MLA Portfolio

Page 1

selected works

SN andra

am cioffi

Sandra.Nam.Cioffi@gmail.com (917) 685.7170 NEW YORK


Westchester County, New York

background (su m m a r y)

Chicago, Illinois

Prior to graduate school, I was in New York

D.C. After being accepted into Virginia Tech’s

City and lived in a small studio on the Upper

three-year first professional degree program

East Side. My life was very urban, hipster-ish,

in landscape architecture at the Washington-

and surrounded by good friends and family.

Alexandria Architecture Center, I fell in love with

After receiving a B.A. from the University of

design, with the landscape, and with the idea

Chicago, I landed in the beauty and cosmetics

that I could possibly do something to make a

field and acquired skills in sales and marketing

mark in the world.

for the perfume industry focusing on brand

management for luxury goods. A few years

thesis and stepping back out into the working

after working in the creative world of scents,

landscape, I look down below and notice that

my marketing skills expanded into the merchant

I am wearing a new pair of shoes and I see

services industry focusing on business-to-

the world anew with a fresh nose. My hope is

business (B2B) activities.

to work in an office that is always challenging

In 2008, I decided to walk a new path

the conversation in landscape architecture and

in the field of landscape architecture and

looking for ways to make great things happen

discover its beauty while living in Washington,

out there.

New York City

Having recently finished my master’s

Washington, D.C.

2

The places I’ve lived.


table of contents

Master of Landscape Architecture at Virginia Tech

Professional Work

Additional Work

background

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The Southeast Side Story 2012 MLA Thesis Washington, D.C.

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Urban Reading Park 2010 Fall Studio Alexandria, VA

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Chestnut Oak Grove Columbarium 2010 Spring Studio Herndon, VA

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Earth, Movement, Play 2009 Fall Studio Washington, D.C.

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Woodside Urban Park, a Montgomery County Park Silver Spring, MD

28

ScentWalks in Landscape Writing & Volunteer Work

32 34

Drawing Label Text for the drawing

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The Southeast Side Story: A landscape narrative about D.C.’s fillscapes

landscape has a story to tell, and U street

U street

every story is embedded in a site’s memory.

Q street

Q street

Q street

thesis project investigates how a landscape

I street

reet

I st

I street

17th street

I street

21st street

9th

17th street

street

Looking through the lens of perfumery, this

17th street

9th

Q street

street

21st street

U street

9th

17th street

Every

street

MLA Thesis, 2010 - 2011 | Washington, D.C. | Dr. Paul Kelsch, ASLA; Brian Katen, ASLA; Dr. Paul Emmons, RA

21st street

architect can read, design, and communicate U.S. Capitol

a landscape narrative so that it resonates on a deep emotional level with the user of a site. By

I street

I street 17th street

9th

‘reading’ the urban landscape of our nation’s

street

Voyelles

capital, a multi-layered narrative reveals itself

Inspired by the inherent beauty of the

landscape of Washington, D.C., this thesis is ultimately set in Southeast, D.C. to tell the story of how filled land along the Anacostia River came to be while revealing the memory of its own history to become a sustainable design of both culture and nature.

As a form of cultural, historical, and

ecological sustainability, this project serves as a pedagogical tool to understand exactly how a landscape’s narrative can reveal itself through design, and how a site’s narrative can serve as a complex web of interrelated natural and manmade systems for the benefit of human society and urban wildlife.

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Golfes d'ombre; E, candeurs des vapeurs et des tentes, Lances des glaciers fiers, rois blancs, frissons d'ombelles; I, pourpres, sang craché, rire des lèvres belles Dans la colère ou les ivresses pénitentes; U, cycles, vibrements divins des mers virides, Paix des pâtis semés d'animaux, paix des rides Que l'alchimie imprime aux grands fronts studieux; O, Suprême Clairon plein des strideurs étranges, Silences traversés des Mondes et des Anges: —Ô l'Oméga, rayon violet de Ses Yeux! ~ Jean-Nicholas-Arthur Rimbaud

str

ee

U street

17th street

turn making sense of itself.

Q

17th street

in the process of mapping scents in the city, in

Q street

Q street

A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu: voyelles, Je dirai quelque jour vos naissances latentes: A, noir corset velu des mouches éclatantes Qui bombinent autour des puanteurs cruelles,

et

U stre

t


2011 MLA Thesis

G Street N.W. between 5th + 6th

Alley between G + H northbound

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Gallery Place Metro

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7th Street N.W. between H + G southbound

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Verizon Center Walk

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7th Street N.W. between G + H Streets northbound

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H Street N.W. between 7th + 8th headed west

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H Street N.W. between 8th + 7th headed east

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H Street N.W. between 7th + Alley continuing east

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Alley between H + G southbound

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G Street N.W. between 6th + 5th east

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H Street N.W. between 5th + 7th headed west

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‘READING’ THE ESSENTIAL LANDSCAPE NARRATIVE OF

SCENTWALK OF CHINATOWN / GALLERY PLACE (above):

A ScentWalk through

D.C. (Left): Historical mapping and analysis revealed the

Chinatown in Northwest, D.C. revealed its essence of place as the intersection of all

urban form of Washington, D.C. was highly influenced

intersections. This area was full of scents of women’s perfumes, cigarettes, various

by its topographical and physical features.

Pierre

eateries, gasoline and rubber from moving vehicles, and the synthetic scents of

L’Enfant was the first to lay out the foundation of our

vinyl, candied goods, and the air pumped from ventilation systems. The mapping

nation’s capitol, but he used the topographical features

exercise communicated the temporal identity of Chinatown in Washington, D.C. while

of the landscape and the river’s edges to do so.

also suggesting its essence of character embedded in place.

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2011 MLA Thesis

L ’ E N F A N T P L A N

White House

An 18th century vision of a new capital city with open parks, grand national monuments, and a garden-lined ”grand avenue”.

10,032 ft. (1.9 miles) 6,336 ft. (1.2 miles) Lincoln Memorial

U.S. Capitol

Washington Monument

FILL-SCAPES A desire to engage and connect the regional landscape to the local, cityplan by reclaiming soil and redefining the character of the river front. ~ 1,000 ft. ~ 3,700 ft. ~4

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~2

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~ 4,500 ft.

