Smarchs portfolio application 2014

Page 1

Dalia Munenzon

b.arch professional degree technion, iit - haifa, israel

selected works 2006-2013

application - mit, SMArchS in Architecture and Urbanism

a c a d e m i c 02/

s e a c h a n g e - a s h d o d wat e r f r o n t

g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s / u r b a n & d e t a i l e d

10/

d o n o t av o i d m a s s a c t i v i t y - n a h a r i a c e n t e r

urban design

13/

G u a r d i a n s t r e s h o l d - r e s i d e n t i a l t o w e r

building

18/ A r t s c h o o l - T LV b u i l d i n g 22/ m at h o u s i n g r e s e a r c h

p r a c t i c e w / u r i c o h e n a r c h i t e c t s 24/

C h a b a d s c h o o l n a z a r e t e l i t e

competition - first prize

26/

u r b a n c e n t e r b e i t h a n i n a - j e r u s a l e m

comission - urban plan

28/

T a c h k e m o n y s c h o o l t i b e r i u s

competition - first prize

30/

d a y c a r e c e n t e r b e e r s h e v a

competition - Honorble mention


g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

s e a c h a n g e | a s h d o d wat e r f r o n t t h e s i s p r o j e c t, t e c h n i o n 2 0 1 3 tutor: els verbakle

AWA R D S A N D N O M I N AT I O N S May 2012 The Leon and Israel Reiskin Memorial Prize - 1st. prize for best graduation project Selected as best B.Arch. Thesis in the Technion, IIT, Haifa, Israel.

June 2012 N at i o n a l c o m p e t i t i o n T h e A z r i e l i F o u n d at i o n A n n u a l Awa r d G r a d u ation project nominated for the first stage of the competition.

May 2012 The Prize in the Memory of Architect Uri Ben Asher: - 1st. prize for best sustainable design in the Technion, IIT, Haifa, Israel.

Aug. 2012 International Archiprix 2013 competition Graduation project Selected TO BE NOMINATED FROM THE iit.

The project deals with the city of Ashdod and its overlapping points with the natural edges correspondingly to changes and urban development along time. The space between city and sea remains outside the city grid, its edges determined by overlapping the sea, ground and city. The weaknesses of the edge as a space empty of urban activity, allows to develop temporary “off grid� events which mediate between city and nature. Acupunctured organization of the waterfront with different scaled public spaces enables a variety of impermanent activities. The new system principals are based on natural elements sand, water and vegetation; The unique landscape defines the planning conditions and reflects its morphology and consistency. The infrastructure system must react to uncertainty, while limiting the possibilities the site can handle. The project develops a local & regiona program and open and building types which can withstand changes such as rising water level and sand dune movement.

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g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

SHORELINE SECTIONS Learning the relations between the built environment and the sea.

Mapping the intensity of the area enraveled the VOIDS. The urban spaces vary between the deserted and the mildly active.

full high medium local

The Abandoned building gives the nature a place to burst out from and the open void drains people and water from the mass.

abandoned - blocked doors deserted outdoors neglected transformed poorly active

DEPLETION MAP "The predictable rise of the water level is expected to leave different mark on different countries....." "Most of these predictions assumed expectable time tables and scenarios. The most popular scenario is measuring the sea level as 1m for 100 years (until 2100), when the alternative time frame is until 2060." SPNI REPORT 2004, THE BEACHES OF ISRAEL. RAMI LERNER CEO.

VOID MAPPING

The principles behind the growth of the new system are based on the natural elements, the unique scenery which defines the planning conditions, and their reflection of shape and consistency.

Page 3


g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

WATER / SAND ADAPTIVE ELEMENTS

bridge/pier accumulation around the ground floor, the upper bridge turnes into the groung level.

THE SHORELINE

DUNESCAPEE CITY GRID

sand accumulation infrastructure for future roffed passage

DUNESCAPEE DIVIDED BY GRID 2011

FORMATION The plan reflects the consistent form of nature - ecological & hydrological. Formation of new urban grid determined by site elements and wind direction - formation of dunescape. LONG TIME SPAN (60-100) The system must be able to react to uncertainty, while limiting the number of possibilities embodied on site.

