Buvana Murali Portfolio

Page 1

Volume 01

Portfolio 2002 - 2012

Buvana Murali Architect AIA

buvana.m@gmail.com 917-215-9106



professional samples


Terraced Gardens Residential Development SIZE:

7 Acres, FAR: 4

LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

Mumbai Project Architect End of Concept

A high rise redevelopment project in one of the most prime locations in Mumbai city. A twin-tall tower project with a complex series of housing typologies located on a equally challenging site.

S

CIRCULATION The Central Public Realm is kept free of cars at all times. Care has been taken to ensure that no car crosses the path of a child running towards his/her playground in the grange. In order to do so, all car movement has been distinctly separated from

pedestrian movement. Movement of vehicles has been restricted along the boundary of the development. A driveway brings all residents from Anstey Road, around Tower 2 to a common drop off point for both towers.

From there onwards a covered arcade leads into entrance lobbies an elevator lobby from where residents can take the elevator to with concierge desks and elevator cores. In the case of a selftheir apartment. There is a Secondary access road from Forjett driven vehicle Entrance 1 and 2 (marked in the diagram 1) leads Road that can be used by residents as per their convenience. residents directly to their parking spaces. Each parking level has

Tower 01

Tower 01

Tower 02

Tower 02

Amenity space is multiplied and distributed vertically

Secondary access point at Forjett Road

Common drop off for both towers

Fo

rje

Entrance to parking garage

tt R

oa

d

Primary access for the entire development from Anstey Road

An

st

ey

Ro

ad

The Grange

Access to recreational greens stays car free



The Trees: Godrej Residential Development SIZE:

2.15 Acres, FAR: 3

LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

Vikhroli, Mumbai Project Architect Schematic Design Phase

Godrej’s flagship residential project is the first Residential Phase of a larger Mixed-use development for the developer owned parcel of land in Mumbai. The site is part of the Godrej Industrial land bank currently undergoing transformation into commercial, retail and residential use. The site contains swathes of mature rain trees that were preserved in the master plan by Sasaki Associates. The design proposes a cloistered, courtyard environment which both provides a residential precinct yet blends with the mixeduse resources of the overall development. The ground plane is designed in a manner in which inside space and outside space boundaries are blurred.

Retail areas are adjacent to the future market place of the development and the residential amenities are distributed in a manner similar to that of an inclusive resort development. The overall massing and the articulation of the architecture, while contemporary, borrows forms and materiality from the industrial legacy of the site. The residential units themselves blur the lines of indoor and outdoor living, always connecting the resident to “trees� as the sense of place for this forward thinking development.


AERIAL VIEW OF PHASE I


2

9 3 7

4 9 2

4

4 5

3 4 4 9

2

10 3

5

11

4 7 9

7 9 9 2

7

3

4

3 9 4 9

1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

ENTRY DROP OFF BREEZEWAY LOBBY COURTYARD TROPICAL FOREST RETAIL OFFICE MAIL ROOM

SITE PLAN

10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

LIBRARY KID’S PLAY AREA SIT-OUT FIRE HYDRANT ROAD GYMNASIUM RECEPTION LOUNGE RESTAURANT SQUASH COURT TENNIS COURT

7


N PA A OR MI CV M RO

SF I EW TH EB CO

AL

ST AN

NY

DI

TV

IEW

SF

RO

M

TH

ER

OO

06

M

04

01

LIVING ROOM

02

BALCONY

03

FIXED CLEAR GLASS RAILING

04 05

06

03

05

02

01

OPERABLE BI-FOLD GLAZING SYSTEM FULL HEIGHT SLIDING GLASS DOORS CONCRETE SLAB

WALL SECTION OF BALCONY

MASSING STUDIES


VIEW OF BREEZEWAY


AERIAL VIEW OF PHASE 1


BIRD’S EYE VIEW LOOKING AT PENTHOUSES



PENTHOUSE VIEW


PENTHOUSE STUDY MODELS


DETAIL OF BREEZEWAY CANOPY

RETAIL PROMENADE BAS RELIEF


OVERALL MASSING MODEL

OVERALL MASSING MODEL

STUDY MODELS


VIEW OF STUDENT COMMONS BUILDING

Brij Mohan Lall Munjal University SIZE: LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

36 Acres, FAR: 1, Student Strength: 11,400 Gurgaon, India Project Architect Phase 1 : Built

The central theme for BML Munjal University (BMU) revolves around innovation. Innovation, not just in the way classes are taught, but also in the way we think, in the way the campus is planned, designed, built and calibrated for change.The university plans to forge alliances with the corporations and institutions through a research and development incubation center which will provide

MASTERPLAN

real opportunities for students to interact with industry and other institutions of higher learning. In keeping with the clients’ intent the design for the project will be frugal in its approach yet sensible in its implementation. Students will not be lectured, but inspired to learn through problem based approach.


IMPROVING UTILIZATION An obvious observation during programming analysis was the low utilizations of specialized spaces during the early years of the university. Between 2016 and 2025 the university plans to increase its enrollment 5 fold while the disciplines and streams remain relatively constant. As more students are added, the utilization of spaces improves significantly as evidenced in the larger blocks of green in the table below.