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500

1000

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2000

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THE ESSENCE OF THE LANDSCAPE NARRATIVE + DESIGN PROCESS: Washington, D.C. attracts millions of visitors to the National Mall for its monuments and memorials along the northwestern half of the city’s riverfront, which generally rest on filled land. However, this thesis project is set in Southeast, D.C. to tell a different, yet related story of how filled land along the Anacostia River came to be, how a man-made landscape reconciles with nature’s ecological processes, how overlapping systems can reveal an underlying narrative, and ultimately telling a love story between the northwest and southeast sides of D.C.’s fillscapes.

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S I D E : noun

-A line bounding a plane figure. -A surface bounding a solid figure. -A surface of an object, especially a surface joining a top and bottom. -Either of the two surfaces of a flat object. -The part within an object or area to the left or right of the observer or of its vertical axis. -The left or right half of the trunk of a human or animal body. -The space immediately next to someone. -The space immediately next to something. -One of two or more contrasted parts or places within an area, identified by its location with respect to a center. -An area separated from another area by an intervening feature, such as a line or barrier. -One of two or more opposing individuals, groups, teams, or sets of opinions. -One of the positions maintained in a dispute or debate. -A distinct aspect. -Line of descent. -An incomplete script that shows the lines and cues of a single performer only.

C U T RIVER

Inaccessible Waterfront The Forgotten River Tidal Water The ‘Other Side’ of D.C. Lack of Paths Major Road Infrastructure

F I L L

FOREST

path parallel to current edge | making 2 sides (north/south + river/base) present.

Levee Construction Taming the River Architectural Edge

New Land

Wild River

Old Land

Tame Man-Made

intersections along the path and old shoreline | dialogue between cut + fill, between fill + forest, and past + present; referencing 2 sides at the same time.

FILL RIVER

Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling Taming the Land Controlled Edge

River Water

path centerline weaving through the old shoreline | making the 2 sides present.

intersections between city and new shoreline | dialogue between L’enfant plan + new plan and between present + present; referencing 2 sides at the same time.

Wild Nature

new shoreline

CUT RIVER

new fill/land

memory of river/water

(Present)

River Water

memory of old shoreline F I L L FOREST

(Absent)

interfaces of lines + sides

Inaccessible Views of the City Rip Rap along the Edge Confluence of 2 Rivers Ecological Corridor Nature Turning Wild Abandoned Railroad Track (B&O’s Shepherd Branch)

Two methods reveal the identities alongside these lines of reference

CUT RIVER

FILL

RIVER

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2

Levee Construction Changing Earthworks Old meets New Shorelines

Back Roads along the Edge Transition to Northern Half of the Base Secured Intelligence Information

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diagram 1 | new land vs. old land

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diagram 2 | tame, man-made vs. wild, nature

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the events | the material (past + present) of the landscape narrative

deric

k Do

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s Me

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Fre

Bridg

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South

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s Me

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rial

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Bridg

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South

rial

Bridg

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Capit

South

ol Str

S.E

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Capit

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S.E

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S.E

.

CUT Asphalt Lot and Create New Public Space

Remnants from D.C. Tree Nursery and U.S. Botanic Garden Nursery

Check point

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Truck Parking Lot

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View of Washington Monument

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Capit

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Poplar Point Park and Public Recreation

Public Access

mo

diagram 3 | presence vs. absence | cut vs. fill | river vs. forest the sequence | a set pattern of operations communicating the landscape narrative

Levee turns into low lying berm along the shoreline

Fre

FOREST

Old Shoreline

600

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the narrative | the essence of the site

Lines and sides have interesting relationships. When you draw one line, two sides are revealed. When you draw two lines, an area is defined. This is a landscape that tells the story between what is old vs. what is new land and to reveal the dialogue of what is present and what is absent; revealing both the processes (cut and fill) and characters (nature and man, river and forest) that created this landscape.

F I L L

Old Shoreline

Old Shoreline

CUT Service Roads

under S. Capitol Street Ramps at Poplar Point.

to connect the new edge with old edge while also allowing the narrative to come together as a whole landscape.

C U T RIVER

Storage Pod

D.C. Water & Sewer Authority

FILL

FOREST

Buzzard Point Marina

CUT Asphalt Lot

Recreational Fields

Levee System

Chain Link Fence

James Creek Marina

between S. Capitol Street’s northbound and southbound routes to develop forest management system.

Asphalt Lot

Cut Bank Present along the boundary of base and S. Capitol Street Detention Swale

Simultaneous views of Washington Monument + U.S. Capitol White House Communications Agency View of Washington Monument

North Gate & Checkpoint

CUT RIVER

FILL

End of Sidewalk from Bridge

RIVER

Interstate 295 Overhead Bridge

Stairway for North Levee Path

Elevate S. Capitol Street

in CUT ZONE 2 along the old shoreline to create a constructed wetland and manage stormwater runoff.

Old Railroad Crossing Signs still present

Navy Barracks 10’ Exposed Concrete Flood Wall

D.C. Water & Sewer Authority Buildings

Expansive view of the city with simultaneous views of Washington Monument + U.S. Capitol

Reconnect the Road Infrastructure

Barry Farm Southeast, D.C. Neighborhood

FILL FOREST

Military Vehicle Parking Lot & Maintenance

Line from old taxiway between 2 airfields

Levee System

Factors-Elements-Zones that limit/permit the negotiation process for determining the site boundary

New construction for Department of Homeland Security (Historic Site of St. Elizabeths Hospital for the Insane)

Asphalt Ramp to South Levee Path

Congressional Heliport

Experiential factors

FILL

RIVER

CUT RIVER Defense Boulevard acts as a spine to connect the 2 halves of the base, yet it only perpetuates the false notion that this (new) filled land is the same as the adjacent (old) land. This land is inherently different from the local landscape. Similarly, this half of the base is mainly a site for secure intelligence operations, whereas the southern half of the base is suburban and residential in nature.

Ecological Corridor: heavily vegetated area dominated by invasives and groundhog crossing

retention pond on base

so as not to disrupt access through the site, while also further defining the identities of the edge and the fill in the process.

Public Works Building

-Potential public path path along the old shoreline -Potential public path along the existing shoreline -Views of the city along the existing shoreline -Defense Boulevard on Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling

Remove Parking Lots

CUT a portion of Defense Boulevard

to create space for redeveloping the edge along the old shoreline and construct a wetland in CUT ZONE 3.

where the taxiway used to be. It currently acts as a spine and allows for direct movement between the northern and southern sides of what is now considered JOINT Base BollingAnacostia.