Dissolving plane OPEN-END STRUCTURE CATALOGUE As the scenery changes and develops, the structures begin to transform. A place, spatially defined by a specific activity for today, which will serve as a platform for other activities in the futures. Eventually these same spaces could be blocked or taken over by the natural elements.

rig / platform

NEW URBAN FORM - DUNSCAPE GRID

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g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

THE NORTH EDGE Is the most sensetive to nature’s changes, the water level in the river estuary changes with the seasons. Close to the harbor - the place functions as a leftover city: immigrants hostels and housing for the elderly. The intervention uses the changing scenery as a park for the city, community center for near by residents and a portal for tourists ariving to the port.

Page 5


g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

THE CENTER - URBAN MARKET

PROGRAM

New loaction for the weekly market, a dynamic space with variable infrastructure.

Providing a solution to the large parking lots, but minimising its footprint, supporting the communities needs and the future turist flow from the port.

The edges of the market is a community center connected to one of the hostel towers and a build street facade.

THE NORTH EDGE - PORT CONNECTION

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g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

The anchor for the spontaneous urban activity is the weekly open air market which takes place in the parking lots. How can we redefine this wide, expansive void into a dynamic spatial entity, which can contain thousands of visitors while changing its spatial functionality during the week days?

Grid of cement pillars establish the market infrastucture, light structure of metal frames and pantographic shelves avilable for the vendors and as shaded urban spaces for different activities.

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g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

INTERVENTION ELEMENT at accupancture points 3 key vantage pointsnorth(1-3) enter market (4-6) enter reuse (7) south (8-9) These points are infrastructural anchor points, in which local solutions are being applied for current needs and problems, while referring specific developments in the future.

Page 8


g r a d u at i o n t h e s i s

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

SOUTH EDGE the neighborhood grid, reuse of a deserted supermarket building to an event hall. A left over space of an old mini golf court can be used as a leveled parking space.

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Naharia - urban design

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Do not a-void mass activity URBAN PLANNING, technion 2009

AWA R D S A N D N O M I N AT I O N S M ay 2 0 1 0

W I T H M . PA R H A M O V S K Y & G . T O B I A S TUTORS: arch. ASIF BERMAN & arch.ZVI KOREN

Tasc - Technion Architecture Faculty Yearly Competition Honorable mentioned for 3rd year Urban design

The project aspires for urban activity and creats a regional center in the city of Naharia. We turn the unintended midlands of the city to an intense activity centers & condense the city around them. The centers are complementary to the Galilee, by the means of inserting height & vegetation into Naharia, An urban Intensity which is an antithesis to the existing homogeneous centers. Versatility explored on each aspect, design and human behavior. The new plan based on continuum of build areas & landscape, which design a new space with diverse movement & usages based on potential and flexibility. The area south from Rasko connects the hills & northern neighborhoods. Each urban tissue continues into the new plan and receives public functions by their needs.

Built Areas

Integration of regional & natural element PLANNING PRINCIPALS

Hetrogenic suroundings

Movement from and to the midlands

UTOPIC CITY DEVELOPS THAT INWORDS

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Naharia - urban design

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

industrial areanational activity

south of Rasko local city activity

Higher buildings in the center around the existing stadium and dens flora growth.

Mass Topography

southaccess from Acre The center connects the neighbehoods, and combines mass of vegetation and built areas concentrated in the center is the heigest and densiest building.

WEEKEND

WEEKDAY

WEEKEND - NIGHT

WEEKDAY- NIGHT

MASTER PLAN vegetation density residential tissue mixeduse high dense mixeduse

URBAN ACTIVITY The new intervention intensifies the disconnected parts both the city and creats a new center.

NEW CENTER ACTIVITY The new center creats urban activity 24/7.