POPULATION (SEE CHART 1) Students Faculty Non Academic Staff TOTAL (STAFF+STUDENTS)

UTILIZATION OF ACADEMIC SPACES Analog Lab Basic Electrical & Electronics Lab CAD ‐ CAM Lab Chemistry Lab Civil Engineering Communication Systems Computer Lab Control System Lab Drawing Electrical Drives Electrical Engineering Engineering Mechanics Environmental Engg Fluid Mechanics Lab Hydrology & Hydraulics Internal Combustion Engines Lab Machine Tool Engineering Lab Material Sciences Networks Lab Physics Lab Power Electronics Lab Survey Lab Thermodynamics Workshop Typical Classroom Tutorial Room Architectural Studio Generic Laboratory Mock Court Mtech Lab ‐ Generic

2016 2,440 144 80 2,664

2016

2018 4,200 238 103 4,541

2018

2020 6,025 336 137 6,498

2020

2022 9,690 536 194 10,420

2025 11,455 634 217 12,306

2022

2025

11,455 9,690

10,000 8,000

72%

88%

93%

91%

92%

23%

27% 53% 60% 90% 67% 7%

53% 53% 90% 92% 67% 10%

57% 80% 82% 96% 73% 10%

57% 80% 88% 99% 83% 10%

67% 94% 7% 3%

CHART 1 ‐ ENROLLMENT‐ Students vs. Other staff 12,000

6,025

6,000 4,200 4,000 2,440 2,000 224

341

2016

2018

2022

50% 40% 40% 40% 27% 27% 67%

60% 47% 33% 67% 27% 40% 80%

68% 60% 36% 80% 27% 33% 87%

76% 60% 36% 80% 33% 33% 87%

27% 7% 13% 80% 48% 92% 91% 30% 57%

33% 33% 27% 53% 55% 99% 97% 81% 77%

85%

83%

42% 40% 40% 67% 51% 98% 98% 70% 83% 4% 87%

47% 67% 40% 80% 62% 98% 99% 81% 97% 4% 97%

47% 63% 40% 89% 67% 99% 99% 93% 99% 13% 48%

SNAPSHOT PROGRAMMING DATA FactsOF / Analysis

B-17

The HOK team has programmed the needs of the university and how it will evolve and grow over the years. The phasing of instructional spaces along with the growth of the campus has been planned in a way that gives the university enough latitude to change course as tomorrow’s world demands of them. HOK lead the initial programming exercise for the project based on which the Master plan has developed. The programming exercise was based on a combination of interviews and work session involing Hero Mindmine

Students

2025

STUDENT ENROLLMENT NUMBERS

CHART 3‐ ACADEMIC SPACE UTILIZATION

21%

90% 80%

12%

48%

12%

28%

70%

8%

36%

40%

60%

42% LOW UTIL

50% 40%

MED UTIL HIGH UTIL

22%

60%

30% 20%

30%

38%

48%

56%

10% 0% 2016

2018

UTILIZATION OVER TIME

Improving Utilization

2020

100%

40% 7% 40% 27% 13% 27% 53%

Faculty/Staff

851

730

473

0

2020

2022

2025

bmu BML EDUCORP SERVICES

team members made up of leadership, educators, academicians, planners , administrators and consultants appointed by the client. This was supplemented by gathering facts and figures, analysing current trends in education including syllabi and class schedules, benchmarking and creating room data documents for various types of academic and non academic spaces.

VIEW OF CAMPUS QUADRANGLE


MASTER PLAN ITERATIONS N

VIEW OF STUDENT COMMONS BUILDING

60

0 30

200 100


to ain ng er he to an

N

The master plan created a large central green that formed the heart of the campus. The academic zone was placed closer MASTER to the highway on the east and the residential PLAN ITERATIONS area occupied the more private zone along the west. The academic zone was divided into a north and south blocks. East- West spines containing common functions weaved together department buildings that branched of the spine at regular intervals. The ‘jewel’ of the campus, a multiuse building was located in the centre of the main green area and becomes the focus of the campus.

The master plan explored the idea of slicing the site into 3 phases going from East to West. Each phase contain ed a mix ofThe residential and explored academicthe uses whilst utilizing academic master plan idea of compacting least amount land area. An into East-West forest buffer and of residential uses a single block. This block would separated function the residential and that academic The according as a module could zones. be repeated academic to buildings were arranged in such a way as the needs of the growing campus. Thetoblocks would open into open space onaround every side as well as enclose an that would be arranged a central podium building internal courtyard. house all the common functions. The strategy here was to occupy the least possible area of land as well as to bring the academic and residential together so as to increase the efficiency and utilization of the buildings by allowing a sharing of space.

Planning Concepts and Studies

Initial Master Plan Options: 9th March 2012

C-09

master a large green that formed The The master planplan wascreated a variation of central the earlier courtyard theHowever heart of rather the campus. The academic zonesilos was placed block. than creating individual of closer to the highway on the east and the residential department buildings, it created linear East-West blocks more private zone along the west. The that area couldoccupied be sharedthe between different departments. Each 200 0 divided60 academic zone was into aand north and south blocks. phase contained a mix of residential academic uses. EastWest spines containing common functions weaved This strategy would reserve land in each phase by using 100 30 buildings that branched of the spine the together minimumdepartment area required. Residential and Academic at were regular intervals.by The the campus, a multiuse zones separated a ‘jewel’ forest of buffer with common building was located in the centre of the main green area buildings bridging across. and becomes the focus of the campus.

