Ben Morgan Jones - Portfolio

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Ben Morgan Jones Curriculum Vitae and Sample of Work Curriculum Vitae 01 Bristol Film Instutute 02 The Peoples Archive 06 Centre for International Culture 08 Wildlife Exploration Centre 10 A Playful Change 12 Exposed Power 14 Haverstock Associates 16 Boyes Rees Architects 18



Ben Morgan Jones Ciriculum Vitae Previous Employment

00 01

Personal Skills

2010 - 6 Months

Haverstock Associates

RIBA Part 1 Placement

www.haverstock.com

2009 - 6 Months

Boyes Rees Architects, Cardiff

RIBA Part 1 Placement

www.boyesrees.co.uk

2007 - 3 Months

Estates & Capital Development, ABM NHS Trust

Summer Placement

www.wales.nhs.uk

2006

Allan Stuckey Architects, Aberdare

Sketching

Experience Placement

www.allanstuckeyarchitects.co.uk

Model Making

2005

B3Burgess Architects, Cardiff

Case Study Placement

www.b3.co.uk

Proficient In

Autodesk AutoCad Adobe Photoshop Adobe InDesign Adobe Illustrator Google Sketchup VRay Verbal Presentations Construction Detailing

Learning

Adobe Flash Rhino3D

Past Education 2007 - 2011

Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, University of Bath BSc (Hons) Architecture - RIBA Part 1

2000 - 2007

Saint John the Baptist Church in Wales High School, Aberdare A Level

Physics (A), Mathematics (A), Further Mathematics (A), Design & Technology (A)

AS Level

Computer Programming (A)

GCSE

Mathematics, English, English Lit, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Welsh, Religious Ed, D&T, IT

About Me Professional Qualities

Thorough, meticulous and organised Fast and able to work under pressure Work well individually & within a team Strong knowledge of design & industry Good communication skills Eager to learn and highly motivated

Personal Qualities

Friendly, inquisitive, entertaining, punctual, hardworking & passionate

Interests

Rugby, traveling, cooking, socialising, technology, DIY and all facets of architecture & design

Date of Birth

12th January 1989

Nominated Referees Previous Employer

Studio Tutor

Claire Barton

Toby Lewis

Partner

Consultant

Haverstock Associates

FCB Studios

+44 (0)2072 677676

+44 (0)1225 852545

cbarton@haverstock.com

toby.lewis@fcbstudios.com

3 Hafod Wen, Aberdare, RCT, CF44 8PJ +44 (0)7891 071612 bjones@benmorganjones.co.uk www.benmorganjones.co.uk


Bristol Film Institute Spike Island

02 03

Project Title

“Cinema - the seventh art - has many affinities with

Screen Machine: Film, Ontology and Architecture

architecture and engineering in that its very essence

Location

of ontological narrative.”

intertwines technological invention, with the aspirations

Bristol, England Not aiming to impose a new identity to Spike Island,

Type

the proposal attempts to deeply respond to its existing

Cultural Building

conditions and make public the sites unique creative Date

wealth. This responsive nature is evident through its form

21/10/2011

and materiality, balancing historical and progressive

Duration

forces, urban and sustainable, as it folds to establish its

6 Weeks

position within the site and the greater city of Bristol.

Studio Tutor Taking and distorting the archetypal figure of the industrial

Susan Lloyd Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios

shed, the scheme fuses the multiple programmatic requirements beneath its continuous “folding” canopy. Objects found on the site become deeply anchored “nodes” within the industrial heritage. Whilst the introduction of three auditoria, orientated relating to existing site forces, embeds the new program within the historical surroundings. The rest of building’s program is then arranged within dynamic “strands”, whose functions respond to the city on an urban level; drawing tourists and the local communities of residents and artists.