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Naharia - urban design

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

RASKO

rasko - low dense built area in vegetation mass

AMIDAR

TRUMPELDOR

stadium and school connection

footbridge above highway 4

CAZENELSON

STADIUM AND PARK VIEW FROM SCHOOL

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h a i fa - r e s i d e n t i a l p r o j e c t

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Guardians threshold residential tower

AWA R D S A N D N O M I N AT I O N S

technion 2010

M ay 2 0 1 1

tutor: architect uri cohen

Tasc - Technion Architecture Faculty Yearly Competition Honorable mentioned for 4th year project

The program - 120 residential units which unifies local and new residents. The development of this region is an acupuncture point to future interventions in neglected areas. The project is a case study of creating an intervention in a problematic urban area without pushing out the weak population by gentrification.

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h a i fa - r e s i d e n t i a l p r o j e c t

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Street TransformationThe relations between the living space and work space changed since the industrial revolution. A new type of residency should be developed. Transportation connection Residential options for suburban living with in the metropolis for strong communities. Social program close the edge of the street, the tower provides urban occupuncture point.

The office building divides between the living area and the noisy intersection, provides living and welcoming communal spaces inbetween.

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h a i fa - r e s i d e n t i a l p r o j e c t

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

ENTRY FLOOR 2, LEVEL +21.00

ENTRY FLOOR 2, LEVEL +24.00

PRIVECY GRADIATION Each appartment in the tower has at least two levels. the living room with a south west view - sun light during afternoon hours while the famlies at home. The bottom floor is the childrens bedrooms - could be connected by choise to an office for people working from home. Each 2 appartments share a communal space to enhace the individual skyscraper way of living and share a public garden.

The intersection blocks the view of the bay and the wadi, it creates a disrespectful feeling for the local residents. Despite the problems the bridge creates it could be an opportunity for a positive intervention if a barrier will be integrated with a new housing type. Contemporary way of living allows many people to choose working from home, in many Israelis households at least one of the parents is working from home. These promote the concept of combining apartments with working spaces.

Page 15


h a i fa - r e s i d e n t i a l p r o j e c t

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

OFFICE SPACE ACUSTIC TERRACE The project creats a new kind of community, as important the tower it's ground floor extremely important for the community. The skyscraper is a continuance for the street and a new threshold.

PRIVECY GRADIATION

ATRIUM VIEW FLOOR COLLECTIVE SPACE AND GARDEN

TOWER GROUND FLOOR

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h a i fa - r e s i d e n t i a l p r o j e c t

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

ROW HOUSE - APARTMENTS

SOUTH VIEW

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t e l av i v - a r t s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

A r t s c h o o l t lv

AWA R D S a n d n o m i n at i o n s

technion 2008 may 2009

tutor: Arcitect oren on National competition “Designs in education� Israeli Ministry of education 2nd year project, art school design chosen to be nominated to the competition by the Technion, IIT, Haifa, Israel.

FORMAL TESTING. Different facade to each street and positionof the school yards with optimal light-shade ratio.

The project is an elementary art school with 12 classrooms and supporting facilities in the dense heart of the white city on a deserted site with an old school building. The site connects two streets with a public passage, lowered 3 meters from the street level. The presence of open space in this urban tissue must be preserved and accessible to the residents. Schools in Israel must be surrounded with a high fence; this restriction might block access for this green space within the city. Using the existing topography allows the usage of an underground level, and allows keeping the public passage. the pablic passage connects two small squers and whatches from above on the interoverted school yards.

VIEW FROM FRUG ST. TO SCHOOL ENTRANCE

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t e l av i v - a r t s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Large yards protected from the urban surrounding.

1-4 classrooms

5-6 classrooms

SPACES DEVISION.

SAFE OUTDOORS.

north s c h o o l ya r d

south s c h o o l ya r d

s c h o o l ya r d public passage

s c h o o l ya r d

1-4 classrooms

a d m i n i s t r at i o n cafeteria

art depertment

5-6 classrooms

s c h o o l ya r d

PUBLIC FUNCTIONS.

PUBLIC CERCULATION.

s c h o o l ya r d public passage LIbrary

Disconectued from the school.