C-09 Planning Concepts and Studies

bmu

Initial Master Plan Options: 20th March 2012 BML EDUCORP SERVICES

T The a and f bloc t b h o t t s


AERIAL VIEW OF PUBLIC SPACES SURROUNDING THE LAKE

The masterplan is based on simple principles of efficiency, orientation The main challenge was to maintain the principles of flexibility and and compact form.It is crafted to create unique spaces that foster modularity while paying careful attention to the existing conditions interdisciplinary learning by design. Through the master planning of the site. exercise, the design team tested a variety of iterations exploring various ways in which student life can be organized on the campus. From the intensive master planning exercise emerged guiding principles that would broadly influence the growth of the campus over the next 25 years.

DESIGN PRINCIPLES

Ex

Open space surrounding every block

Open space surrounding every block

Iconic building at the entrance

Consistent phasing of academic and residential

program so each phase looks complete Consistent and self sufficient phasing

Iconic structure with maximum visibility

Provide for a large, open recreational field

Adequately scaled event space

Vi

Existing hospital building and road network

View of existing school playground Existing school to be maintained in Phase 1

Maintain East-west orientation of buildings VIEW OF EXISTING SCHOOL PLAYGROUND for maximum exposure to north

MASTERPLAN

Planning Concepts and Studies Design Principles

Create land bank for future expansion

C-11

Maintain interdisciplinary learning environment by design and avoid creating insular departmental buildings

bmu BML EDUCORP SERVICES

V

Ex

Sit


From the intensive master planning exercise emerged guiding principles that would broadly influence the growth of the campus over the next 25 years.

AERIAL VIEW LOOKING TOWARDS HOSTELS

The site is well suited for an educational campus and has a network of mature trees. The site also includes a functioning school building and a decommissioned hospital which had to be incorporated in the master plan.The Master plan ideas ranged from tabula rasa approaches that explored the maximum potential of the site to ones Open space surrounding every block

DESIGN PRINCIPLES

that were pragmatic and built around the memory of the place. Each of the options however had the common thread of creating a lively student environment with a hierarchy of open spaces for student interaction.

Iconic building at the entrance

Consistent phasing of academic and residential program so each phase looks complete

Provide for a large, open recreational field

xisting hospital building and road network

Existing school to be maintained in Phase 1

Integrate existing buildings within Master plan

Maintain East-west orientation of buildings for maximum exposure to north

Create land bank for future expansion

Maximize north orientation

Create land bank for future expansion

Maintain

interdisciplinary

learning

environment by design and avoid creating Foster interdisciplinary insular departmental buildings learning spaces by design

bmu

iew of existing school playground

Planning Concepts and Studies Design Principles

View of fieldsVIEW along south-west corner of site OF EXISTING FARMLANDS

xisting Site

te Images

C-11

BML EDUCORP SERVICES

ON THE SOUTH WEST CORNER OF THE SITE

C-04

MASTERPLAN


Faculty housing: Is located in a cluster away from the hostels and academic areas, but at a 5 minute walking distance from the academic core with views to the lake.

Urban Forest: This dense thicket of trees creates a backdrop for performance in the amphitheater. It provides a shaded zone in the active pedestrian area of the campus. Located along the western edge of the campus it serves in mitigating the dust-laden north-western winds coming into the academic zone.

Hostels: These are located along the northwestern edge of the plot at a 5 minute walking distance from the academic core. Buildings are arranged in the form of a courtyard block ideally suited to provide shade and enclosure in the arid climate of Gurgaon. The bar and tower typology has been used for the hostels since the differential scales help in maintaining a intimate scale of the court while at the same time accommodating the density required for a campus of this size.

Dining hall: Dining hall is located in proximity to the hostel zone.

Library/Student Commons/Cafeteria: This is a multiuse 24 hour public building that forms the hinge between the academic core and the hostel areas. On one side it bookends the pedestrian spine and on the other it frames the water body with an amphitheater.

The water body: This is a retention pond that could form the main public space of the campus. It forms the termination to the pedestrian spine and the heart of student social life. Located between the academic and residential areas it is framed on one side with the Student Centre and on the other by hostels affording great views to the pond. In addition to being a public amenity it also serves to lower the ambient temperature by way of evaporative cooling as the north-western winds blow into the academic zone.

Main Campus Drag: is an active shaded quadrangle space framed by classroom buildings on either side. It is bordered on either side with a colonnaded walkway which provides a shaded promenade in the heart of the academic core. Typical Academic Blocks: Two courtyard blocks frame the north and south side of the main quadrangle area and house the bulk of the academic areas including classrooms, laboratories and tutorial rooms.

Vehicular Loop: A 12 m Right of way vehicular loop allows for the flow of traffic without impeding pedestrian movement on campus.

Gateway Building: This complex of buildings forms the front door of the campus. Seen from the highway it establishes the campus identity and the character. The building program includes administrative and office uses as well as the common classroom functions that are shared between all departments of the campus. It forms a hinge between the academic and research zones.

Avenue of Innovation: This is one of three avenues on campus created by preserving the existing row of mature trees. It runs parallel to the main campus spine and is bordered on one side by the workshop buildings. It is envisioned to form a staging area for various exhibition and innovation fests that are a part of campus life.

Main Entrance Boulevard: This is a grand 40M tree lined boulevard that forms the entrance to the campus from the highway.

Incubation Centre: This is located on the front face of the campus with exposure along the national highway. It is the centre for universityindustry collaboration as well as provides spaces for innovation and research.