04 01 Internal view of classroom

02-04 1:100 Final Model

05 Internal view of cinema

06 External Street view of cafe


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VMZINC Standing Seam

Vapour Control Layer

Breather Membrane

12mm Cement Particle Sheathing Board

150mm Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation

Breather Membrane

Vapour Control Layer

Structural Steel Columns

Corus D60 Structural Decking

VMZINC PLUS Standing Seam

VMZINC Plus Gutter

Metsec Stud

L2L Insulation Metsec Stud Primary Structure Secondary Structure 12mm High Density Core Plasterboard VMZINC PLUS Standing Seam

Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation

Structural Steel Columns

Softwood Skirting

Suspended Ceiling

Applied Floor Finish 50mm Screed Underfloor Heating Pipes 200mm In Situ Poured Concrete

12mm High Density Plasterboard Vapour Control Layer

Comflor 100 Floor Deck

Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation 12mm Cement Particle Sheathing Board Metsec Stud Primary Structure

Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation

Services

Breather Membrane

Suspended Ceiling

Detail 7 Hidden Gutter Detail Strand Roof - 0.12 W/m2K

Detail 1 Floor Structure External Wall - 0.22 W/m2K

Material 3 Steel Structure Light and flexible structure with efficient large spanning abilities.

Material 2 In-situ concrete In-situ poured concrete with fly ash cement and locally sourced aggregate.

Material 3 Timber thinnings Sourced from forestries within a feasible proximity to the site. Using a resource that is considered waste.

Material 1

Material 1 Pre-patinated zinc Sourced from recycled material with an average energy consumption of 10% less than that sourced from ore.

Detail 4

Detail 7

Detail 1

Material 4

Material 2


Applied Floor Finish

VMZINC Plus Gutter

50mm Underfloor Heating Screed

Double Glazed PPC Aluminium Skylight

200mm In Situ Poured Concrete

VMZINC Standing Seam L2L Insulation Tertiary Structural Steel Roof Boarding PPC Aluminium Variable Ventilation Grill

Comflor 100 Floor Deck

Solar Thermal Panels

Primary Structure

Breather Membrane

Suspended Ceiling

VMZINC Standing Seam

Kingspan Mineral Wool Insulation

150mm Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation

Double Glazed PPC Aluminium Window

Precast Concrete Hollowcore Planks

Structural Stel Truss

Softwood Window Cill

Structural Steel Columns

Roof Boarding

Metsec Hangers

Metsec Stud

12mm High Density Core Plasterboard

VMZINC PLUS Standing Seam

Acoustic Damping Sheet

Vapour Control Layer

150mm x 25mm Hardwood/ Softwood Timber Thinnings

Concrete Upstand 200mm Kingspan Rigid Mineral Wool Insulation Foundations

Metsec Stud

External Steel Rainwater Gutter

12mm High Density Core Plasterboard

Concrete Paving Slab

Primary Structural Steel

Detail 2 Projecting Window Detail Glazed Unit - 2.20 W/m2K

Detail 5 Ventilation Stack Auditoria Roof - 0.06 W/m2K

Material 3

Detail 3

Detail 5


The Peoples Archive City of Bath

06 07

Project Title

In the current disposable society of the twenty-first

Garden City: Alienation, Nature + Re-conciliation

century, meaningful personal items are often disregarded

Location

photos and trinkets, whilst rich in personal meaning, are

Bath, England

often stored without care or thought due to their lack of

although having a significant role within one’s life. Letters,

monetary or technological value. Yet these items provide

Type

a far more poignant insight into the lives of the individual.

Archive Date

With the belief that alienation occurs within a city due to

02/02/2011

the lack of knowledge and understanding of others within

Duration

society, the City of Bath Archive aims to unite a socially

14 Weeks

fragmented community through the celebration of the history of the city and the lives of those who reside there.

Studio Tutor Matt Clay The Form Design Company

The peoples archive, consisting of a steel structural tower, a detached service tower, “plug in� storage units and a cantilevering glazed mollusk, becomes a flexible, symbolic civic entity within the city of Bath, forming an intimate public relationship with its immediate contexts. Whilst a new city archive imbedded within a forgotten layer of the city, gives symbolic purpose to the archeology of the old city structure. The proposal rejuvenates an important forgotten part of the city centre,

whilst

displaying honesty and clarity through the constructional build up, representative of its contents and programmatic natures.

06 01 Internal visual of lecture theatre

02 Construction section of city archive

03 External visual from the archive gardens

04 Scene from Everything is Illuminated

05 Section a:a

06 Personal storage box


01 02

03

04

05


Centre for International Culture Amsterdam

08 09

Project Title

Is there a risk that the Amsterdam society will become

Centre for Contemporary Culture

stagnant? The city caters extensively for its wide array

Location Amsterdam, The Netherlands

of traditional and contemporary cultures, but without the absorption of new world traditions previously introduced through immigration and trade, is the existing free and

Type Cultural Building

liberal development of Amsterdam going to cease to exist?

