Ben Michel Architecture Portfolio

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PORTFOLIO

Benjamin R. Michel

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

ACADEMIC

DESIGN/BUILD

_Urban Farm Riverside Expansion............6-17 _Portland Mercado............18-27 _The Frame Athenaeum............28-39 _Bruton Pavilion............40-41 _Straw Bale Cabin............42 _Lot 4 House............43

OTHER

Shaping............45

BIO

I believe architecture has the potential to address the design challenges of social and climate crises. Having a background in the arts and in construction, I am as interested in creating beautiful designs as I am in how materials, details, and craft can take projects from concept to building. My background in Environmental Studies and Philosophy inform my design process and the ideas and values my projects represent. Those ideas stem primarily from ecological and Buddhist thought: phenomonological ideas of impermanence and the interdependence of place, culture, ecosystems, built systems, and the individual. Ecological and Buddhist analytic frameworks have influenced my interpretation of the world, and I am interested in applying this framework to architectural theory and design practice. I strive to balance aesthic and contextual design sensitivity with technical performance aspects of design, and am patricularly drawn to passive strategies and natural material intelligence. I engage largescale civic projects, affordable and co-housing typologies, as well as communityengaged design build, with the same interest in their potential to inform a socially and environmentally sustainable way of life.

EDUCATION

BENJAMIN MICHEL +1.406.540.2640

bmichel@uoregon.edu

University of Oregon School of Architecture and Environment

Master in Architecture I | Eugene, OR | June 2022 - present

Middlebury College

Bachelor of Arts Magna Cum Laude | Middlebury, VT | February 2015 - February 2019 | Major: Environmental Studies with a focus in Religion and Philosophy

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

Integrated Study Abroad | Madrid, Spain | September 2016 - June 2017 | Environmental Studies

EXPERIENCE

VOLUNTEER

University of Oregon School of Architecture and Environment

Graduate Teaching Assistant | Eugene, OR | March 2024 – Present

Assist Professor Howard Davis in the teaching of ARCH 430/530: Architectural Contexts. Lead discussion sections and grade student work.

University of Oregon School of Architecture and Environment

Graduate Teaching Fellow | Eugene, OR | September 2023 - present

Assist Professor Tom Hahn in the teaching of ARCH 470/570: Building Construction. Lead the teaching of lab sections, grade student work.

University of Oregon Institute for Health in the Built Environment

Research Assistant | Eugene, OR | December 2022 - September 2023

Under supervision of Dr. Mark Fretz. Complete comparative analysis of light frame and MPP window systems, accounting and detail drawings. Research reuse potential of NHERI-10 mass timber shake table test structure, focusing mainly on practical material challenges and LCA.

Carpenter, Independent

Turners Falls, MA | September 2021 - May 2022

Renovation work, incl. drywalling, window, door and cabinet install, flooring, tiling, siding.

Tide Water Builders

Carpenter | Sedro Woolley, WA | March 2021 - August 2021

Various new builds and renovations. Wide range of duties including: demolition, framing, trim, tiling, flooring, siding, concrete work, fencing, cabinet installation, door and window installation.

Darby Custom Building

Carpenter | Choteau, MT | April 2020 - January 2021

Work with crew on the construction of a straw bale house, primary duties framing, siding, roofing.

Bruton Design Intensive

Participant | Eugene, Oregon | Two-week intensive, August 2023

With a group of students led by Malu Borja of Al Borde Arquitectos and John Folan of the Fay Jones School of Architecture, design and build a pavilion to raise awareness of local housing issues.

Escuela Los Algarrobos

Teacher | Canoa, Ecuador | January 2018 - March 2018

Prepare lessons and teach Environmental Science and Art classes to students grades 3, 4 and 7.

Design

Revit | Rhino | Grasshopper | Adobe Suite | Climate Studio | Hand Sketching

Language Fluent in Spanish, conversational in Portuguese.

