Alex Hamady Portfolio Excerpts + Thesis Boards

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Alexander Hamady

Gloop a place for kids

LOCATION: Chattanooga, TN

PROJECT TYPE: School

SQUARE FOOTAGE: 85,000

PROFESSOR: Mark Blumberg

TERM: Fall 2019

This project, located in downtown Chattanooga, was an experiment in the idea of what a school should be. It is designed to cultivate a sense of exploration and creativity within the students who attend the school. Circular classrooms begin to break down the notion of front and back, encouraging participation and engagement from every student. The design represents a deconstruction of mainstream, clinical school design that locks children in a prison-like setting for a large portion of their childhood. This structure defines the idea of school as a unique experience unlike any other activity and does so via the use of abnormal shapes and forms that make mandatory school attendance something to look forward to. Put simply, this was designed to be a place for kids.

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Gloop 09
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Alexander Hamady
School Zone Student Dropoff

Sightlines created between levels by staggering classrooms

Kindergarten/ 1st Grade 2nd/ 3rd Grade 4th/ 5th Grade

Classrooms are not directly on top of one another, but rather staggered in order a variation of interstitial space.

East Section 692 704 716 728 752
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Alexander Hamady
of mass to create
Insertion of rational core Insertion of mass Removal
public space
Gloop 13
Insertion of lIghtwell Additional extrusions and punctures to provide light
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Cherry St. Level 680 684 0 5 10 30 60 Cafetorium Lab
Backstage Stage
Alexander Hamady
Kitchen
Gloop 15
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Form steps back from the street to accomodate student dropoff entrance on Cherry St.
Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom 16 Alexander
Georgia Ave. Level 680 688 684 692 0 5 10 30 60 Faculty Reception ELEV
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Gloop 17
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Public Space outside of guest entrance on Georgia Avenue
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Looking up the lightwell from the Cherry St. level
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Sight-lines between floor levels encourages connectivity between different classes.
Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom 18 Alexander Hamady 3rd Level Lab 0 5 10 30 60 ELEV Lab
Gloop 19
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Large curtain wall window provides additional natural light for the three classroom levels Children are not confined to desks
4th Level 0 5 10 30 60 Classroom Lab Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom Classroom 20 Alexander Hamady ELEV
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Lightwell acts as the centerpiece of the communal space surrounded by classrooms
Gloop 21
Study nooks are located at each landing of the stair
22 Alexander Hamady 5th Level 0 5 10 30 60 Lab Lab Library Gymnasium ELEV
Gloop 23
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Gymnasium is illuminated with lighwells and large amorphous windows
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Space between gymnasium and library gives students to opportunity to occupy the lightwell Library window overlooks historic Dome Building
Roof 0 5 10 30 60 24 Alexander Hamady
below to incorporate play elements 12 13
Gloop 25
Lightwells for gymnasium become colorful pillars that define smaller spaces on the rooftop playground

an experiment in modularity Tube Library

LOCATION: Brooklyn, New York

PROJECT TYPE: Public Library

PROFESSOR: Zhan Chen

TERM: Spring 2020

This project is a library located in downtown Brooklyn, New York. It is a conceptual experiment that explores the use of modules to create complex void spaces and dynamic relationships between larger programmatic volumes. The tube modules also allow for a network of paths that end in various private spaces or “nooks”. Each nook is unique in its location and therefore has different views and, as a result, relationships to the other occupiable volumes. The apertures along the tubes allow occupants to catch glimpses of people moving through them, surrounding them with the life of the structure, like blood cells moving through veins.