Date 09/10/2010 Duration 6 Weeks

The aim of the project is to continue the development of a Contemporary Amsterdam Culture through the detachment of an individual from the city, leading to the complete immersion within a performance.

Studio Tutor Toby Lewis Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios

Delicate in its actions the centre for international culture distinguishes itself from the city, creating a pocket of isolation containing cultures in their pure form. The proposal produces spaces of an unfocused dreamy quality to offset against the focussed and directed space of a stage and seating area wrapped in a sculptural envelope, designed to enhance the experience of the performance.

04 01 Visual of cloud space, pre-performance pratice room

02 External visual of Damrak Street facade

03 Visual of stage envelope

04 Stage envelope concept form


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02

03


Wildlife Exploration Centre Penarth

10 11

Project Title

By heaving the beach into a vertical dimension; creating

Linking The Lands

an augmented man made landscape, the proposal converts a currently inaccessible beach into a location

Location

that allows for the easy congregation and socialization

Penarth, Wales

of the community and visitors, whilst also continuing to Typology

provide the existing ability for a person to find a solitary

Regeneration

place.

Date 28/08/2010

A series of paths entwine and meander throughout this landscape with an aim to excite and encourage

Duration

exploration. At high tide the paths will seem to float

3 Weeks

effortlessly on top of the waters surface, with the many Studio Tutor Toby Lewis Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios

fascinating rock pools and outcrops revealed as the tide recedes.

The proposal includes a restaurant, cafe, fish mongers, tackle shop and wildlife exploration centre. With a desire to become a hub of activity and part of the community, the scheme expands on the famous seaside culture of Penarth.

06

01 Basement plan

02-03 1:100 Final model

04 Visual of proposal, towards Penarth Pier

05 Section

06 Intial proposal sketch


02

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04

05

03


A Playful Change Victoria Bridge

12 13

Project Title

In desperate need of some care and attention, Victoria

Studio In The City

Bridge is a well used means of crossing the River Avon.

Location Bath, England

Neglected, it is covered in graffiti and vegetation, yet those who use it choose to ignore its current state. Fixated on their commute, they are blind to their environment.

Type Installation

Aimed to alter the status quo, the installation attempted to

Date

raise the awareness of location and surrounding personal

31/09/2010

by disrupting the standard routine of commuters,

Duration

through the means of inducing interest and curiosity.

4 Days Based on the idea of a playground toy, brightly Studio Tutor Gareth Stokes 4orm

coloured listening devices provided a sense of play and happiness. Involving everyone that crossed it or passed beneath, the installation created a positive atmosphere that hopefully brightened up the day for many, thus bringing some joy and awareness to Victoria Bridge.

06

01-05 Images of final instalation

06 Section


01

02

03

04

05


Exposed Power The Design Potential of Services

14 15

As students of architecture we are often taught the ideals of structural and material honesty, but where is the honesty to the environmental services? My final dissertation at the University of Bath was an investigation into the design potential of environmental services, the aim of which was to discover through critical analysis of existing structures, the concepts and methods of incorporating the building services into the aesthetic of the architecture. Below is an extract from the opening section.

“Within The Architecture Of The Well-Tempered Environment01, originally published in 1969, Rayner Banham proposed the term “exposed power”, citing the foul air stacks at Le Corbusiers Unité d’Habitation, the external ducts of Albini’s La Rinascente Store and the “clip on” air conditioning units of Zanuso’ Olivetti factory, as examples of the increasing significance of environmental devices as decoration within architecture. But four decades later this significance is no longer apparent. Within recent works of architecture it is evident that the more dominant method of practice is now the discreet concealment of environmental services within the ducts and voids of the building fabric. This can be considered in essence, the smuggling of the necessities of the environment.

It has become clearly apparent that due to the architectural professions general lack of interest within the subject of environmental services, it has now fallen to another body of men and women to assume responsibility for the maintenance of a decent environmental condition. They represent “another culture”02, so alien to the architectural profession that most architects hold it beneath contempt. Although this other culture of consultants and subcontractors holds a significant role within the tectonics of architecture, their work and opinions are rarely allowed to impinge upon the teaching of architecture schools, where the preoccupation continues to be with the production of elegant graphic compositions, rendering the merely structural aspects of plans, elevations and sections. It is now evident that because of this situation, the great potential within the expression and exposure of services is somewhat limited and unexplored. The environmental services have thus passed out of the control and comprehension of architects and into the hands of the specialist consultants, resulting in an often mutually ambivalent relationship. The art of architecture has thus become divorced from the practice of making operational buildings.