N 0

50

ILLUSTRATIVE MASTER PLAN Preferred Master Plan Overall Plan

60

0

C-12

30

N

30M ENTRANCE BOULEVARD 12M PERIPHERAL LOOP ROAD 9M ROW 6M ROW

VEHICULAR CIRCULATION Vehicular Circulation 40 m Entrance Boulevard 12m ROW 9m ROW 6m ROW

MASTERPLAN DIAGRAMS

PEDESTRIAN CIRCULATION ZONE

PEDESTRIAN CIRCULATION Pedestrian Circulation Pedestrian Pathways

200 100


Residential Greens

Proposed Trees

Academic Greens N 0

OPEN SPACE TYPES

Existing Building Zone

Existing Trees

PLANTING STRATEGY 0

50

60 30

N

Landscape Design

200 100

C-30

Open Space Network

ACADEMIC CORE WORKSHOP COMMUNAL FACILITES HOSTELS FACULTY HOUSING PARKING R & D CENTRE

2014 2020 2025

LANDUSE Land Use by Building

PHASING Phasing STRATEGY

Academic Buildings

Hostels

Phase 1: 2016

Non-Academic buildings Workshops

Faculty Housing Staff Housing Parking

Phase 2: 2020

Incubation Centre Utilities

Phase 3: 2025

MASTERPLAN DIAGRAMS


LEGEND W 16

Buildings constructed during this phase shown in yellow

W 15

Buildings constructed during previous phase

W17 W 14 W18

W 16 W 16 W 15

W 23 W 15

W 11

W 13

W 11

W 12

2016

W 12 E 05

2015

Note: Fo E 05

Note: For detailed program of spaces see page B-40 E 04

H0

NO. OF UNITS

2015

E 01

ACADEMIC & NON‐ ACADEMIC E1 GATEWAY BUILDING E5 WORKSHOP H0 HOSPITAL

1 1 1

RESIDENTIAL W11 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W12 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W15 STUDENT HOSTEL W16 STUDENT HOSTEL

1 1 1 1

FY-2016

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE

LEGEND

W 17 W 19

W21

W18

Phasing Strategy - FY 2016

W 20

W21

W22

W 16 W 15

W 12

W 14

C-21

W 20

W 16

NO. OF UNITS

E 07

ACADEMIC & NON‐ ACADEMIC E 05 E1 GATEWAY BUILDING E5 WORKSHOP H0 HOSPITAL E4 ACADEMIC BLOCK E7 STUDENT COMMONS F W23 DINING HALL

E 05 E 04

E 01

H0

202

Note: F

E 04

H0

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE

FY-2018

FY-2020

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE

W 19 W18

W 14

W 20

C-22

W 16

685 685 327 491 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 9,440

W 19

W 14

Buildings constructed during this phase shown in yellow

Preferred Master Plan

2022W22

W21

AREA RE OVERAG

C-23

W18

Phasing Strategy - FY 2020

RESIDEN W11 FAC W13 FAC W12 FAC W14 STA W15 STU W16 STU W17 STU W18 STU W19 STU W20 STU W21 STU W22 STU

W 15

Buildings constructed during previous phase

W 13

W 11

2022 W 12 ACADEMIC & NON‐ ACADEMIC E1 GATEWAY BUILDING E5 WORKSHOP H0 HOSPITAL

W 12 E 07

E 05

E 05 E 02

E 09

E4 ACADEMIC BLOCK E7 STUDENT COMMONS F E2 ACADEMIC BLOCK E3 ACADEMIC BLOCK W23 DINING HALL

W 20

FY-2022

FY-2024

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE

DETAILED PHASING STRATEGY Preferred Master Plan

NO. OF UNITS

Note

C-24

Preferred Master Plan

Phasing Strategy - FY 2024

AREA (sm)

GROUND COVERAGE

1 E 07 1 DEMOLISHED

10,424 3,568

4,252 2,684

1 1 1 1 1

E 02 5,371

1,074 1,376 2,574 3,000 1,016 15,977

E 04

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE RESIDENTIAL W11 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W13 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W12 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W14 STAFF HOUSING W15 STUDENT HOSTEL W16 STUDENT HOSTEL W17 STUDENT HOSTEL W18 STUDENT HOSTEL W19 STUDENT HOSTEL W20 STUDENT HOSTEL W21 STUDENT HOSTEL W22 STUDENT HOSTEL

20

W 16

E 03

E 01

ACADEM E1 GATE E5 WOR H0 HOSP E4 ACAD E7 STUD E2 ACAD W23 DIN

AREA RE OVERAG

Note: For detailed program of spaces see page B-48 W 15

W 11

E 03

4,110 4,110 2,290 1,963 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 73,036 W 16 70,582 2,454

E 09

W 23

W 23 W 15

E 04

4,252 2,684 3,148 1,074 1,376 1,016 13,551

W 17

W 17

Preferred Master Plan

10,424 3,568 E 02 3,148 5,371 6,882 1,016 E 30,410 01 29,409 1,001

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

2020

GROUND COVERAGE

AREA (sm)

1 1 1 1 1 1

RESIDENTIAL W11 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W13 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W12 FACULTY/STAFF RESIDENCE W14 STAFF HOUSING W15 STUDENT HOSTEL W16 STUDENT HOSTEL W17 STUDENT HOSTEL W18 STUDENT HOSTEL W19 STUDENT HOSTEL W20 STUDENT HOSTEL W21 STUDENT HOSTELLEGEND

