NSS Headquarters Research and Proposals - PART 3A

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CHAPTER 11 Dora Chan

CHAPTER 11 / 161 Projected Parallax / page 163 Floor Plans/Experience / page 165


underGROUND//projected parallax//dorachan National Speleological Society Headquarters

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A continuous split of surfaces may receive light at different angles but will appear relatively flat from one perspective. This is a type of illusion which reveals a space to be wider and deeper than anticipated, forming a parallax condition. As a frame is projected and skewed, volumes are created, where the eye is then forced to scan the horizon to understand the extent of the space. Only moving further into it will it expose hidden behind.

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Loading Dock Janitorial

400

Zone 8

80

Visitor

Book Distribution

Storage

Museum Archives

11000400

700 250

Visitor

1

Member

Worker

2

Zone 6

60 Conference Room

730

Visitor

Member

Visitor

Member

Library

Worker

Primary

2

Zone 5

380 Vertical Training

Worker

2

Zone 4

400

Visitor

Locker Rooms

Kitchen

Bunker Room

Member

Worker

1

Zone 3

200 300

750

Secondary Visitor

Member

Visitor

Member

Museum

2500 Lobby

Worker

Zone 7

Toilet

Office

Member

Worker

1

Zone 2

Gift Shop

Worker

2

Zone 1

240 300

Visitor

Loading Dock

Member

Worker

1

Janitorial

70

Book Distribution

Storage

Office

Museum Archives

Toilet

Meeting Room

163

Library

65

Vertical Training

65

Locker Room

Kitchen

Bunker Rooms

Museum

70/65

Lobby

Gift Store

70

CHAPTER 11 Dora Chan


Library

Mud Room Locker Rooms

Vertical Training

Bathrooms

Plan

Upon entering the site from Mammoth Cave Road, visitors are drawn into the atrium, where the core then redirects them the opposite direction from which they are drawn. The programmatic spaces are only found through explorative measures, simulating the navigational experience of a cave. These areas unveil themselves through distinct angular trajectories. Public and private spaces interweave the site, occasionally with overlaps to create adjacencies for viewership.

Auditorium

Museum

Lobby

Cafe/Dining Area Bookstore Museum Archives

Open Offices Large Conference Hall

Plan

By allowing the land to breach the building, surreptitious campgrounds are created for incoming cavers. Throughout the building, every corner reveals another projection presenting activity. Geared towards both families and individuals, formal or informal, the site provides a niche for all. Navigation occurs through primary and secondary zones, where lineally, public becomes more private. Commercial ventures are paired with office, offering ongoing services and activity for all NSS members and non.

Book Distribution

Bunkrooms Commons Area

Labratory Research Campgrounds


Section 1DWLRQDO 6SHOHRORJLFDO 6RFLHW\

165

Top: Looking towards the lobby of the museum. Bottom Left: A view of the gallery space. Bottom Right: Looking back towards the entrance.

CHAPTER 11 Dora Chan


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The proposed project attempts to simulate the distortions that occur from projections, revealing spaces at every turn to navigate the visitor through the building. Additional programs such as a a research and labratory would draw academic investments into Mammoth Cave region. Safe family campgrounds and temporary units would also encourage extended visitation periods for surrounding growth.

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Book Dis Distrib tributio ution Storage Stor age M um Archi Mu Muse Arch ves v

Office Office Toilet Toil et

Meeting M e ing RRo Room oom o Libr b ary br ary

Lockerr Rooms Kitchen Bunkerr Rooms oms

Lobbyy Lobb


167

CHAPTER 11 Dora Chan



CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen

CHAPTER 12 / 169 Speleogenesis / page 171 Site/Context / page 173 Floor Plans / page 175 Sections / page 177 Perspectives / page 179


underGround//NSS headquarters//Speleogenesis//Danni Chen T

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Speleogenesis Volumetric relationship

Carbonic acid in groundwater dissolves limestone

Subtraction of earth Addition of water

Volume (=) Earth (-) Water (+)

Subtraction of earth Accumulation of water

Volume (=) Earth (-) Water (+)

Stabilization of earth Subtraction of water

Volume (-) Earth (=) Water (-)