In Studies in Tectonic Culture03, Kenneth Frampton clarifies the distinction between spatiality and tectonics in architecture and develops a powerful argument for the reestablishment of the significance of the tectonic in relation to the dominant position of space in much of twentieth-century theory. Here, the tectonic is represented as more than an instrument of construction, resisting the notion that it is an end in itself. The concern is with the poetics of construction: “the full tectonic potential of any building stems from its capacity to articulate both the poetic and the cognitive aspects of its substance.”04 Frampton’s argument has thus been highlighted within Dean Hawkes’ The Environmental Imagination05 as an “implicit challenge to the historians and theoreticians of the architectural environment to develop a parallel account of its evolution.”06 This essay is to some degree a response. Concerned with the tectonics of the expressive environmental services of architecture and indeed the resulting outcomes and theories of the exploration within this field, it is a method of exploring the architecture of “exposed power”.

01 Rue Du Renard Street facade, Centre Pompidou

02 View of Plant, Queen Elizebeth Hall

03 Inmos microprocessor factory

04 Core Tower, Richard Memorial Laboratories


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02

Fig.11

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04


Haverstock Associates London

16 17

Address

Haverstock Associates LLP is a design-led practice of 27

Studio 10 Cliff Road London NW1 9AN

architects with an annual turnover of ÂŁ2.7 million. Formed

Telephone +44 (0)20 7267 7676

in 1980 and located in the London Borough of Camden their extensive portfolio is largely Public Sector based, including a range of award winning buildings. Committed to quality design and planning, they strive to improve lives by creating modern buildings that are intelligible,

Website www.haverstock.com

protective, stimulating and attractive.

Placement Period

Whilst at Haverstock Associates I was an integral member

14/04/10 till 24/09/10

of an architectural team consisting of 4 architects and

Employment Mentor David Givens

2 architectural assistants. Through working closely with Skanska RM and Essex County Council we strived to realise the new ÂŁ19.7m BSF Columbus School and

RIBA Registration No. 067185A

College, Chelmsford, catering for children with profound multiple learning difficulties and/or autistic spectrum

Mentors Email

disorders. Aiming to create solutions which would allow

David.Givens@haverstock.com

the SEN students to play an integrated role in society throughout their lives at the school, college and beyond.

Over a 6 month period my tasks whilst working on Columbus School (during RIBA work stages F-H) included the revision of information for financial close, the production and revision of tender package information, the production of key preliminary and final construction sections, the collaborating with structural engineers Skanska Technology for design team meetings, and the responsibility as Skandocs document controller for both the Columbus School and College.

01 Prilimianry onstructions sections for Columbus School



BoyesRees Architects Cardiff

18 19

Address Greyfriars House Greyfriars Road Cardiff

Boyes Rees Architects (AJ100) established for over 40

CF10 3AL

operate throughout the U.K with an annual turnover of

Telephone +44 (0)29 2055 8900

years is a leading design practice employing over 60 members of staff (30 architects). Based in Cardiff they

£4.5million. Distinguished by the high caliber of their designers, their progressive approach to construction, and their delivery of innovative, sustainable and cost

Website www.boyesrees.co.uk

efficient services, they have managed to develop a successful client focused culture.

Placement Period 16/02/09 till 14/08/09 Employment Mentor Jane Boyes

Whist at Boyes Rees Architects I was part of a flexible team consisting of 2 architects, 1 architectural technician and myself an architectural assistant. We were involved in a total of 12 projects, varying from a university campus

RIBA Registration No. 054662C

to Royal Mail distribution offices. With the majority of our time divided between three key projects, the DVLA

Mentors Email

Swansea Masterplan (£70m), the JCP Expansion (£50k

jboyes@boyesrees.co.uk

- 150k per project) and the Farringdon Royal Mail Super DO (£65 m).

With a very fluid personal role within the design team I was often working on serveral projects at once, continuously juggling various tasks. My duties within the team included building surveys, the production of brief feasibility reports, the production of scheme proposals for approval and tender, the preparation of rendered visuals for client/planning approval, the production of construction plans and details, and the attending of design/progress meetings and site inspections.

01 Proposed DVLA x-ray building arrangements and details




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