Phasing Strategy - FY 2022

AREA REQ OVERAGE

W 19

W18

E 07

W 13

RESIDENT W11 FACU W13 FACU W12 FACU W14 STAF W15 STUD W16 STUD W17 STUD W18 STUD

W 15

2018

W 12

W22

685 327 1,036 1,036 3,084

W 13 W 11 Note: For detailed program of spaces see page B-44

W 11

Phasing Strategy - FY 2018 W21

4,110 2,290 8,652 8,652 23,704 27,353 ‐3,649

AREA REQ OVERAGE

W 23

2018

W 23

W 13

W 17

Preferred Master Plan

W 14

4,252 2,684 3,148 10,084

W 15

Buildings constructed during previous phase

C-20

Phasing Strategy - FY 2015

10,424 3,568 3,148 17,140 8,918 8,222

W 16

Buildings constructed during this phase shown in yellow

Preferred Master Plan

ACADEMI E1 GATEW E5 WORKS H0 HOSPIT E4 ACADE W23 DININ

E 01

H0

AREA REQUIRED OVERAGE

FY-2014

2016

GROUND COVERAGE

AREA (sm)

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

6,882 12,870 15,000 1,016 E 01 55,132 54,813 319

4,110 4,110 2,290 1,963 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 8,652 81,688 81,536 152

2024

ACAD E1 G E5 W H0 H

E 09

E4 A E7 ST E2 A E3 A E8 IN W23

AREA OVER

E 08

RESI W11 W13 W12 W14 W15 W16 W17 W18 W19 W20 W21 W22

685 685 327 491 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 1,036 10,476

AREA OVER

C-25


B

C

C

A

B 12 m Road

Gateway Building

Main Pedestrian Spine

Student Commons

Water body

Student Hostels

12 m Road

SECTION B - B

Hostels

12 m Peripheral Road

SECTION A - A SECTION C - C

Workshop

Academic Block (South)

Main Pedestrian Spine

Avenue of Innovation

Academic Block (North)

40 M Boulevard

9 m ROW

Incubation Centre

Existing School

12 m Peripheral

Road SOLAR STUDIES + SITE SECTIONS


VIEW FROM ENTRANCE BOULEVARD

EAST ELEVATION

CONCEPT DESIGN: GATEWAY BUILDING


ROOF

22.4M

TERRACE

19.4M

LEVEL 4

15.2M

LEVEL 3

11.0M

LEVEL 2

6.8M

Staircase/ Lift Core Circulation Auditorium Classroom/lab Services

PLAZA LEVEL

2.6M

Support Office

EXISTING GRADE 0.0M

FLOOR PLANS Ground Level 0.0m

N


CONSTRUCTION PHOTOGRAPH


VIEW OF MAIN ENTRANCE BOULEVARD


VIEW FROM NORTH WEST CORNER

PL

EXIS WEST ELEVATION

CONCEPT DESIGN: GATEWAY BUILDING


ROOF

22.4M

TERRACE

19.4M

LEVEL 4

15.2M

LEVEL 3

11.0M

LEVEL 2

6.8M

LAZA LEVEL

Staircase/ Lift Core Circulation Auditorium Classroom/lab

2.6M

Services Support Office

STING GRADE 0.0M

FLOOR PLANS Ground Level 0.0m

N

CONCEPT DESIGN: GATEWAY BUILDING


VIEW OF COURTYARD

Staircase/ Lift Core Circulation Auditorium Classroom/lab

N

Services Support Office

0

6 2

GROUND LEVEL PLAN

+/- 0.0M

20 10

FLOOR PLANS Ground Level 0.0m


N 0

6 2

20 10

LEVEL 2

+6.8M


VIEW LOOKING TOWARDS MUNJAL EXPERIENCE CENTRE

VIEW OF COURTYARD AND AMPHITHEATRE

N

se/ Lift Core

0

tion

ium

6 2

20 10

oom/lab

es

t

LEVEL 2 FLOOR PLANS LEVEL 2


N

Lift Core

lab

0

6 2

20 10

LEVEL 3/4 FLOOR PLANS Typical Floor: LEVELS 3 & 4


CONSTRUCTION PHOTOGRAPH


VIEW OF INTERIOR COURTYARD AND AMPHITHEATRE


VIEW OF COURTYARD

ENTRANCE DETAIL


WEST FACADE


CONSTRUCTION PHOTOGRAPH



COLONNADE FRAMING CAMPUS QUADRANGLE

CONCEPT DESIGN: ACADEMIC BUILDING


COURTYARD ACTIVATED BY PEDESTRIAN BRIDGES

Test Concepts

Sustainability / Shading

B-34

CONCEPT DESIGN: ACADEMIC BUILDING


SUSTAINABLE GOALS

VIEW OF COURTYARD

In response to the hot climate of Gurgaon, buildings framing the central quadrangle are lined with colonnades to provide shaded walkways.

In addition to providing shaded walkways, the elevated area also allows for continuous air circulation in the courtyard.

Identical academic buildings frame the north and south of the campus quadrangle. They provide a double height colonnade that Test Concepts B-33 connects a variety of spaces from private classroom zones to Sustainability / Shading and Breeze public programs located on the ground floor. In addition to providing shaded walkways, the elevated area also allows for continous air circulation in the courtyard.

CONCEPT DESIGN: ACADEMIC BUILDING

Bridges form an important feature of an academic campus. They can hold a variety of common uses as well as connect buildings to one another allowing a seamless transition within academic clusters.

The faรงade strategy varies as per solar exposure. Deep set windows on South facades shades the interiors from the afternoon sun. Sun breakers on the east and west facades shield the classroom areas from the glare. North facade can afford a higher amount of transparency.

The facade strategy varies as per solar exposure. Deep set windows on the south facade shade the interiors from the bmu BML EDUCORP afternoon sun. Sun breakers on the east and west shield theSERVICES classrooms from glare. North facade afford a high amount of transparency.