Infrastructural elements -South Capitol Street (southbound lane) -South Capitol Street (northbound lane) -Roads and Parking Lots that intersect with the Old Shoreline -Buildings that intersect with the Old Shoreline -Base Security

Trailers

Ecological zones Brookley Ave S.W. back access road on base Chain-Link Fence

Shooting Range

asphalt parking lot

asphalt parking lot

gravel parking lot recreational fields + picnic areas

Old Shoreline

Recycling Room

asphalt parking lot

Defense Intelligence Agency

Proposed Site Outline Shooting Range

Move

Buildings

along the old shoreline that are not high security in order to create space for redeveloping the edge.

Recycling Room

Remove Parking Lots

Interstate 295 N/S

to create space for redeveloping the edge along the old shoreline.

S. Capitol Street S.W./ S.E.

Congress Heights Southeast, D.C. Neighborhood

S. Capitol Street S.W./ S.E.

Toward Main Gate & Checkpoint

0

diagram 4 | existing site conditions

Edit the Current Road Infrastructure

by utilizing the access road (Bradley Avenue) to redirect traffic along the Old Shoreline, making the edge present and active, and further outlining its new(er) form from the old landscape.

Interstate 295 N/S 0

towards residential homes and park space

Old Shoreline

The proposed site negotiates the private/secure parts of the base with non-private/non-secured areas outside its borders through strategic and non-imposing ways. This outline enhances the qualities of the site, its characteristics, and inherent identities, while also distinguishing itself as its own landscape.

FILL FOREST

Abandoned Railroad Tracks from B&O Shepherd’s Branch emerges from heavily vegetated & fenced area

-The Anacostia River and Potomac River edges -The heavily vegetated area between Bradley Ave. & S. Capitol St.

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diagram 5 | negotiating site boundaries

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future | defining the new landscape

diagram 6 | editing the new land

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infrastructure | redefining the filled landscape based on the old landscape in order to create a whole landscape

Sub-sub watershed A Lh on turf Lh on pavement Lh TOTAL

1ST ST. S.E.

present | recognizing current boundaries, systems, + events

140 acres 2,561 ft 853 ft 3,415 ft

2ND ST. S.E.

Old Shoreline dog training area on mounded terrain

FILL FOREST

1,00

0 ft.

Sub-sub watershed B Lh on turf Lh on pavement Lh TOTAL

Northern Connection (betw. old and new) At the juncture where levee meets berm, where old meets new, and where cut meets fill, this area will become a kayak launch site for public recreation and provide direct access to the new riverfront. CUT ZONE 1 will act as a small basin to allow the river water to calmly flow in and out with the tides.

195 acres 3,627 ft 1,209 ft 4,836 ft

Slope of Lh 3.57% (change in elev 173 ft)

80 - 88 90 - 98 100-108

B

110-118

um Mon ton Was hing of

typ.

0 ft.

150-158

2ND ST. S.W.

160-168 170-178 180-188 190-198

stormwater from 2 sub-sub watersheds flow towards 2 low points at the edge of the old shoreline, as shown by shaded areas.

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CUT ZONE 2 378,000 cu. ft.

For comparison, number of trees managed in major U.S. Parks: The National Mall, Washington, D.C. 9,000+ Central Park, New York 24,0000 Prospect Park, New York 30,000+

ce

an

(dist

= 1.2

150 Red Maple Trees will be planted alongside the eastern/base side of the levee and will continue north at the public recreation area.

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Ca t& iles en um 1.3 m on = .M s les .W ce tw ening mi stan op .33 l di of = ) ce ds tan islan length al dis r ttl tot barrie of een (@ 1/4 betw

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Sub-sub Watershed B

stormwater calculations*

RIVER

4TH ST. S.W.

Sub-sub Watershed A stormwater calculations*

CUT

150

3RD ST. S.W.

0

. 0 ft 1,00

1ST ST. S.W.

130-138 140-148

Constructed Wetland/Detention Area 1

An already low-lying area, stormwater from this sub-sub watershed will flow into a catchment area that will accommodate for an average 2 year storm. (see Diagram 8 for details)

Forest Management Plan (FILL)

1,00

120-128

are major guiding lines upon which Tulip Poplar saplings (a pioneer species) will be planted for forest management in FILL ZONE 1. A mixture of Tulip Poplar and Black Locust trees will also be planted along parallel lines 15’ from these major lines. The northbound lane of S. Capitol Street and retaining wall at I295 will serve as the major boundaries to the east of this site.

Water flows and Sub-sub Watersheds

This plan calls for planting roughly 3000+ tree saplings during the initial 3 years along 1.5 miles. They will consist of Tulip Poplars, Black Locusts, Virginia Pines, Swamp White Oaks, Eastern Red Cedars and Sweet Birch Trees, all major pioneer species in the local region.

view

70 - 78

stem

60 - 68

id sy

50 - 58

16 18

n gr

40 - 48

12 14

groi

30 - 38

8 10

The levee wall will be cut open at this juncture to create direct access to the Anacostia River. A kayak launch site will allow for new recreation in this area and provide a gateway to this new public river walk.

perfo

Street Lines from Barry Farm (historic neighborhood)

20 - 28

6

5TH ST. N.W.

Sewer lines follow the path of the old shoreline and flow towards the Anacostia River. Stormwater flowing into detention area 1 will be filtered, piped into this drainage system, and will then flow out into CUT ZONE 1 and connect with the river.

2 4

en

0 ft.

1/2 ST. S.W.

F I L L

FOREST

Storm Drains for Detention Area 1

t

1,00

A TOPOGRAPHY - COLOR KEY

rate d

CUT

RIVER

SOUTH CAPITOL ST. S.E.

Outfall at Anacostia River

1/2 ST. S.E.

Slope of Lh 4.89% (change in elev 167 ft)

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view

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A new pier and boat dock near the naval barracks will function as a new checkpoint for base employees and those residing at the southern side of the base. There currently exists a gate that can be accessed here.

A

L’enfant’s grid plan and the current shoreline work as 2 separate yet overlapping systems designed to create an experientially, structurally, and ecologically functioning landscape.

Was

va

te

d

wa

This plan calls for capturing stormwater flowing into 2 sub-sub watersheds at the old shoreline. The details for this management plan are shown in Diagram 8.

Design function

Mon

hing

.

Stormwater Management Plan (CUT)

FIL L FOREST

U.S

ito

ap

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nd

la r is

Experiential function

The experience at the edge of the river provides numerous views of Washington, D.C., including simultaneous views of the Washington Monument and U.S. Capitol building, which are currently inaccessible to the public. The connection to the city lies dormant at the heart of this edge. With a new public pathway, people can experience the edge of a forgotten riverfront, kayakers can meander down the river on the main channel or alongside the new barrier islands, and boats can dock at the edge of the barrier islands and enjoy new places along the river.