Circumferential movment system inside the school. classrooms on the outer ring arouns the arts classes.

dance studio

Opening some of the schools facilities to the public by positionong them along the street with a double entrance.

auditorium

s c h o o l ya r d s c h o o l ya r d

l e a r n in g space ya r d

The environment foster and provides with insperation.

art s t u d io

classroom c ir c u l at io n

street

The learning space is the buffer between the classroom and the art space; unformal activities are possible.

The school structure is different from its surrounding, it is mostly external space referring to an opaque facade continuom. Most of the classrooms are on the same level, around a central art space and all with access to the yard. The central art space is open with vertical partitions, there is different levels of exposure to the outdoors.

LEVELS OF CIRCULATIONS.

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t e l av i v - a r t s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Length section - from Dov Hoz st. to Frug st. Green terraces and classrooms.

Page 20


t e l av i v - a r t s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Gradiant of exposure for the environment asolute, natural light and sound. partial, different views to the outside. exposed, watch and learn from the street.

VIEW FROM DOV HOZ ST.

Classroom Regular frontal teaching class, however each student can choose whether to take part or watch from the side.

LEARNING SPACE Various possibilities of learning conditions to choose from.

WIDTH SECTION - WEST VIEW Section through the main art space and its relationship to the classrooms.

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m at h o u s i n g - r e s e a r c h

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

“ M at H o u s i n g ” - r e s e a r c h technion 2010

with vered bengio tutor: Arcitect uri cohen

Bern, Switzerland - Siedlung Halen Architects: Atelier 5 Dwelling units: 81

“Mat - Housing” precedence researchof two projects, learning the planning process and comparing the results. Siedlung Halen in Bern, Switzerland by Atelier 5 andexample Neighborhood in Beer Sheva, Israel. Exploring the urban form created by the building and it’s assembly by one cell and learning about the planner’s decision making process.

A SELF SUFFICIENT urban block, internal pathways and Square are defined by intrinsic geometric logic with no reaction to the surrounding. THE ORIGINS of each case study are different, on one hand the european row housing and on the other the arabic “kasba”; each typology has its own urban and climatic advatages.

Beer Sheva, Israel - Example Block ‘H’ Architects: A. Yasky Masterplan, D. Havkin and N. Zolotov Dwelling units: 300

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m at h o u s i n g - r e s e a r c h

Dalia Munenzon

academIC

portfolio 2013

Beer Sheva, Israel - Example Block ‘H’ Architects: A. Yasky Masterplan, D. Havkin and N. Zolotov The cell contains front and back garden space, the house inside has two types with different privacy gradiation.

DECISION MAKING ANALYSIS Beer Sheva, Israel - Example Block ‘H’ The consept of the growing home - the cell may be filled over time, the construction allowes it.

COMPLEX CREATION One cell duplicated in a geometrical order in the frame, no climatic relation to the position of the units. Clearing combinations of units for pubilc space.

THE DWELLING UNIT CELL

Bern, Switzerland - Siedlung Halen Architects: Atelier 5

Govermental plan for a prototype neighborhood with three types of urban elements.

THE DWELLING UNIT CELL The cell was condensed into the minimun width to apply the same unit on three floors so it will merge with thetopography. COMPLEX CREATION The size of the units defined by an underground parking space, the upper left block. The central public space is the heart of the project and divides the blocks. DECISION MAKING ANALYSIS The construction allowes the space to fllow between the two awailable facades.

RELATION TO THE OUTDOORS - GRADIATION

STREET

LOBY PUBLIC AREA

LIVING

GARDEN Beer Sheva, Israel - Example Block ‘H’

Circulation lines - by architects plan interpretation.

Bern, Switzerland - Siedlung Halen

outdoors private public

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nazareth - school

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

chabad school - nazareth ilit

AWA R D S

competition and comission 2010

led by uri cohen team: ranny shor role: team architect during work on the competition, project architect working on the comission going through permisions, construction phases and detailing.

october 2010 first prize in a competition by iaa and the municipality of nazereth ilit.