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Tube Library 77
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Sections of the large programmatic tubes are extruded to create the necessary programmatic elements Sectional shift of the tube walls allow for new apertures and sight lines Type 1a Type 1b Type 2a Type 2b Type 3a Type 3b Type 4a Type 4b
Tube Library 79
Additional walls and operative shifts of the small tubes make room for private nook spaces
80 Alexander Hamady N Auditorium Receiving Room ELEV DN DN UP ELEV FULTONST
HUDSON AVE Ground Level A B 0 5 15 30 60
ROCKWELL PL
Auditorium space is defined by a large tube at ground level submerged into the ground and expanded from the center point to reveal seating
Tube Library 81
Ground level is an open plaza that allows free access through the site with modular seating to serve the public
82 Alexander Hamady N ELEV UP Storage Storage 2nd 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
HUDSON AVE ELEV A B
ROCKWELL PL
Library main entrance facing the street
Tube Library 83
Grand large tube entrance
84 Alexander Hamady N Information Cafe Cafe Seating Storage Restroom Restroom DN 3rd ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
Tube Library 85
Cafe area on lowest level of library Information desk at top of grand stairway
86 Alexander Hamady N Processing Room Conference Room Office Office Office Administration Computer Room Meeting Room Restroom Open to Below Open to Below Open to Below 4th ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV Office Office Office Restroom Restroom Restroom A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
Tube Library 87
Faculty office area with communal space defined by shift in large tube Computer room shift allows for seating and desks for the computers while leaving a path to the side for circulation through the space
88 Alexander Hamady N Restroom Restroom Meeting Room Meeting Room Multipurpose General Stacks UP Terrace Terrace Terrace UP Open to Below Open to Below Open to Below 5th ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV ELEV A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
Tube Library 89
One of several external terraces offering views into the various programmatic volumes Primary book stacks space with stair seating
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The activity in the smaller tubes can be seen when looking through the void space
Tube Library 91
Section perspective shows off unique variety of relationships between programmatic volumes
92 Alexander Hamady N Restroom Meeting Room DN Restroom Restroom Restroom UP Storage DN Open to Below Open to Below Open to Below Open to Below Large Format Media Periodicals General Stacks Open to Below 6th ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV ELEV Terrace A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
Tube Library 93
Communal spaces exist in the portion of the tube that was shifted over while the new space created by the shift makes rooms for bookshelves External Terrace surrounded by small tubes with glimpses back onto the street
94 Alexander Hamady N Meeting Room Restroom DN Open to Below Restroom Open to Below Open to Below UP Multipurpose Teen CD/DVD 7th ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV ELEV Restroom Restroom Open to Below Terrace Terrace A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
Tube Library 95
Small tube windows frame views into void space Teen area with lounge space defined by large tube shift
96 Alexander Hamady N Meeting Room Restroom DN Open to Below Teen Restroom Children Storage Multipurpose Open to Below 8th ROCKWELL PL HUDSON AVE ELEV ELEV Terrace Storage A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST

Communal spaces exist in the portion of the tube that was shifted over while the new space created by the shift makes rooms for bookshelves

Children’s space is scaled down for youth and made fun with a variety of heights and nooks

Tube Library 97
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Nearly every level of the library is visible when looking up or down through the void space
Tube Library 99
Section perspective displays complexity of void space throughout the project
N UP Open to Below Gallery Open to Below 9th
HUDSON AVE ELEV Restroom Restroom Terrace A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
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ROCKWELL PL
Tube Library 101
Gallery space near the upper levels of the library allow occupants to have greater views of the city as well as sight lines back into the void space At the upper levels, the tube begin to frame larger views of the surrounding Brooklyn structures
102 Alexander Hamady N DN Open to Below Open to Below 10th
HUDSON AVE Terrace Terrace A B 0 5 15 30 60 FULTONST
ROCKWELL PL
Tube Library 103
The top level gives occupants the opportunity to see the activity of the library in contrast with the activity of the city that surrounds it. The uppermost terraces offer a release from the density of tubes and open views of the Brooklyn skyline
104 Alexander Hamady
Glimpses of people moving through the tubes give the structure life A glimpse of the city and terrace activity can be seen through the small tube aperture
Tube Library 105
Views out of tubes also help to orient the occupants. In this case, the occupant can see a path up to the next level without having to turn the corner.
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reading nook with a unique view of the city

Study a Thing and Draw It

an exercise in finding the details

LOCATION: Auburn, AL

PROJECT TYPE: Hand Rendering

MATERIALS: brown butcher paper, charcoal, Arches 140# hot-press, Prismacolor colored pencils

SIZE: 8’ x 5’6”, 22” x 30”

PROFESSORS: Margaret Fletcher and Rusty Smith

TERM: Spring 2018

The first material required for this project was a deceased insect. In this case, the insect was a bumblebee. The goal of the assignment was to study the bumblebee and depict it in various mediums. This project’s purpose was to improve one’s ability to study a thing. To begin, the bee was drawn two ways in charcoal: a line drawing and realistic drawing. The pieces were created on large sheets of butcher paper that measured eight feet in length. After this study, half of the bee was rendered completely in color with Prismacolor colored pencils, while the other half was drafted purely with graphite on a full sheet of Arches 140# hot-press.

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Study a Thing and Draw It 153
Working on the floor was necessary in order to manage the massive scale of the charcoal drawing.