Historic path to Insane Wharf

. Ca pitol

Structural function + U.S

*calculations based on the rational method

CUT RIVER

CUT ZONE 3

Monu ment

Constructed Wetland/Detention Area 2

An already low-lying area, stormwater from this secondary sub-sub watershed will flow into a catchment area that will accommodate for an average 2 year storm. (see Diagram 8 for details)

ington

555,984 cu. ft.

the

Wash

Lines from buildings that were close to the original river’s edge at St. Elizabeths historic site

views

of the

city

& of

will serve as major guiding lines to plant Virginia Pine tree saplings (a pioneer species) in FILL ZONE 2 and the adjacent areas of CUT ZONES 2 & 3 on the eastern side of the original shoreline. Swamp White Oak trees will complement this pattern of Virginia Pine trees as a secondary pioneer species.

Outfall at Potomac River

Old Shoreline

broad

Storm Drains for Detention Area 2

Sewer lines follow the path of the old shoreline and flow towards the Potomac River. Stormwater flowing into detention area 2 will be filtered, piped into this drainage system, and will then flow out into the river.

F I L L FOREST

Old Shoreline

F I L L FOREST

Historic Property Lines at Giesboro Point Sweet Birch trees will be planted at the historic Giesboro Point, where the old shoreline meets the new shoreline, attracting the Yellow-Bellied Sapsucker bird which breeds in the north and migrates south for the winter.

old edge | designing the working systems alongside the old shoreline

B

Where the new shoreline meets the old shoreline, the barrier island and pathway at this final juncture work to create an ideal sitting area and stage to view the city.

Ecological function

The structural system of the new public pathway provides 2 ecological functions. (1) The barrier islands work to slow down the water, while (2) the perforated groins work to slow down and capture the sediment flowing down the river. Over time the sediment will accumulate and create a marsh-like condition, allowing for grasses and a tame nature to grow.

Old Shoreline

Street Lines from Congress Heights will act as major lines to plant Eastern Red Cedar tree saplings for forest management in FILL ZONE 3. Congress Heights takes its name from its hilly geography which provides views across the Anacostia to the Capitol.

0

diagram 7 | remembering wild, nature

On an original 1891 map created by the U.S. Army Corp. of Engineers, a distance of 1000 ft. was measured from the northern edge as the distance upon which ships could traverse after the river was dredged. The fill from the dredge was placed alongside this line to the east and what is now the site for Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling. The edge of this filled land did not reach 1000 ft, but rather further from it at 1190 ft (less sediment was dredged than anticipated). The new designed public path runs parallel to the current shoreline and levee system at a maximum distance of 190 ft. from the existing seawall to meet this original distance, while also working to create a natural security system for the base. A dual series of barrier islands and perforated groins work to support the path, tame the water, and tame the sediment flowing down the river; all working to fill and tame the river as was done over a century ago.

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diagram 8 | remembering wild, nature (CUT detail) 2 year plan | hydrology + stormwater management

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diagram 9 | taming the wild, river - redux

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current edge | designing the working systems alongside the current shoreline

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working landscape

Site Process

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“Perfume is a language; through it the body gains expression and the spirit and soul of the body (its desires, needs, feelings) are roused from muteness to speech. The skin is the surface, the page, onto which this language is ‘imprinted’ or impressed for a short time before scent transforms the body into an altogether different, less substantial, more ethereal, and invisible incarnation of being.”

Northern Joint: Kayak Launch Site & Outfall for Constructed Wetland (1) into Anacostia River

~Richard Howard Stamelman

view of Washington Monument

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System of Barrier Islands taming the river’s water (typ.)

System of Wood Pilings will allow for sediment build-up over time (typ.)

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which will allow for marsh-like conditions to grow and create a tame buffer next to the levee wall (typ.)

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58 Barrier Island providing a simultaneous view of the Washington Monument + U.S. Capitol

Barrier Island providing an exclusive view of the Washington Monument

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view of Washington Monument

52 Space between pilings allow for kayakers to travel underneath and alongside the new public path

Elevated bridge connecting public path

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Marina and Pier for Base Employees and Base Residents Only

10’ High Flood Wall separating north and south levees

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46 Path Line

Barrier Island providing a vast view of the city

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broad simultaneous view of Washington Monument + U.S. Capitol

Southern Joint : Outfall for Constructed Wetland (2) into Potomac River

Piling Barge for construction on water

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20’ wide Cedarwood Boardwalk on Wood Pilings 20’ O.C. (typ.)

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Spring

Summer

Fall

Winter

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broad simultaneous view of Washington Monument + U.S. Capitol

36 30’ wide Barrier Island path

(gabion cage construction)

Outdoor Viewing Area Seat walls provide views across the river towards Ronald Reagan National Airport

(typ.)

Maximum distance 190 ft. from existing seawall

Plan Scale 1:200 Diagrammatic Section Not to Scale 0

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200

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Levee Edge lined with existing Rip Rap

Existing Levee

Wood Piling System

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Average distance 75 ft. from existing seawall

Red Maples (Acer rubrum) planted every 50’ on center along the eastern side of the levee

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“This spectacle, moreover, is an epiphany not only of light but of eros (love); perfume eroticizes the body. It occasions a performance of self-display whereby the body, asserting its physical and sensual presence, makes a scene of its own privacy, turning intimacy into drama, theatre. The narcissism of the toilette and of the act of perfuming the wrists, elbows, neck, and cleavage, not only makes the body sensually perceptible to smell by transforming flesh into aroma; it broadcasts the body far and wide, projecting it and making public its intimacy; it ‘outs’ the body, so to speak, in a controlled and measured manner.” ~Richard Howard Stamelman, “Perfume”

p a t h

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2011 MLA Thesis

AVERAGE HIGH TIDE LEVEL

SECTION 1 : NEW GATEWAY TO THE ANACOSTIA RIVER KAYAK LAUNCH SITE AND BRIDGE TO RIVERWALK VIEW FACING NORTH

THE EXPERIENCE BEGINS AT THE END OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS BRIDGE WHERE THE NEW SHORELINE MEETS THE OLD SHORELINE

NEW BASIN FOR LAUNCHING KAYAKS & OUTFALL FOR FILTERED WATER FLOWING FROM CONSTRUCTED WETLAND 1 (ALONG THE OLD SHORELINE) WITH A VIEW OF THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT

AVERAGE HIGH TIDE LEVEL

SECTION 2 : NEW RIVER WALK ALONGSIDE THE NORTH LEVEE BARRIER ISLAND @ S. CAPITOL STREET VIEW FACING NORTH

SIMULTANEOUS VIEW OF THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT (LEFT) + U.S. CAPITOL BUILDING (RIGHT)

END OF S. CAPITOL STREET

NATURE, TAMED

NORTH LEVEE

AVERAGE HIGH TIDE LEVEL

SECTION 3 : A VIEW OF THE ‘INSIDE’ MARINA AND CHECKPOINT FOR JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING VIEW FACING SOUTH

MARINA AND PIER FOR BASE EMPLOYEES AND RESIDENTS ONLY

ELEVATED BRIDGE CONNECTING THE PUBLIC RIVERWALK PUBLIC AND PRIVATE DO NOT CROSS PATHS

THE VIEW BEGINS TO EXPAND TOWARDS EAST POTOMAC PARK + HAINS POINT

AVERAGE HIGH TIDE LEVEL

SECURED ZONE SEPARATING PUBLIC FROM PRIVATE

SECTION 4 : A BROAD VIEW OF THE CITY BARRIER ISLAND ALONGSIDE THE SOUTH LEVEE VIEW FACING NORTH

SOUTH LEVEE

AVERAGE HIGH TIDE LEVEL

SECTION 5 : THE FINALE SITTING AREA FOR VIEWING THE CITY AND ACTIVITIES ON THE POTOMAC RIVER VIEW FACING NORTH

THE GRAND BLEACHERS

NATURE, TAMED

Sections

END OF THE LEVEE WHERE NEW LAND MEETS OLD LAND

0

5

10

20

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Sections Along the New Shoreline Original drawing at 1:10 scale

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When partial clearing of the wildwood changed the Ile-de-France from a natural landscape into a working landscape, Dubos wrote, it gave rise to ‘an environmental diversity that provides nourishment for the senses and for the woodlands, as well as from the alternation of sunlit surfaces and shaded areas.’ For him, the ‘profound origin’ of that nourishment was an ‘increased awareness of the interdependence between humans beings and their total environment.” ~Tony Hiss, “The Experience of Place”

p a t h

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n a r r a t i v e

2011 MLA Thesis

SECTION 1 : FILL TULIP POPLAR + BLACK LOCUST FOREST

OLD SHORELINE

SECTION 2 : CUT CONSTRUCTED WETLAND - DETENTION AREA 1

SECTION 3 : FILL VIRGINIA PINE + SWAMP WHITE OAK FOREST

SECTION 4 : CUT + FILL CONSTRUCTED WETLAND - DETENTION AREA 2 | PINE + OAK FOREST

GATE TO JOINT BASE ANACOSTIA-BOLLING

OLD SHORELINE

PIPES FOR DIRECTING FILTERED WATER TO NORTH JOINT

CONCRETE PATHWAY

I 295 (SOUTH)

PROPOSED ROAD ELEVATION

RAILROAD TRACKS

BIKE PATHWAY

OLD SHORELINE

PIPES FOR DIRECTING FILTERED WATER TO SOUTH JOINT

OLD SHORELINE

S. CAPITOL

ELEVATED PATHWAY

WOOD MULCH PATHWAY

ELEVATED PATHWAY

S. CAPITOL (SOUTH)

S. CAPITOL (SOUTH | NORTH)

RAILROAD TRACKS

WOOD MULCH PATHWAY

S. CAPITOL (SOUTH)

S. CAPITOL (NORTH)

OLD SHORELINE

SECTION 5 : FILL EASTERN RED CEDAR + VIRGINIA PINE FOREST

BASE ROAD

RUNNERS’ PATHWAY

RAILROAD TRACKS

WOOD MULCH PATHWAY

S. CAPITOL (SOUTH)

Sections

I 295 (SOUTH)

I 295 (NORTH)

0

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Sections along the Old Shoreline Original drawing at 1:10 scale

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S. CAPITOL (NORTH)

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working landscape

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Site Process

“Perfume is a ‘here’ en route to a ‘there,’ a today floating away in the direction of a yesterday, a possession paradoxically coinciding with an imminent loss. Created from blossoms and petals which have surrendered their floral odors, and their ‘lives,’ perfume is, when all is said and done, a concentrate of loss, the distilled spirit of now-dead roses, macerated jasmine blossoms, or stem-withered lavender: ‘an essence of absence’” ~Richard Howard Stamelman w

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(Forest 1) Pioneer Species:

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20-50 years

Tulip Poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) Black Locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) 5-20 years 0-5 years

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8 Poplar and Locust saplings planted Fall 1

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Summer

Winter

Fall

Winter

Spring

Pathway over wetland

12 Constructed Wetland / Detention Area (1 ) ~design for 2 year storm = estimated 378,oo cu. ft. of stormwater ~filtered water piped to northern joint @ Poplar Point into the Anacostia River)

Red Twig Dogwood for Winter Interest

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20-50 years

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(Forest 2) Pioneer Species: Virginia Pine (Pinus virginiana) Swamp White Oak (Quercus bicolor)

5-20 years 0-5 years

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Pine and Oak saplings planted Fall 1

Winter

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Summer

22

24

Fall

Winter

Spring

Pathway over wetland

Constructed Wetland / Detention Area (2 ) ~design for 2 year storm = estimated 555,oo cu. ft. of stormwater ~filtered water piped to southern joint at Giesboro Point into the Potomac River)

Red Twig Dogwood for Winter Interest

26 (Forest 3 + 4) Pioneer Species: Sweet Birch (Betula lenta) wintergreen scent - attracting Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (Summer breeding in the north, migrates south in winter) Virginia Pine (Pinus virginiana) Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana) 20-50 years

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5-20 years

35 2-3 year River Birches planted in groves along Giesboro Point Virginia Pines planted in allées along roads

Winter

2-3 year Cedars planted Fall 1

Plan Scale 1:200 Diagrammatic Section Not to Scale 0

100

200

s c a l e

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The design of a landscape narrative The whole system will read, resonate, and tell its story.

The design along two shorelines (old and new) work together as productive landscapes to operate as one, while also subtly lifting or revealing the identity within. As L’Enfant had recognized

the

topographical

boundaries

and river edges around the city to devise the plan for D.C., this landscape also recognizes topographical boundaries and its river edges, both past and present, around this site. Along the new shoreline the infrastructure of a new pathway designed with perforated groins and pilings tame the river to create a marsh-like condition, while harnessing grand views of the city that are currently hidden form the public.