Stabilization of earth Subtraction of water

Volume (-) Earth (=) Water (-)

The role of water in cave formation

critical agent for subtraction of solid space and formation of void space

Water table is lowered

+ + +

Limestone dissolved from rocks above the cave is deposited as stalacites and stalagmites

Stabilization of earth Addition of stalacities

Volume (+) Earth (+) Water (=)

critical agent for formation of decorated elements


Spatial Penetration

Circulation Patterns

Singular static movement

Complex, interactive movement

Section of block(s) with dripping method

Section of block(s) with flowing method

Acetone Applying Method -imitating circulation patterns

Original block(s)

Singular Space

Parallel Space

Hierarchical Space

Interacted Space

CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen

171


Site/Context

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Rotated form to attract visitors

Penetration mimics cave formation

Program grid

Vertical Training space is pulled out more to become a strong identity


Program Study

Vehicular experience

Roofscape/Geology Garden

Museum experience

VERTICAL TRAINING

Membership experience

LIBRARY ARCHIVE OFFICE PRINTER COPIER

MEETING ROOM

173

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SEUM

GIFT SHOP

VERTICAL TRAINING

LIBRARY ARCHIVE

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OFFICE PRINTER COPIER

LIBRARY ARCHIVE

MEETING ROOM

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GIFT SHOP

MEETING ROOM

PRINTER COPIER

LIBRARY ARCHIVE

OFFICE

VERTICAL TRAINING

MUSEUM MUSEUM

GIFT SHOP

FFICE

Public programs

Administration

Membership related programs

Promenade

CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen


Drawings/Plans

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1. Vertical Training 2. Museum 3. Information/reception 4. Entry 5. Tunnel 6. Offices

7. Meeting Room 8. Archives 9. Library 10. Members Parking 11. Public Parking 12. Geology Garden

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CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen


Drawings/Sections

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Section B


177

Vertical Training

Section C

CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen


Drawings/Renderings

Museum display on top of the tunnel

Museum ramps break the ground of geology garden


Model/Photographs

179

CHAPTER 12 Danni Chen



CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio

CHAPTER 13 / 181 NAGARE / page 183 Process Work / page 185 Project Representation / page 187 Sections / page 189 Perspectives / page 191


NAGARE

by Michelle Claudio Mammoth Cave

I-

70 Mammoth Cave Rd The Site

Mammoth Cave Pkwy

31W / Louisville Rd PARK CITY

4667 Mammoth Cave Road Cave City, Kentucky

This project is inspired by cave hydrology. I looked at different ways that water moves through a cave--drip, pond, flow, eddy--as a conceptual strategy for arranging the building on site, organizing program and for inspiration for the ways light spills through the space. The title “Nagare” is Japanese for “to flow”, this was an appropriate title as elegant Japanese architecture served as inspiration for this project.


183

CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio


Process Work The collages shown were a way to identify and develop the material qualities of different spaces. The top image is a study of a “dripping space�, or a space in which people would meander through. Then there is a ponding space, one which collects people. And finally, a faster flowing space.


A series of flow studies was done to better understand the relationships between different types of flow.

MUSEUM Drip + Flow + Pond

GIFT SHOP Drip + Flow GIFT SHOP Drip + Flow

CAFE Drip + Pond

GIFT SHOP GIFT SHOP Drip + Flow Drip + Flow

LOBBY Flow

185 MUSEUM Drip + Flow + Pond

CAFE Drip + Pond

GIFT SHOP Drip + Flow

LOBBY Flow

CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio


Project Representation

Entry

3

Administration

Museum

ms

oo str

Book shop Re

Meeting Room

Additional Gathering

Training Space

1 2

Sleeping Area

Locker Rooms

Mud Room

Ground floor plan

Administration

Book Distribution Museum s

om

ro est

R

Training Space

Basement floor plan


1 Vertical Training

187

2 View of Vertical Training as you approach the locker rooms

3 Trickling light in Museum CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio


Sections


Cross Section

189

Section

CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio


Perspectives

Entry


191

Approaching bookshop and Museum

Descent into NSS Library and Offices

CHAPTER 13 Michelle Claudio



CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng

CHAPTER 14 / 193 Light Boxes / page 195 Idea and Site / page 197 Program / page 199 Sections / page 201 Renderings and Model / page 203