SECONDARY ENTRANCE

oncept Images

udent Centered Interaction Spaces

C-47

bm

BML EDUCORP SER

SUSTAINABLE GOALS

In response to the hot climate of Gurgaon, buildings framing the central quadrangle are lined with colonnades to provide shaded walkways.

Visual and physical connectivity has been maintained between various zones by lifting buildings off the ground, making the dense campus permeable and pedestrian friendly.

Bridges form an important feature of an academic campus. They can hold a variety of common uses as well as connect buildings to one another allowing a seamless transition within academic clusters.

Bridges form an important feature of the campus. They multiply public spaces by maintaining continuity at upper levels as well as form spaces for informal interaction.

CONCEPT DESIGN: ACADEMIC BUILDING The faรงade strategy varies as per solar exposure. Deep set windows on South facades shades the interiors from the afternoon sun. Sun breakers on the east and west facades


Amantra Residential by Tata Housing SIZE: LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

VIEW OF SKYLINE FROM HIGHWAY

24 Acres Kalyan, India Urban Designer Completed

This is a landmark project that exemplifies affordable housing in the modern Indian context. It is envisioned as an affordable development with quality infrastructure and diversity of housing products suitable to varied income groups. The approach was to create a compact, shaded and close-knit community with a pedestrian-scale development with “places for people� while

VIEW OF ROOF TOP PUBLIC SPACE

accommodating the density. Since this was an affordable housing scheme, the project responded to climate through passive ventilation strategies such as orientation of buildings to minimize solar heat gain, capturing and channelizing wind through the building mass, creating self-shading conditions and creating voids for air flow.


RESPONSES TO WIND: BUILDINGS CAN STAGGER TO FUNNEL AND SHARE WIND

CLIMATIC RESPONSE


ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTER


BUILDING ELEVATION DETAIL


VIEW OF SUSPENDED GARDEN

Parc 1 SIZE: LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS: ARCHITECT:

1,60,000 Sqft. Seoul, South Korea Urban Designer On Hold Richard Rogers Partnership

Parc 1 is a mixed-use commercial development housing major companies, international brand-name shops and a quality restaurants.The development is at the edge of Seoul’s Yeouido Park and is designed by Architect Richard Rogers.The development comprises two modern towers anchoring the architectural design, surrounded by retail businesses and outdoor meeting spaces. It will include a premium galleria mall, an international hotel, public access spaces and plazas.

PLAN

MSP was asked to provide the overall landscape design concept for the site and specifically design a number of different areas that all intertwine with the overall concept and link with the architecture. Parc 1’s design concept evolves around the idea of creating a vibrant heart, and a unique meeting place for Yeouido and the city of Seoul. The Parc 1 design emphasizes public open spaces and linkages, connections to the community, and sustainability.


Water Feature at L6

Sunken Gar-

West Void Stone Shards

Hanging Planters

Bamboo

Stream

Undulating Wood Decking

SECTION A-A

VIEW


VIEWS


L6 Waterfea-

LEVEL 6 PLAN

AmphitheB

Cafe seating

Event space

Undulating Wooden Decking

Retail bridges

A

A

Cascading shards

Bamboo Planters

LEVEL 5 PLAN

SECTION THROUGH WATER FEATURE

Water Stream

Stone bridges

Shard water cascade

B

CONCEPT DESIGN


SCHEMATIC DIAGRAMS


SCHEMATIC DIAGRAMS


PLANTER BENCH DETAILS

STUDY MODELS


L6 SHARD WATERFEATURE

WATERFALL DETAIL

WATERFEATURE DETAIL

STONE BRIDGE DETAIL

CONSTRUCTION SEQUENCE DIAGRAMS

MOCK UP STUDIES

DETAILS


LEVEL 5: PLAN

SECTIONS

SCHEMATIC DESIGN


LEVEL 5: PLAN

SECTIONS

SCHEMATIC DESIGN


SCHEMATIC DESIGN : SECTIONS


SCHEMATIC DESIGN : SECTIONS


Delhi Public School SIZE: LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

12,000 Sqft. Surat, India Architect Schematic Design

Junior Architect for the conceptual design and documentation of the K-10 school building of 12,000 sq.ft including classroom, auditorium, laboratories and playground.

SITE PLAN

L1

L2

L3

L1

L2

L3

PROGRAM DISTRIBUTION

FLOOR PLANS


MODEL


Span Engine Office Design SIZE: LOCATION: ROLE: STATUS:

6,000 Sqft. Mumbai, India Architect Built

Junior Architect for the Conceptual, Schematic and Detailed Design for a 6000 sq.ft office space.




competitions


AIM International Competition for the Redevelopment of Cable 8 Beijing, China

YEAR : 2010 TEAM MEMBERS: Amit Arya, Buvana Murali “Designing the last factory block in China” Among the glittering towers that rise to the sky in the Guo-Mao District, Cable 8 – a smaller scaled group of low rises – is an antithesis to the Guo-Mao paradigm. Originally built during the industrialization era of the People’s Republic, Cable 8 was a factory complex producing electrical cables, and has recently evolved into a re-vitalized incubator for art and design. Eight of its existing buildings have been converted from manufacturing floors to loft space, hosting designers and artists of various disciplines.