Two religious schools an elementary and high school, the programs ask the boys and girls to have divided spaces with a common administration and subject rooms. In order to allow the public to use the building, the additional functions were situated in proximity to the street on the east, allowing access directly from the city, with no need to cross through the classes areas. The school is planned to be build in two stages, each stage must be self-sufficient as a structure and an urban space. The special classrooms and programs are added in a hinged level above a public square in the second phase.

SECTION - PUBLIC FUNCTIONS LEVEL

PHASE A - PUBLIC SQUARE

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nazareth - school

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

GIRLS ENTRANCE - GROUND FLOOR

BOYS ENTRANCE - BOTTOM FLOOR

PUBLIC FUNCTIONS -UPPER FLOOR

An open area between the two schools, and is used as a local amphitheater and cafeteria off school hours by the community. This open area is situated next to a green yard sloping to the west, separating the two schools. The yard is partially roofed, allowing outdoor activities during rain or hot sun.

public public building public square

elementary

highschool

Program Combination

GIRLS YARD - SECTION Stage A

Stage B

Development Stages

Girls Boys Yards - Boys/Girls

highschool elementary Age Groups

BOYS WING- SECTION

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Beit hanina - urban plan

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

urban plan - beit hanina - jerusalem comission 2011/2

l e d b y u r i c o h e n t e a m : y. g o l d a n d r . s h o r role: team architect, site and program studies, 3 d m o d e l l i n g , p l a n d e v e l o p m e n t a n d 2 d d e s i g n a n d d r aw i n g . Beit Hanina is a neighborhood in northern Jerusalem located along the historic rout between Jerusalem and Ramallah. Due to the uncertainties of the future of the area, a flexible master-plan was developed to the various political, social, economic and environmental scenarios that may occur.

Landmarks: School for boys (1), The building of Al-Quds University(2), The two Mosques(3,4), and the various Green elements (tree avenues(5), forests, agricultural terraces(6)) .

Green Connection

The site is tangent to diverse traffic and cultural networks (National to local, from Arab to Jewish, from vertical to horizontal).

Opportunity: The Site is one of the largest vacant spaces in the Arab northern neighborhoods of Jerusalem.

STRATEGIC PLAN: 1. Beit Hanina Road – Regional Backbone 2. Representative landmark 3. “The Stage” - Urban Public Space 4. Green route 5. Public Green Space 6. Programmatic Bridge 7. Perforated Fence 8. Topography Integrated Architecture 9. Existing Symbolic Landmarks 10. Local Backbone

Page 26


Beit hanina - urban plan

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

The urban plan stems from the following objectives: The first - Creating a public center for various populations of northern Jerusalem and the region, based on the strategic location of the site. The second - Preserving the large urban scale of the site, while integrating into the existing urban fabric. The third - Creating a sustainable environment ecologically and socially. Integrating various programs and morphologies, while protecting the values of the site and its surroundings. FUTURE SCENARIOS: Due to uncertainties about the future of the area three scenarios were developed. The various programs derive from each scenario: Local, Regional and National.

8. Programmatic breakdown - Multi Scenario Chart – Total Areas: Zone Name & Area

Program Type Commerce

"SPECIAL COMMERCIAL ZONE" 10,433 m2

Offices Tourism

"RESIDENTIAL ZONE 1" Residential - 38,606 m2

Scenario Shops

Cafes

Restaurants

Market

(Open) Passage

Total

Local

Regional Function Regional

1,500 Offices 11,650

600 Total 11,650

426

2,750

4,000

9,276

Regional

Function

Inns

Guest Rooms

Boutique Hotels

Spas

High End Hotels

Total

0

6,200

Regional Function Regional

Public Buildings - 28,000 m2

Public

Sports

Culture

Public Institutions 70,919 m2

Education

Institutions

Programs & Areas (m2)

Function

National

1,200 600 1,800 2,600 Average Residential Residential High-rise Terrace Housing Student Dormitories building in Beit Building Hanina 13,190 (132 units)