The first line drawing offered an initial understanding of the basic shapes and textures of the insect.

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Alexander Hamady
The second drawing attempted to capture the finer details of the insect.
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Study a Thing and Draw It 157
The final product is a hyper-detailed portrayal of the insect on one side and a study of its form via drafted lines on the other.

Nooks and Crannies

A study and documentation of small spaces around the world

Top row: Tiber Island, Rome Basilica di Santa Maria in Trastevere, Rome Tivoli, Italy

Middle row: Tennessee Aquarium, Chattanooga Park Guell, Barcelona Prague, Czech Republic

Bottom row: Catacombs, Paris Prague, Czech Republic Hadrian’s Villa, Tivoli

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Alexander Hamady
From left to right

Classification: Cranny

Type: Artificial

Location: Casa Milà Roof, Barcelona, Spain

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Nooks and Crannies

Traditional forms of storytelling are communicated via written or verbal language, but storytelling through architecture opens the gate for a new level of complex narratives. These stories can go past the one or two dimensionalities seen in typical communication and bring storytelling into a three-dimensional form of language. Architecture makes room for every story to be a choose-your-own-adventure. The architectural story has infinite possibilities based on a combination of a structure’s age, time of day/year, weather, materiality, form, and so on. All these factors combined can allow the architect to string together an intricate narrative that allows for a variety of experiences. Despite this, it is not the designer who determines the full breadth of stories that a structure can tell. The ultimate randomizer to the change of story is the unique perspective and semi-unpredictable nature of each person who inhabits the structure. Each person pursues a different route, notices different details, and moves at different paces making the seemingly infinite array of story variation a reality. Despite all this possibility, it is rare for architecture to reward curiosity. Many structures of today abandon this diverse idea of storytelling in place of those that are akin to a book with a beautiful cover but filled with blank pages. That is not to say there are no successes in the development of this sort of architectural storytelling. Nearly all examples, however, range from spiritual to full on religious in nature. Just like a good book engages the reader and forms a connection with them, the built environment can generate interest and instill a sense of mystery and discovery into those who occupy it. storytelling is a medium that has the power to incite personal connections between people and their surroundings.

Study 1: What is a story?

What is a story? A story, at its core, is a collection of individual moments, thoughts and feelings, that when brought together form a completed being; a thing that can immerse participants and allow them to travel beyond their immediate reality. A story, by its very nature, requires engagement to be to be experienced and understood.

What is the story worth telling?

Those who prospered and found great wealth in th Magic City were quick to abandon it, leaving behind a scarred landscape riddled with industrial remnants. The area surrounding McLendon Park is occupied by those people who were left behind after the departure of industry from Birmingham. These people fueled the industry that shot Birmingham into existence, but are now left to exist in a city littered with artifacts of another time, representing a past they never owned. This project aims to tell a story about reclamation of the industrial language and re-purposing it to serve the community.

Study 2: Learning a Language

All stories are told through some type of language. Architecture is no different. In order to tell a story about the reclamation of an industrial past, you must learn the formal language of Birmingham’s industry. This language is seen scattered around the city and most preserved in the now inoperative Sloss Furnaces. If you perceive each form as but a single letter that works with another to produce a word and another to make a paragraph and another to create a chapter then you begin to understand the inter-connective ability that form has to tell a story.

wherein ones eyes may travel through the scene and piece together a narrative in any order and with varying degrees of interpretation.

What is the story worth telling?

The moment where one is at their deepest point of immersion in a story is often at point such as the climax, plot twist, big reveal, or moment of clarity. All the words before these moments exist to set them up. These moments exist also in the built environment and are equally capable of immersing an occupant into a story. Even these forms that are devoid of life and existed solely for a utilitarian purpose are capable of conveying powerful and complex thoughts and emotions.

Storytelling In Architecture
A collage illustrating how a collection of individual moments and singular ideas can come together and form a complete world or landscape
Isolation/ Loneliness Spirituality Division/ Dichotomy Chaos Rebellion Stoicism
Study #3: Industrial Form as Architectural Space Industrial forms literally translated into conceptualized architectural space. Drawn charcoal perspectives that utilize newly learned formal language to create conceptual landscapes. These scenes represent initial ideas of how an architectural space can invoke ideas of industrial processes without actual serving an industrial purpose. Trying out the language Drawn conceptual site plan and sections that utilize newly learned formal language to create ideas of space that could invoke thoughts of industry. 0 150 300 600 1200

Study #4: Application

With a thorough understanding of industrial language comes the opportunity to manipulate and re-purpose that language in a way that communicates the intended story. The program that will support this story is public campus that includes a workforce development school, a public park area, and a local market. These programs all work to generate wealth and foster a greater sense of community for the area.

