

24°

24°

church functions

indivuality

seperation to create individualized response

fellowship INSERT learning

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worship

ELEVATE

NESTED

the ‘heart’ integrating program and nature

democratic, unprogrammed green space


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campus plan

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exterior conditions

physical model study 1

physical model study 2

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chapel - prospect + refuge


interior conditions

sanctuary - nested contemplation

fellowship hall - elevated views + exterior connections

library - ambient retreat

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DENVER FRAME In the age of rapid urbanization and population growth, the challenge of feeding said growing populous becomes ever apparent as land becomes more and more scarce. In response, the idea of urban farming expands on existing Controlled Environment Agriculture technologies multiplied and automated. Therefore this controlled module is then multiplied into a vertical format, creating green towers within cities. The farm is accompanied with an urban market. The synthesis of a nostalgic and vernacular market and the futuristic cladding of the farm lands at a major intersection in downtown Denver.

section 2



URBAN AGRICULTURAL PAVILLION 200 E. COLFAX AVE, DENVER ,CO

INEVITABILITY VERNACULAR

GEOGRAPHY

MARKET

MODERNITY

AGRICULTURE

parti: adjacencies North Market - Columbus, OH loading dock set at alley grade with large turnaround area

offices closest to adjacent parking garage

1f/2f

setback to reduce crowding on the sidewalk

public square at the main entrance

processing market loading dock public space lockers break room offices

map

program adjacencies

market typeology

UP

O

UP

1700 SQF

EAK ROOM

2020 SQF

CKERS

1057 SQF

LT

CIVIC SPACE

HISTORY

UP

918 SQF 2396 SQF 204 SQF 10098 SQF 1353 SQF

LEVEL 1 1/16" = 1'-0"

site plan

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UP

DW REF.

linear organization


UP

UP

UP

UP

UP

UP UP

UP

UP

ELECTRICAL

1552 SQF

MECHANICAL

3248 SQF

VERTICAL ARM

960 LIN. FT.

PROCESSING & PACKAGING 1347 SQF

ROTARY ARM

36 ARM.

ROTARY ARM

COMPOST VAULT

2490 SQF

FARM

12020 SQF

FARM

CIRCULATION

7314 SQF

1mf plan

2f plan

3f plan

36 ARM. LEVEL 4 4800 SQF 1/16" = 1'-0"

4f plan

LEVEL 6 1/16" = 1'-0"

5-16f plan

25


LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

LEVEL 8 130' - 0" LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

ETFE sheet LEVEL 8 130' - 0"

PARAPET 333' - 0"

air handler system thermally broken aluminium frame

CAP 330' - 0"

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

ETFE sheet

PARAPET 333' - 0"

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

40’ x 40’ panel

CAP 330' - 0"

1” - 8’

0

16

compressive stone cap

LEVEL 17 310' - 0"

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

1/2" STEEL ANGLE

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

LEVEL 7 110' - 0"

LEVEL 16 290' - 0"

THERMAL BREAKING

air handling system

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

duct

air intake

2" x 5" ALUMINIUM MULLION 4" PERFORATED STEEL CHANNEL FLOORING

1” - 1’

0

2

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

VALVE

central valve box AIR DIFFUSER AND VAVLE CONTROL 2" DUCTING AIR HANDLER 5 X 10 BAR GRATING PANEL

LEVEL 17 310' - 0"

LEVEL 15 270' - 0"

1/4" ETFE SHEET

PARAPET 333' - 0"

ETFE sheet

INFLATABLE ETFE PILLOW

LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

CAP 330' - 0"

6" B-DECK SLAB

air handler system LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

thermally broken aluminium frame

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

LEVEL 2 20' - 0"

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

LEVEL 2 20' - 0" LEVEL 14 250' - 0"

BRICK PILASTER 1.5" AIR BARRIER LOAD BEARING 8 X 8 X 16 CMU

ETFE sheet

partial elevation 1” - 4’

BRICK VENEER ANGLE 1/2" STEEL

0

8

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

6" B-DECK SLAB

LEVEL 6 90' - 0"

40’ x 60’ panel

BRICK SWEEP

1” - 8’

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

0

16

GARAGE DOOR RAIL

18 x 35 W SECTION LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

12" CONCRETE SLAB

SITE -1' - 10 1/2"

VAPOR BARRIER

compressive stone cap

LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

COARSE AGGREGATE

SITE -1' - 10 1/2"

wall section 1” - 4’

0

LEVEL 16 290' - 0" 8

ARC321_2016F_P.3.0_Fung_Z

LEVEL 17 310' - 0"

Section 4 - Detailing 1/4" = 1'-0"

THERMAL BREAKING

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

2" x 5" ALUMINIUM MULLION

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

4" PERFORATED STEEL CHANNEL FLOORING

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

LEVEL 5 70' - 0"

VALVE 1/2" STEEL ANGLE AIR DIFFUSER AND VAVLE CONTROL 2" DUCTING AIR HANDLER 5 X 10 BAR GRATING PANEL LEVEL 15 270' - 0"

1/4" ETFE SHEET INFLATABLE ETFE PILLOW

LEVEL 16 290' - 0"

LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

6" B-DECK SLAB THERMAL BREAKING

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

2" x 5" ALUMINIUM MULLION 4" PERFORATED STEEL CHANNEL FLOORING

LEVEL 4 50' - 0"

VALVE LEVEL 2 20' - 0"

AIR DIFFUSER AND VAVLE CONTROL 2" DUCTING AIR HANDLER

LEVEL 2 20' - 0" LEVEL 14 250' - 0"

BRICK PILASTER 5 X 10 BAR GRATING PANEL 1.5" AIR BARRIER LOAD BEARING 8 X 8 X 16 CMU 1/4" ETFE SHEET

LEVEL 15 270' - 0"

partial elevation 1” - 4’

0

8

BRICK VENEER INFLATABLE ETFE PILLOW 6" B-DECK SLAB

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

BRICK SWEEP

LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

6" B-DECK SLAB GARAGE DOOR RAIL

LEVEL 3 30' - 0"

18 x 35 W SECTION LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

12" CONCRETE SLAB

SITE -1' - 10 1/2" LEVEL 2 20' - 0"

VAPOR BARRIER

LEVEL 1 0' - 0"

COARSE AGGREGATE

SITE -1' - 10 1/2"

BRICK PILASTER 1.5" AIR BARRIER LOAD BEARING 8 X 8 X 16 CMU BRICK VENEER

wall section 1” - 4’

0

LEVEL 2 20' - 0" LEVEL 14 250' - 0"

partial elevation 1” - 4’

8

0

8

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

6" B-DECK SLAB

Section 4 - Detailing

BRICK SWEEP 1/4" = 1'-0"

26

LEVEL 1m 10' - 0"

GARAGE DOOR RAIL

18 x 35 W SECTION LEVEL 1 0' - 0"


section 1

virtual reality rendering

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GARFIELD BUNGALOW The Garfield Bungalow was designed for a young couple looking to start their family. They have chosen to move into the historic Garfield neighborhood, a neighborhood that has seen better days economically but is beginning to see economic revival and rejuvenation. The lot is a Southwest facing corner lot on the intersection of Pierce St. and 9th St. The site due to its location provides an excellent view of the Phoenix skyline yet a demanding heat load. The neighborhood is historic and is home to few of the remaining pre-suburb era bungalows and pyramid cottages that sprung up because of American expansion into the Southwest.



4 90

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the neighborhood

This home takes from the bungalow’s dominant roof as a giver of form as well and protection against the Sun. As the identity of this neighborhood begins to re-develop, so the family will as well. By building upon the influences of its context and to utilize technology does this house find an appropriate place in the 21st century. Resiliency in architecture is achieved here through flexibility and respect for its context.

Housing Typologies Garfield was developed between 1883 to 1955 as a ‘streetcar subdivision’ built around the establishment of the streetcar line. The neighborhood is one of the few central neighborhoods that holds pre-50’s historic vernacular architecture. The neighborhood is dominated by bungalows, period revival adobes, and the largest collection of pyramid cottages anywhere in Phoenix. It has seen better days, many of the lots have become vacant, the streets need maintenance and profit-driven design is making their way into the neighborhood.

bungalow

period revival

pyramid cottage

shed

townhome

retail

ID: 868

30

5


13

11

1 - living space 2 - bedroom 3 - bathroom 4 - bedroom loft 5 - master suite 6 - master loft 7 - guest living 8 - guest bed 9 - guest bath 10 - atrium 11 - patio

5

6

7

12 - carport 13 - sunken garden X

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1

8 3

3

2

2

1

9

12

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Y

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The house is a blank canvas, large wooden CLT trusses with metal brackets provide an opportunity for expansion and inversion. The house’s other features continue along this theme: sliding partitions, lofts with ladder access, revolving screen exteriors, and canvas shades create a continually changing environment. This environment creates opportunities for creative expression integral to a satisfying childhood; the choice of material is designed to invoke comfort and familiarity.

the neighborhood

32

section x

section y


white tile + composite insulated roof

double insulated clearstory window

white tile + composite insulated roof

deployable canvas screen

plywood floor upstairs loft

9�x6� CLT

plywood shear wall

brick

foundation slab living + flex space

sk

yli

gh

t

Bungalow Adaptation

+

large roof + dormers

+

t

tile roof

gh sk yli

ADAPTATION

VERNACULAR

plinth + covered porch

heavy timber framing

interior partitions

upper level lofts

operable screens

infill walls

heavy timber trusses

ID: 868

337


GOULD EVANS INTERNSHIP Selected conceptual renderings for Gould Evans in Phoenix, AZ

ground floor program

canopy

34


tower 1 + podium

lobby

35


GEMS BENCH RESEARCH Digital Fabrication and Design of a framework for environmental experiements in passive cooling technologies. Responsible for the design of the framing + the fabrication, currently in progress Research Supervisor: Alethia Ida

intent: framework for evaporative skin

in progress

36


FREEDOM BY DESIGN Freedom by Design is a design-build program of AIAS that is focused on community outreach. In 2017-18, a group of students fundraised, designed and built a shade pavilion for a native american charter high school in tucson.

process

result

37


PHOTOGRAPHY

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