Function

Auditorium

Local

3,660

0 GLASS HOUSE -

Botanic Gardens

16,960(106 units) Memorial Center 0 Public Swimming Pool 2,550

Local

0 Sports Centers Basket Ball Hall & Gyms 980 8,150 Community Galleries Center 3,700 2,400

Function

Daycare Center Learning Center

Function Regional Function

Total

14,000

44,150

Center for Global Dialogue (Convention) 0

National Heritage Museum 3,500

Center for Disability Services 13,540

Water Purification Center & Park 2,000

23,160

Total

Foot Ball Court

Total

2,120

13,800

Youth Center

Events Hall

Social Club

Cinema

2,000

1,000

500

1,500

Municipal Theater 2,000

Visitors Center 0

Kindergartens

University Faculty

Research Centers

Music Academy

Academy for the Arts

Teachers Training Center

Total

0

0

0

19,700

z

Local

900

500

900

17,400

0

Function

Library

Orphanage

Retirement Home

Medical Center

Convention Center

Transportation Center

Total

Regional

2,000

1,500

1,810

3,400

6,180

3,000

17,890

Concert Hall

Total

0

13,100

Total Multi Scenario Area – 147,276 m2

Beit Hanina – Urban Center Master Plan

March2012

* Click on the cell within the chart to view precedent

PUBLIC SQUARE

ORCHARD / CENTRAL GARDEN

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t i b e r i u s - Ta c h k e m o n y s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

Ta c h k e m o n y s c h o o l - t i b e r i u s

AWA R D S

competition and comission 2012

l e d b y u r i c o h e n t e a m : y. g o l d a n d o . m e n a c h e m role: project architect, basic scheme design, urban

march 2012 first prize in a closed competition by the municipality of tibrius.

The city of Tiberius lies in Northern Israel along the shores of the sea of Galilee. Until the 20th century the city was characterized by a casbah urban fabric with densely built basalt houses and communal courtyards. New buildings and urban transformations of the 1930’s and 1960’s created a disintegrated city fabric. The Tachkemony school compound is an opportunity to link the city’s past with a sustainable future through the creation and reconstruction of an urban public space.

concept development, detailing, 3d modeling.

Page 28


t i b e r i u s - Ta c h k e m o n y s c h o o l

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

Classroom Directions North/South

24/7 Activity evening daytime

Sea view The school site is in a new neighbourhood in the midst of the planning process. Although the first intuition was to place the school in the north east corner on the main street, a further analysis made it clear that the school should create a new urban space in the new neighbourhood.

ROOF GARDEN

“Past fosters the future�

urban space yards

Sustainability

OutDoors

scattered objects 1. Director 2. Administration 3. Nurse 4. Jenator 5. counselor 6. teachers lounge

8/14. classroom 9. Technology 10. Science 11. Special aid 12. library 13. private room

Lower floor plan

covered gardening sports leisure

green roof solarwater panels resycling

Entrance floor plan

SECTION THROUGH PUBLIC SQUARE AND GARDEN

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b e e r s h e va - d ay c a r e c e n t e r

Dalia Munenzon

practice - uri cohen architcts

portfolio 2013

d ay c a r e c e n t e r - b e e r s h e va

AWA R D S

competition 2013 march 2013 Honorble mention in an open competition by t h e m u n i c i p a l i t y o f b e e r s h e va a n d z e z e z e g a l l e r y.

l e d b y u r i c o h e n t e a m : y. g o l d a n d o . m e n a c h e m role: project architect, planning and design, concept development, detailing, 3d modeling and 2 d r e s e n t at i o n .

Establishing the day care center in the city of Beer Sheva is an opportunity for integration of social services within the community. The plan allows selective exposure to city life for the users, while keeping their privacy and giving the city areas for activities. Most building spaces designated for the users, concentrated in the entry level. The rest of the operational functions are located at the lower level , which connected to the city.

Additional services

classrooms

Wing devision

Natural topography

ROOFTOP GARDN

yard

roof terrace

coffe shop

loby

treatment room

common garden

One level

Accesability

ACTIVITY GARDEN

Page 30


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