Along the old shoreline, an urban

forest of pioneer species coupled with major storm water catchment systems re-ignite the memory of the river’s old edge and the soil that was used for forestry and agriculture over a hundred years ago. Like a harmony of base notes over time, this is the structure that keeps it together, that keeps this southeastern half of the city operating with the northwestern half.

12


2011 MLA Thesis

“The drama of perfume tells a tale of loss; it is a fable about the impermanence of life, a story of something gained and something taken away.� ~Richard Howard Stamelman

Site Plan 0

100

200

s c a l e

400

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The Base Note: Site Plan As a whole, the landscape works as one system of many working parts + tells a narrative about itself.

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working models 3-D visualization of the landscape narrative

The existing model (left column) shows the magnitude of sediment that was dredged from the bottom of the Anacostia River and then reclaimed by the government and military. It also shows the topographical difference between the hilly, old land compared to the very flat, new land. The new model (opposite page) shows how the design along each shoreline helps to emphasize each side of the river (both new and old) and how it unobtrusively works with its surrounding conditions.

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2011 MLA Thesis

Drawing Label Text for the drawing

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Urban Reading Park A place for reading, daydreaming, and a marketplace for book vendors Fall Studio, 2010 | Alexandria, VA | Laurel McSherry, ASLA and Carolina Dayer, Ph.D. Candidate

Set

in historic Old Town Alexandria, VA, a

daydreamer can dream, and an avid book lover can wander into a new kind of urban marketplace. This studio project explores a settler’s desire to stay and a nomad’s desire to come and go in the landscape. Daydreaming stimulates a condition that allows one to be physically idle in one place while mentally wandering. For the daydreamer, time lapses and the landscape suddenly becomes distant, different, and desirable. Reading also triggers this condition. While physically idle and reading, one mentally wanders into the imagination of another. In conceiving a programmed space for daydreaming and reading, a parking lot in Old Town is transformed into a place for reading and selling books. Books are sold on sliding shelves that move in and out of a terraced park, becoming the settler in the landscape, while the nomadic readers come and go to read and dream during the day.

ABOVE, an aerial map shows the current site as a small urban parking lot, that has the potential to transform into a new marketplace for selling books (collage below map). BELOW, the history of this parking lot expresses the parceling of the land and how over time individuals have made smaller and smaller living spaces within, similar to reading nooks in a library. RIGHT PAGE, A diagrammatic storyboard shows how the new park takes a part of its history to make an outdoor place for reading and re-discovering the joy of buying real books and reading in the landscape.

QUEEN STREET

QUEEN STREET

ST. ASAPH STREET

PITT STREET

1959

16

1941

1921

1912

1896

1885


2010 Fall Studio

north

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As one inherits a site to be re-made and re-designed, one takes care with the lines that have already been drawn in the past. The architecture of daydreaming provided the program for this site, while the history of the site and its existing characteristics provided a means to make the program fit with its surrounding neighborhood. This drawing shows the site turning a new page.

18


2010 Fall Studio

Site Plan

north

scale 1:10

A terraced park provides an intimate landscape within a landscape where readers can nestle on one of many benches underneath two rows of apple trees. At ground level, vendors can sell books along six long outdoor shelves set underneath non-flowering Sweetgum trees. At dusk the park will empty and the shelves can slide into the walls of the terrace for storage at night.

19


MATERIALS + PLANTINGS: using a soft palette of blue brick to line the terrace walls, rows of apple trees spark the imagination of the daydreamer and rows of non-flowering Sweetgum trees create shade for perusing books during the day. Corten Steel lines the front facade of the book shelves for a finishing touch, and for ease, the book shelves slide out from the wall via rail tracks.

20


2010 Fall Studio

Site Plan

north

Field of Benches scale 1:10

FIELD OF BENCHES, FIELD OF SPACE(S): a site plan of the overall design without the tree canopies reveals fluid movement from space to space, from one elevation to another, and for staying idle or for staying mobile. With this drawing it is clearer to see the tracks upon which the shelves will slide out from under the terraced park and where they will be stored within.

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33

44 SECTIONS THROUGH THE READING PARK: The sections below and on the opposite page

2

2

provide a glimpse into the simplicity of the design, and its connection to the residential neighborhood.

1

1

1 Section facing East towards the terraced park north

2 Section facing West on the terraced park 3 Section facing North 4 Section facing North

1

ection 1 | north - south

ale 1:8

Section 2 | north - south

cale 1:8

22


2010 Fall Studio

3-D MODEL OF THE DESIGN: the model shows the details of the design such as the different pathways leading users up to the terraced section of the park. A ramped path and three sets of staircases provide a variety of ways to experience the site. The staircase at the park’s northeast corner is designed to be a back entrance for adjacent residents. Below one can see a closer view of the book shelves that slide in and out of the terraced park, the key to this design.

Section 1 | north - south

cale 1:8

2

Section 2 | north - south

cale 1:8

3

Section 3 | east east -- west west scale 1:5

4

Section 4 Section 4 || east east -- west west scale 1:5 scale 1:5

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Chestnut Oak Grove Cemetery: Columbarium Design An Independent Study Studio Course for the Owners of Chestnut Oak Grove Cemetery Spring, 2010 | Herndon, VA | Jaan Holt, W.A.A.C Center Director of Architecture + Design and Annalisa Miller, Ph.D. Candidate

At

the historic site of Chestnut Oak Grove Cemetery in Herndon,

Virginia, there is a small landscape within the cemetery designated for a columbarium design to be the last resting place for cremains. With the consultation of the owners of the cemetery, this design was inspired by my own mourning of a loved one, managed through the practice of a ‘sincere’ martial art, as well as a beautiful grove of Chestnut Oak trees on the site. The strength, beauty, and longevity of the Chestnut Oak tree provides the ‘breath of life’ for this design, and the rhythmic movement through the landscape follows the grove’s existing pattern on the site.

Final Site Plan (right) with drawings showing the sacred path-making process and design for hundreds of niches to be housed within this sacred landscape.

north

East/West Sections

Columbarium at Chestnut Oak Grove Cemetery

sacred space(s)

Existing Site Sketch: Walking north along gravel path

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E/W Surface + Canopy Notations

H e r n d o n,

V i r g i n i a

scale 100 ft scale 50 m

scale bar 20’

Existing Site Sketch: Looking south on slight hill

ritualized disciplines of the body

Existing Site Sketch: Detail of a shrub after snowstorm

Existing Site Sketch: Looking west through the site

Existing Site Sketch: Looking south on gravel path

north


2010 Spring Independent Study

At the end of each path, the mourner is embraced by a robust Chestnut Oak Tree.