U.S. Department of Energy Solar Decathlon Design Competition

2nd Place, Education Division | Adaptive reuse project | University of Oregon | Winter term 2023

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON URBAN FARM RIVERSIDE EXPANSION

University of Oregon School of Architecture & Environment ARCH 584: Project, full-studio collaboration

Instructors: Mary Polites and Ignacio Lopez Buson 5 weeks | Summer 2024

The Fuller Studio is a landscape architecture and architecture hybrid involving the masterplanning of an urban farm expansion on the University of Oregon campus. The site, located by the Willamette River and part of the Fuller Land Lab, serves as a hub for community, education, restoration, food production, and research. Significant portions of the studio involved communications and co-design with stakeholder groups including community leaders, educators, students, and researchers. The result is a series of support structures that use sliding panels, providing enough flexibility to accommodate the needs of these various groups, able to evolve

URBAN FARM RIVERSIDE MASTERPLAN

FULLER SUMMER STUDIO 2024

UNIVERSITY

and grow in response to user needs and engagement with the project. The studio was organized in teams of two: my team’s work, shown here, tackled the educational component. I was mainly responsible for the plan development, digital modelling of the structures, and visualizations. All work shown is my own, my partner’s, or both, with the exception of the masterplan below, which is the collaborative product of the full 14-person studio (including instructors).

WILLAMETTE RIVER NATURAL AREA (WRNA)

CO-DESIGN METHODOLOGY

Engaging University stakeholders in design charettes was a crucial part of the group’s design process. Creating a design game in which participants used model components and a site plan to define and locate their visions of the project ensured that all input be valued equally and allowed the group to adapt the design in response to feedback. These sessions were carefully recorded and incorporated into the final proposal.

NATURAL BUILDING SYSTEMS

Users are meant to engage with the project on a construction level as well. The choice of natural, userfriendly building materials allows learning through doing, and expands on the university’s design-build ambitions. By placing construction agency into the hands of the users, the project is able to grow into itself through use, adapting and expanding in response to user wants and needs.

USE CONDITIONS

Educational programming is able to respond to various use conditions throughout the week and academic year. The spaces provide maximum value by adapting to social, educational, and event uses. Through appropriate material use, the structures are able to adapt to seasonal conditions through passive strategies like thermal mass and cross-ventilation.

CLASSROOM STRUCTURE: SEASONAL FLEXIBILITY

Sliding polycarbonate panels can adapt to seasonal conditions and user needs.

Shaped by the site, the learning pavilions are closed towards the back and open to the front, highlighting views of the river while minimizing distractions from the railroad, which flanks the site to the South.

PORTLAND MERCADO MIXED-USE AFFORDABLE HOUSING

University of Oregon School of Architecture & Environment

ARCH 584: Project

Instructor: Howard Davis

10 weeks | Spring 2024

The Portland Mercado is a mixeduse affordable housing project built on the site of the original Portland Mercado, tragically destroyed in a fire in 2024. The project restores the original market function, as well as the food trucks, with additional programming informed by community stakeholders. With its commerical ground floor and residential upper floors, the project aims to foster community through shared, permeable, and flexible spaces. The aim of this approach is to create maximum transparency and practical connection between residential and public life and the growing, processing, and consumption of food.

SITE USE | PARTI

SITE AXONOMETRIC

COMMUNITY GARDENS

The quieter “back yard” of the project includes a summer kitchen, extensive gardens, and basketball court. Food trucks, a restaurant, and the market frame the active public square. The visual connection between these elements lends transparency to the food production and processing of goods for sale at the market.

Reduced-cost commercial space for renters approaches an economically resilient, soverign establishment that sources, produces, and sells its goods in the same place its residents live.

Each unit has ready access to private outdoor space through sheltered, South-facing outdoor rooms. Ample shared outdoor space, in addition to common rooms and facilities, encourages the formation of community. Offices for economic and business advising, and a leasable commercial or event space, occupy the Southwest building on FL1.

UNIT FLEXIBILITY, ECONOMIC AGENCY

Providing flexible unit types accommodates a range of rental budgets. This flexibility and variety encourages intergenerational co-living through units’ ability to expand and contract based on family size and situation. The ability of the intermediate “flex space” to convert from living space to workshop or commercial space supports the economic agency and resiliency of residents. Growing areas and commercial spaces on the ground floor enhance the connection between living and working, producing and processing, which further supports residents economically.

2BR | STUDIO: fully separate units; 800 sqft | 250 sqft up

up

4BR: more spatious flat for large families, potential rent-to-own; 1,800 sqft

2BR + WORKSHOP: flexible workshop/ commercial space attached to unit; 1050 sqft

2BR + STUDIO: connected studio for relatives/extended family space attached to unit; 1,050 sqft

SECTION AA’

In plan and section, the project emphasizes the importance of connection and transparency.

Outdoor spaces between units create a staggered pattern that improves social connectivity and access to daylight in units, all of which receive light on four sides.