The low rise Cable 8 buildings, with their ivy-covered brick walls, form a sharp contrast to the high rise structures that have sprung up around it. The visitors to Cable 8 can enjoy a visit to a photography exhibition, the opening of a new studio, or a discussion session on contemporary art at one of the galleries. Cable 8 not only supplies a contrasting architecture to the CBD area, but also ushers in a cultural impetus to the otherwise homogeneous socio-cultural scene of Guo-Mao. The district has become fragmented from the holistic planning that

AIM COMPETITION FOR REDEVELOPMENT OF CABLE 8, BEIJING


has standardized the majority of the CBD, but the fragmentation shows a beauty in itself; Cable 8 has become a cultural carrier that has its roots in the historic past, but has regained its value with an investment in the future. Cable 8 has brought cultural infusion to Guo-Mao. Participants were asked to come up with strategies and mechanisms that will improve Cable 8, making it more susceptible to the rapidly changing urban landscape, and perform better as a cultural carrier that helps to diversify the otherwise homogeneous nature of the

CBD area. Participants could either improve the existing buildings in Cable 8 or introduce new architecture. The competition highly encouraged the design to go beyond the confinement of the existing site into the urban scale of the CBD area, and try to form a new relationship between site, program, form and technology.





CBD AND CULTURAL INFUSION

CBD AND PUBLIC SPACE

The proposal to dehomogenize the CBD addresses both global and local scales. Cultural institutions like museums, Libraries and Theatres anchor the site internationally and are located in the larger volumes of the hyperbuilding. These are complemented by small scale counterparts such as independant art galleries, film institutes, satellite campuses, studios and workshops that occupy the warehouse buildings and the smaller volumes of the hyperbuilding.

Beijing’s hyperdensity calls for a public space appropriate to its scale and time. The design proposes a new space for the Collective. It acts as a physical extension of cyberspace , ‘an Augmented Space’ where the lag between real event and its broadcast is reduced to a minimum. The building acts as an urban screen and allows for the dissemination of information. The new space for a new Public is envisioned as both, a breather for the business district as well as a battle ground for the dialectics between the tower and the warehouse, the gentrifying agent and the delicate urban fabric that is being gentrified, and between goverment and the governed.


AIM COMPETITION FOR REDEVELOPMENT OF CABLE 8, BEIJING


AIM COMPETITION FOR REDEVELOPMENT OF CABLE 8, BEIJING


AIM COMPETITION FOR REDEVELOPMENT OF CABLE 8, BEIJING


AIM COMPETITION FOR REDEVELOPMENT OF CABLE 8, BEIJING


Freedom Park Competition URBAN DESIGN COMPETITION LOCATION: Bangalore, India This was a competition for the conversion of a defunct colonial prison into an urban public park. Following a move of Bangalore’s Central Jail to the outskirts of the city, the Bangalore’s Municipal Corporation was handed the task of redeveping its defunct infrastructure. The BMC saw the premise as an urban space for the arts, recreation and commercial activity. The proposal sought to reuse the barracks and institutional infrastructure by rejigging it for recreational use. The program developed as a 24 hour public space that acts as a canvas for both everyday activities and events.

FREEDOM PARK COMPETITION, BANGALORE



Rethinking Peri-Urban Public Space INVITED COMPETITION by the Indian Institute of Architects LOCATION: Mumbai, India This project sought to look critically at the design and programming of urban public spaces. Working in a team of 2 we focussed on those on a satellite city of New Bombay and started by studying the history of these spaces and the way in which they were envisioned. This was followed by a process of empirical observations, field studies, time lapse documentations and a finally a proposal that was presented at a public forum.

DESIGN COMPETITION


DESIGN COMPETITION


DESIGN COMPETITION


DESIGN COMPETITION



academic samples


Undoing the Highway

Urban Design Capstone Studio (MUP) UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LOCATION: Detroit, U.S.A ROLE: Urban Designer

Detroit is the archetypal post-industrial American city with the hollowed out centre and suburban sprawl. In recent years the city has become a space for spectacles, a magnet that draws suburban crowds to it liminally and empties out when the spectacle ends. Sports arenas, Casinos and Convention centres bookend the peripheral subgrade freeway that cuts the downtown from the rest of the city. The impact of the Automobile on the city has left its social economical and physical scars. The flight of manufacturing and with it jobs and people has effected the atrophy of the fine grain fabric transforming it to a city of superblocks. Parking lots fill the city and there exists no pedestrian realm in a city full of decaying ghosttowers.

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)

SITE: Downtown Detroit is an area of 1 mile radius cut off from the rest of the city with sub grade highways on 3 sides and bordered by the river on the 4th side. The perceptive turf as well as siting of the mega projects is influenced by this highway ring. Academic and cultural institutions pepper the city forming islands of activity in the ghostown. These become the only zones where pedestrians can be seen on the streets. However these pockets remain disconnected from each other and the larger regional context and are too impotent to cause urban transformation acting in isolation.


INTENT: This project seeks to use education as a way to redensify the inner city and to intensify the existing education networks Intensifying urban education netby creating synergies between them. The attempt is to further works through partnerships reconnect downtown Detroit both physically as well as regionally across various institutions as a centre for higher learning. Regional education centres once established, acquire a growing presence, give to the community as well as draw a critical mass of regional and international students.

Wayne State University

Detroit Institute of Arts

The educational institutions emerge in the interstices between existing buildings which can be retrofit for new uses thereby optimizing on funding. The proposed fabric tries to remian fine grain pedestrian by integrating with the future public transportation networks.