Q u e r c u s p rinus | Che s tnut O ak T r ee

Section across the northern part of the site (east/west) facing north

E s t . m a x d ia me te r of t runk ~ 10 feet

Sacred Path-Making Movement in the landscape...

sacred space(s)

sequence of breath

sacred space(s)

meditative movements

love

Section across the southern part of the site (east/west) facing north

obedience

etiquette

k ata

karate-do

respect

sacred path-making movement in the landscape through the breath of life...

form

50 steps, 100 steps

art

in

the

landscape

kin hin

karate

martial

moving

zen

walking

sacred space(s)

meditation

b r e a t h

...through the Breath of Life

o f

l i f e Quercus prinus | Chestnut Oak Tree est. max diameter of trunk ~10’

Perspective view of a typical path and columbarium walls

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Earth, Movement, Play (Rose Park + Rock Creek Park) Using earthworks as the only means to design and connect two adjacent parks. Fall Studio, 2009 | Washington, D.C. | Jonathan Fitch, ASLA, Adjunct Professor & Principal of Landscape Architecture Bureau [L.A.B.]

Similar

to a “Quick-Fire Challenge” on the

show Top Chef, this studio project had a twoweek turnaround from start to finish.

The

site is actually two sites, Rose Park and Rock Creek Park in Northwest, D.C., and they are unassumingly separated by a chain-link fence and a steep drop in slope. The assignment had many limitations, yet three simple requirements: use only earthworks, connect the two parks so that children and adults may play, and it must

e x i s t i n g c o n d i t i o n s

+

Rose Park + Rock Creek Park

t o p o g r a p h y

s c a l e

1:100

be beautiful in the name of public art.

The design for the site was quickly

ignited during an initial site visit. While walking across the lawn adjacent to a baseball field,

Cretan labyrinth earthwork located in Northern California, USA

Storm King Wavefield, Maya Lin, 2007-2008

playful movement downhill

a sudden ‘dip’ in the landscape conjured

The requirements for

connecting earth

repetition

Field of snow moguls

Parallel Paths

cut + fill

multiple paths

the idea of snow moguls and skiing down a steep mountainside.

Earth Berms

artful display

Path System

One Path

Many Paths

earthworks, movement, and play all synergized in the simple idea of using snow moguls as the impetus for design. e

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“beautiful” design and the myriad pathways that will allow young children and adults to walk, run, and play, all through the movement of earth and topography existing on the site(s). The design of the moguls were exaggerated, resulting in larger mound-like figures in a field that can be visible from afar and provide visual enjoyment for drivers along Rock Creek Parkway. e a r t h

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Rose Park + Rock Creek Park s c a l e

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1 : 6 0


2009 Fall Studio

Move only earth, connect 2 parks, . . . a n d i t mu st b e b ea u tifu l .

3-D Model of the final design at 1:20 Scale

Inverted Model of the one above at 1:20 Scale

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Woodside Urban Park, Silver Spring, Maryland Professional Renderings for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission Project Leads: Lanshing Hwang, RLA, Symbiosis Inc. and Ching-Fang Chan, RLA, LEED-AP, MNCPPC | PROJECT HAS BEEN APPROVED

Woodside Urban Park in Silver Spring, a central

1 BEFORE VIEW FACING SOUTH TOWARDS SPRING STREET + 1ST AVENUE

business district in Maryland’s Montgomery County, will be undergoing a major re-design in the year 2018 or earlier. The $9.6M budget and design for the park was approved by the board in early October 2011.

My role in this project as Graphics

Contractor was to provide “before” photographs

2 BEFORE VIEW

FACING

SOUTHEAST

TOWARDS

SPRING

TOWARDS

1ST

STREET

of four key areas in the park to then be fully rendered based on the new site design and materials palette (shown below) created by Ching-Fang

Chan,

Registered

Landscape

Architect and Project Manager for MNCPPC. The goal was also to market these renderings to the local community and reveal them during

3 BEFORE VIEW

FACING

WEST

public hearings and presentations to the board in order to win their approval. PARKING

MONTGOMERY COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Parking

Walk

GYM

Walk

SKATE SPOT

Terrace

Runnel

Gate

BASKETBALL COURT

Water Tank Steps

COMMUNITY GARDEN TENNIS COURT

Ramp

Gate

Crossing +346.0

Bridge

Terrace

WOODS

Bench

Groundcover Planting

RAIN GARDEN

Runnel

WL348.0

RAIN GARDEN & PLAY

+346.0

Steps

+352.0

Walk

Runnel Rock Climbing Wall

Retaining Wall Overlook

Slide Stairs

Board Walk

Bench

Bioretention

+356.0

Groundcover Planting

+350.0

Tube Slide

Climb N' Play

1ST AVENUE

Groundcover Planting

Walk

WL346.0

WL345.0

WL345.0

Bioretention

Steps

Bench

Seat Wall

Bioretention

Water Tank

Steps

DEMONSTRATION GARDEN

Runnel

Walk Bioretention

Rain Garden

ART & PLAY

GEORGIA AVENUE

4 BEFORE

10' Sidewalk Walk

GREAT LAWN PICNIC ALEE

VIEW OF MAIN ENTRANCE - FACING WEST

Play Path Bench Bioretention Planter

Seat Wall

SENIOR PLAY

Ramp

Opening for Existing Tree

Terrace

+355.0

Swing

+356.0

Bio-retention Planter

+348.0

Board Walk Bench

+356.5

Steps

Groundcover Planting

Bench

+346.9

Bus Shelter Concession

GATEWAY TERRACE Steps

Groundcover Planting

Cross Walk

5.5' Sidewalk Bio-retention Planter Bioretention Planter

N

SPRING STREET 0

15

60

Scale: 1” = 30’-0”

WOODSIDE URBAN PARK

REVISED CONCEPT February 2011

NIGHTTIME VIEW

28

AVENUE


2011 Professional Work

1 OPPOSITE PAGE Four key ‘before’ photographs stitched together as a panorama to provide the Board with an overview of the park’s existing site conditions and to be compared next to graphic renderings of its new design. 2

Rendering 1, New Perspective of the bioretention and demonstration gardens with the playscape for children in the 3

background.