Limestone! Coal! Iron! These are the resources that once flowed rich in the Valley of Jones. The unstoppable forces of Mother Nature worked slowly and tirelessly for millions of years so that mankind could one day discover the wealth she accumulated. The Red Mountain reached toward the sky as it pulled these anthropic riches from deep within the earth. Twas not long before the valley was ringing with the unnatural sounds of machine and man as they wrestle against the inherently stubborn nature of the matter they so violently ripped from the earth.

Screaming serpents, formed by plates of metal, coursed along their tracks through the heart of the city, carrying precious cargo to and from all ends of the country. Although it was in their mission to connect and distribute, by doing so they inadvertently severed links and divided the landscapes that they tore through.

The once unbreakable beast of industry, who had propelled the city to greatness, fled with tail tucked timidly between wounded legs, abandoning its lair of flame and smoke. The valley, scarred by the forces of man and riddled with the remnants of another time, will reclaim what it once owned. Just as the roaring furnaces once shaped the stubborn metals found rich in the valley, those left in the city bear the responsibility of molding Birmingham into something new. Indeed the remnants of our past shall become the tools with which we use to construct our future. From the ashes of a once sturdy industrial giant, personified in the image of Vulcan, a new, gentler creature, forged from empathy, can rise in its place.

Man vs. Nature Railroads Reclamation
Program Stalls out while market is active Stalls away while market is inactive Stalls away while market is inactive allowing free movement through empty plaza Stalls out while market is active defining new winding paths and outdoor room according the shifting positions of the market stalls.
Form emphasizes cuts through natural landscape Industrial doors of incubation spaces below penetrate through grassy park extension above when doors are open Transition between park space and primary structure allows moments where grass reaches out to the structure and other moments where built elements reach out and scar the landscape. Where once a furnace consumed raw material from the top and shot fiery liquid out the bottom, now a well of light harbors a garden at the bottom and ferries people to the top where there is fresh air and a view overlooking their community
Private meeting/study spaces encircle courtyard Circulatory vestibule filled with a sense of heat Occupants move through the structure as though they are raw material The workers are championed. All workshops exist in raised positions, often with sight-lines into admin offices; a reversal of the old ways. Familiar forms given new identity A path with a windowed view down into admin offices 0 150 300 600 1200
Path study east to west Proposed Valley Creek Greenway Major Roads Primary Paths Nodes/ Intersections McLendon Park Proposed Valley Creek Greenway Major Roads Railroad Path Site Analysis Former Elyton Yard classification tracks no longer in existence Path study west to east Path study north & south Path study merged Path study simplified Primary Masses Secondary Masses Site Analysis 1:300 Site Context 0 mi .125 mi .25 mi .5 mi 1 mi N Floodway 100 Year Flood 500 Year Flood Elyton Village Center Center St 3rdAveW 3rd Ave N 1st W 2nd St W 3rd St 4thAve Ct 4th St W 5th St W 6th W PrincetonPkwyW PrincetonPkwySW Arkadelphia Rd 3rdAve 3rd TuscaloosaAveSW TuscaloosaAveSW PrincetonAveSW PrincetonAveSW 2nd St SW 3rd St SW 4thStSW 2ndPlSW 1st St SW 2nd St SW CharlesAve 5thStSW 6thStSW St.CharlesAve St.CharlesAve FultonAveSW FultonAveSW AlabamaAve Washington Ave WoodlandAve N Housing Elyton Village Center Center St 3rdAveW 3rd Ave N 1st W 2nd St W 4th St W 5th St W 6th PrincetonPkwyW PrincetonPkwySW 3rdAve 3rd N TuscaloosaAveSW TuscaloosaAveSW PrincetonAveSW PrincetonAveSW 2nd St SW 3rd St SW 4thStSW 2ndPlSW 1st St SW 2nd St SW CharlesAve 5thStSW 6thStSW St.CharlesAve St.CharlesAve FultonAveSW FultonAveSW AlabamaAve Washington Ave WoodlandAve Major Roads Jefferson Wenonah South Bessemer Flood Plane Existing 0 150 300 600 1200

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