THE FRAME ATHENAEUM

University of Oregon School of Architecture & Environment ARCH 683: Project

Instructors: Michael Zaretsky and Steven Duff

10 weeks | Fall 2023

The Frame Athenaeum is a multipurpose building that caps Portland’s North Park Blocks. The building site is at a critical urban juncture--a node of transition from the park blocks to the larger Portland green loop. The frame library orients itself towards the park, serving those stopping along the way by providing a place to rest,

A: Reflection (library)

B: Interaction (public)

C: Collaboration (offices)

NW Glisan St.
Hoyt St.
SECTION

WEST ELEVATION

FL 4

EAST ELEVATION

INSULATED PARAPET ASSEMBLY WITH METAL CLEAT AND HEM ATTACHMENT FASTENED TO PARAPET STUD WALL

ALUMINUM U CHANNEL FASTENED TO STEEL L PLATE

PANELIZED SHEET METAL CLADDING WITH BACKING SEALANT, BACKER ROD, SHIM

CONCRETE PAVER WITH ADJUSTABLE RISER

6" TAPERED POLYISO RIGID FOAM INSULATION (T.C.L.)

CONTINUOUS HSS STEEL PARAPET SUPPORT (INTERMITTENT, NOT SHOWN IN DETAIL)

TPO ROOFING MEMBRANE (W.C.L., V.C.L.)

5/8" GYPSUM COVERBOARD

3 PLY CLT

4X12 GLT BEAM

AIR AND VAPOR MEMBRANE, 6" LAP W/EXTERIOR WRB (B&S V.C.L. & A.C.L.)

FLUID-APPLIED W.R.B. (W.C.L., A.C.L., & V.C.L.)

3" RIGID MINERAL WOOL INSULATION (T.C.L.)

2 1/2" X 9 1/4” THERMALLY BROKEN CHANNEL GLASS CLADDING (W.C.L. & T.C.L.)

6" X 1 1/2" STEEL TOP PLATE W/ DEFLECTION TRACK AND STUDS 16" O.C.

6" MINERAL WOOL BATT INSULATION (T.C.L.)

5/8" INTERIOR GYPSUM BOARD

6 X 16 GLT BEAM

12 X 16 GLT COLUMN

2'X2" ALUMINUM PANEL VERTICAL SHADING SYSTEM W/ ALUMINUM CLIPS FASTENED TO U CHANNEL 5' O.C. 1 1/2" = 1'-0" 4 PARAPET-ROOF (CRITICAL DETAIL)

Sketching wall sections in various levels of detail is an integral part of my design process. I find detailing very engaging and believe it should be a part of the process throughout design.

THE NEGOTIATION TABLE

Project: Bruton Design Intensive

Eugene, Oregon

2 Weeks | Summer, 2023

The Bruton Design Intensive is a two-week design build workshop, in 2023 centered around the creation of a space for negotiating housing issues, bringing awareness to them through a design informed by local stakeholders. Through reused, modular and stackable seating, the space lends itself to multiple uses: rest, contemplation, conversation. The pavilion offers shelter and enclosure while maintaining a sense of lightness and transparency.

STRAW BALE HOUSE

Darby Custom Building, LLC

Choteau, MT

Fall and Winter 2018

Straw bale house built with Darby Custom Building on this Straw bale house. Most of the wood used is salvaged. I took part in some of the design and detailing decisions, and in the construction. The bottom floor of the house is plastered bales while the upper part is wood framing.

LOT 4 HOUSE

Tide Water Builders, LLC

Bellingham, Washington Spring, 2019

Carpentry work pictured here was done for Tide Water Builders. Accent walls are irregularly stained salvaged wood. I was asked to compose the wood in a way that looked random yet balanced.

Exterior siding and window installation was done with crew and independently.

SKETCHES

Top left: Rendering of main house in a rammed earth compound I designed to build in Todos Santos, MX.

Bottom left: Sketch of Corbusier’s Ozenfant Studio for Graduate Design Process course, Summer 2022.

Right: Renderings of abstract building designs for first part of Graduate Studio, Summer 2022.

SURFBOARD SHAPING

2019-2022

Surfboard shaping has been an outlet for me to explore the intersection between design, craft, and performance. The process is relatively sensitive and detailoriented, requiring care and preparation. A surfboard’s geometry influences how it interacts with the surface of the water, posing an engaging design challenge. I shaped the board on the right with my sister for her birthday. I’ve designed and shaped this and two other surfboards using boardCAD, and enjoy using them whenever I get the chance.

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