Rendering 2, New Perspective of the community garden adjacent to the tennis court with a view of the rain barrel to collect rainwater for treatment.

Rendering 3, New Perspective of the great lawn, a new and open lawn providing picnic areas, recreation space, and shade along the perimeter.

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Woodside Urban Park, Silver Spring, Maryland Professional Renderings for the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission Project Leads: Lanshing Hwang, RLA, Symbiosis Inc. and Ching-Fang Chan, RLA, LEED-AP, MNCPPC | PROJECT HAS BEEN APPROVED

During

the project, I was offered another

4 BEFORE VIEW OF MAIN ENTRANCE - FACING WEST

opportunity to provide key diagrammatic/ illustrative section renderings to further express the sustainable elements of the design.

A

complex rain and storm water system was designed with site engineering to be conveyed into three bioretention pools in the new design.

NIGHTTIME VIEW

The two drawings below reflect how the systems operate together for the benefit of the community.

The key experience I had during this

time was in having a fluid working relationship ROOF RUNOFF

HARVEST

with all parties involved and the ability to intuit and be sensitive to the project’s needs as well as the team leader’s vision for the project. All WATER TANK

of the renderings I worked on were published in PUMP

the final Facility Report, as one page is shown

MICRO-BIORETENTION 3 CROSSING

below.

TYP. BIORETENTION 12” WATER 24” MEDIUM 6” SAND 24” GRAVEL

OVERFLOW TO STORMDRAIN

MICRO-BIORETENTION 2 BRIDGE

RE-USE

MICRO-BIORETENTION 1 / WATER FEATURE

RUNNEL BOARDWALK RAIN GARDEN

GREAT LAWN BLUESTONE PAVING CLIMB N’ PLAY AMENITY POUR-IN-PLACE RUBBER MICRO-BIORETENTION 2 PERMEABLE PAVER COMMUNITY GARDEN

DEMONSTRATION GARDEN PERMEABLE PAVER CONCRETE SIDEWALK EXISTING GYM

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2011 Professional Work 4a

OPPOSITE

PAGE

(BOTTOM

TWO

DRAWINGS): Diagrammatic perspective drawings, using Google SketchUp as a base, to portray the conveyance of storm water and rainwater on site in 4b

addition to the functions of an essential bioretention feature.

MAIN ENTRANCE TO WOODSIDE PARK Nighttime Rendering 4a, Perspective of the main entrance at Woodside Park as an inviting, open space.

With a new

lighting design, the park will invite people in, while imbuing a sense of security.

Nighttime Rendering 4b, Perspective of the main entrance at Woodside Park as ‘flexible space’ that can become a bus shelter for an existing bus stop location.

Nighttime Rendering 4c, Perspective of the main entrance at Woodside Park as 4c

‘flexible space’ for small vendors and a means to generate revenue for the park.

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Additional Work : ScentWalks in Landscape Inspired by my previous work in the field of perfumery and revisiting the beauty of its art during my thesis work, the idea of mapping scents in the landscape has become a personal method of expression and representation.

The idea of drawing what is invisible, yet fully present in our daily experience is a provocative form of communication.

Perfume is used as

a method of attraction, and scents capture the essence of what is present in its true form. A scent cannot disguise its own identity, yet can be used to disguise the presence of another.

Grasse Institute of Perfumery School in France Summer 2010

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Drawing the Scents of Natural Essential Oils


ScentWalks

Northbound on Frederick Douglass Bridge between Anacostia Dr + Potomac Ave

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Potomac Avenue S.E. between S. Capitol + 1st St

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1st St S.E. between Potomac + O

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1st St S.E. between O + N Place

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N Place S.E. between 1st + 2nd

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N Place S.E. between New Jersey Ave + 3rd

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N Place S.E. between 3rd + 4th

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N Place S.E. between 4th + Isaac Hull Ave (Navy Yard)

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N Place S.E. between Navy Yard + 4th

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Walking south towards the new Yards Park along the Anacostia River

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Walking through the new Yards Park along the Anacostia River

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Northwestern edge of the N Street S.E. N Street S.E. Yards Park walking through between 3rd between ew New Jersey + 1st Parking Lot +New Jersey

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1st Street S.E. between N Place + O

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90

1 hour

s s c e n t n a r r a t i v e

Along Anacostia River through a lot with restricted access

(adjacent to Concrete/Aggregate Mixing Facility)

through Diamond Teague

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S. Capitol St. S.E. between R + S S.W.

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S. Capitol St. S.E. between S + Potomac Ave

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W A L K

2

100 ft.

Southbound on Frederick Douglass Bridge between Potomac Ave + Anacostia Dr

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Heading southeast towards Anacostia Park Reserve

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Going east around Anacostia Park Reserve

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South through Anacostia Park Reserve Edge

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Cut through U.S. Park Police Parking Lot

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Going west along Anacostia RiverWalk Trail / Anacostia Drive S.E. towards Frederick Douglass Bridge

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1 hour

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n a r r a t i v e

1st S.E. between O St. + Potomac Ave

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s c e n t

NTS

W A L K 100 ft.

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NTS

‘ScentWalks’ Drawing and Mapping the physical and temporal nature of scents in the landscape

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Additional Work : Writing & Volunteer Work Though writing is a form of communication, it is also a form of persuasion. With my marketing background and my ability to visually and ‘scentsually’ see the world, I believe that I my writing skills would be a great asset in the field of landscape architecture.

‘Giving back’ has always been a priority in my life as I have been given much during my lifetime thus far. During an afternoon of ‘giving back’ to my alma mater, Edgemont High School in New York, I showed a group of junior and senior high school students how to ‘see a line in the landscape’ as a short introduction to the field of landscape architecture. What resulted was a rich learning experience for both the students and myself, and the simple idea that this can be done at any school and at any level. I am continuing this work in the future starting with an after school program in Southeast Washington, D.C.

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Promoting the passage of the ‘Forest Landscape Restoration Act’

Written Work :


Writing & Volunteer Work with Youth

Volunteer Work : Teaching

youth how to draw, see, and express lines in the landscape

SERIES OF PHOTOGRAPHS TAKEN AT EDGEMONT HIGH SCHOOL’S ALTERNATIVE SCHOOL IN NEW YORK: Students in their junior and senior year of high school actively participated in drawing and outdoor activities to understand how their built environment can be seen and re-imagined.

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Sandra Nam Cioffi Sandra.Nam.Cioffi@gmail.com (917) 685.7170 NEW YORK


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