Detroit Medical Centre Detroit School of Arts,

in c A th P o c a a

Public high school

Max Fisher Music Centre

T f a s i d p

Cass Tech High School Recently added new school building with the old building currently vacant

I-75 Fox Theatre + State Theatre

DOWNTOWN

The highway is bridged with an intensely programmed public space that is seen as the canvas for everyday activities and events. Numerous “follies” litter this canvas and become nodes in the activity network. The geography of the city morphs from a disconnected nucleus to a series of north south tentacular network of students and their allied activities.

T u c w o s t t w T

WSU, School of Medicine

A range of institutions have been considered from those of private higher education like schools for Perfoming arts and Sport management that build on Detroit’s existing assets, to community colleges and trade schools that cater to a range of aspirations, providing affordable options as well as places for continuing education.This network allows for a sharing of space and resource, while simultaneously allowing each institution to develop its main expertise. INTERVENTION: The existing periphery that divides downtown Detroit from mid town-i.e.Interstate 75 is considered as the site for weaving the scattered institutions as well as the auto-scaled city together.

T in d re e g a ti

Detroit Public Library

MIDTOWN

The benefits of an urban multi-university campus are many. The adjacency of various diverse and specialized institutions is useful to establish partnerships with one another. This allows community colleges and other public institutions to benefit from such a network of close proximity. Universities are able to tap public/ private funding for improving the physical realm of the city.They bring with them a diverse pool of students, faculty and research bodies invested in the place. Detroit provides an ideal laboratory for experiments on the City.

A A

I-94

T D e ti

T b t p s e a

Detroit Opera House Gem Theatre Wayne County Community College University of Detroit Mercy, School of Law

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


CASS A VENUE

GR AN RI VE

1

R AV

I-75

2ND AV ENUE

D

5

PARK AVENUE

3

EN UE old cass tech building reused as vocational institute

MUSEUM

CAFÉS

SKATEBOARD PARKS

Urban Multi-University Campus:Intensifying the network of existing local learning institutions

Educational Institutions Total: 3,000,000 sq.ft Approx 12,000 - 15,000 students

CRECHE/PLAYSCHOOL

CHESS PARK

Public Pedagogy: Floor space leased out on temporary basis to business incubators, research centres, non profits, start ups forming bridges between the academy and the city

reconfigurab reconfigur

MEDIA PAVILION

Vehicular Circulation + Strengthening the N-S corridors with increased density

Community College, Satellite campuses, Trade Schools-Reusing the vacant Cass Tech Building New Private Higher Education University

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)

urban sofas

private universities

WATERSCAPE

Entertain-

Civic

Parking

Total:

ment

Buildings

Total:

Total:

Total:

No.of spots : 6000

400,000

300,000

sq.ft

sq.ft

540,000

Park programs Total: 144,105 sq.ft sq.ft

Theatres, Recording Studios, Startup Artists Space

LIBRARY LIBRA

Bridging the highw everyday activitie

Commercial

Cass Avenue

7

community college

student housing

COMMUNITY GARDENS

1,700,000 sq.ft


BRUSH STREET

I-75

6

park as a canvas for everyday activities and events

FARMERS MARKET

way: Using the park as a canvas for es and events

RESTAURANT

public pedagogy

public movie screening

URBAN EXHIBITION SPACE

Pedestrian Flows Mid Blocks Pedestrian pathways

GYM

Landuse + Programming

Total proposed build out:

17acres

climbing wall

JOGGING TRACKS

10,317,500 sq.ft or 240 Acres

Residential

Parks Total:

sports pavilion

OPEN AIR THEATRES

725,500 sq.ft

8

Total:3,600,000 sq.ft or 82 Acres Units: 4000 Persons: 12,000 45 units/acre Dormitories, Hostels, Student housing, Market Rate Housing

SECTION 1

Woodward Avenue

TRANSIT STOP

Park Avenue

WOODWARD AVENUE

rable architecture

ARY

2

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


9

Woodward Avenue

SECTION 1 CONTINUED

11

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)

STUDENT EXHIBITION SPACE

CAFE BAR

COMMUNITY GARDENING

FARMERS MARKET


T

Brush Street

John R Street

10

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


13

JOGGING TRACKS

BIKING TRAILS

9

Woodward Avenue

SECTION 1 CONTINUED

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)

SPORTS COURTS


Brush Street

John R Street

10

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


LIBRARY CAFE + PUBLIC READING SPACE

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


CRECHE

WATERSCAPE

16

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


Lafayette Park

ChryslerFreeway

I-75 Fisher Freewa

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


Renaissance Centre

Detroit river

John C Lodge Freeway

ay

DESIGN DISSERTATION (MUP)


Heterotopias and Convent Schools Design Dissertation (B.Arch)

UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI LOCATION: Mumbai Using my subjectivity as primary text, I analyzed space,hegemony and gaze in a disciplining system and revisited my Convent school. This involved a 3 month study comprising of interviews with students and faculty, spatial and temporal analyses. Through this study I decoded the ways in which the disciplining system was reflected and experienced spatially as well as looked for “spaces of resistance”- interstices and moments that escaped the policing gaze of the convent. Michel Foucault’s“Panopticon” provided a useful analytical instrument.The resulting intervention worked with both architectural form and a program that challenged, somewhat playfully, the panoptic gaze of the convent seeking a less hegemonic learning space.

DESIGN DISSERTATION (B.ARCH)


art room library

basketball courts

hockey courts

convent

cafeteria

locker rooms

stationary store

B

assembly

7

lawns

entrance

kindergarden classroom

PLAN amphitheatre

A

classroom

B

3

2

A 6

A

1

11

1 First Floor

DESIGN DISSERTATION (B.ARCH)



Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.