Light_Boxes Yunyuan Deng

The way how we feel a specific cave is by only remembering the special moment such as the special geological typology. This project tries to translate the natural geological cave language to an architectural language. Another fascinating point of cave is the changing of the light quality. Actually, light enhances the special caving moment. For example, the light tells the cavers where the exit is. Located at a hill slope, the site condition can help to create the atmosphere combined of light, temperature, sound and so on. The building has three different kinds of relationship with the ground, underground, above the ground and cantilevered from the ground. Entering the building by crossing some boxes from the hilltop, people cannot make sure whether they are underground or above the ground. This is

also another experience people have in real caves. These boxes work as “light creators”, since the boxes change the light quality which casts on the interior surface. The boxes are not at the same level, they sometimes block people’s view, sometimes create delusion and illusion of the building position. In terms of the program, the floating boxes are for member and staff, while the museum part for the visitor is the large space underneath these boxes. Instead of making an artificial cave, this project lets people recall the experience they have in the real caves with the special atmosphere.


195

CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng


idea & site

N 0m 10m 30ft

20m 60ft


197

CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng


program

members

museum

administrative


floorplans

-3.600

vertical training

1.400

-1.600

hostel

up

down locker room locker room

-1.600 -3.600 library

office

down down

book distribution

down

0.150 meeting room -3.100 office

1.200 archives auditorium

up

up staff and members’ entrance

-1.800

lobby ±0.000

±0.000 down visitors’ entrance

up

1.000 plan

199

vertical training

-1.600

up

childrens’ learning center exhibition

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library exhibition

up

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down

down

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coffee gift shop

down auditorium -1.800

up lobby

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CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng


sections

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6-6 section

CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng


renderings & models


203

CHAPTER 14 Yunyuan Deng



CHAPTER 15 Leann Dreher

CHAPTER 15 / 205 NSS Headquarters Proposal / page 207 Site and Floor Plans / page 209 Sections and Elevations / page 211 Perspectives / page 213


National Speleological Society Headquarters Proposal My proposal is located on mammoth cave rd. In cave city, kentucky, just off of i-65. The site has easy highway access, and is near the entrance to mammoth cave national park. My project used cave mapping symbology together with my experiences underground to create a building proposal that uses perception to allow the building to reveal itself to the visitor. The building is separated into three areas; administration, museum, and members. Each of these areas is then connected to an adjoining area by an interstitial space. The courtyard connects the museum and administration through the lattice structure that spans both portions. The density of the lattice allows someone in the courtyard to understand the programming of the space beyond, it also creates an entry sequence that plays up the shadows, reflections and overlaps of the lattice allowing for a thick interstitial space to unfold around the visitor entering the building. The museum, member, and administration spaces are all hinged around the vertical training space. It allows for museum goers to get a glimps of cavers training, as well as allows admininistrators to quickly transition from work to training. Outside, i created a terraced retaining wall to meet up with the building where the ground has been manipulated to both inform a visitor of the excavation that has taken place, as well as activate the landscape to encourage visitors to interact with the site. One section of the building has been depressed below the terraces, allowing for a visitor to interact with the building itself, and to realize that there is a structure beneath them, just as caves lie beneath much of the ground in kentucky.


207

CHAPTER 15 Leann Dreher


I-65

MAMMOTH CAVE RD.

SITE PLAN


BUILDING KEY 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16

16 15 13

3 4

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5 6

1

7 2

8 9 9 9 9

209

SECTION B

SECTION A

PLAN LEVEL 0 CHAPTER 15 Leann Dreher



NORTHEAST ELEVATION

SECTION A 211

SECTION B

CHAPTER 15 Leann Dreher


VERTICAL TRAINING SECTION

VERTICAL TRAINING PERSPECTIVE


OFFICE CANTILEVER SECTION

213

OFFICE CANTILEVER PERSPECTIVE CHAPTER 15 Leann Dreher



CHAPTER 16 Ryan Giles

CHAPTER 16 / 215 Initial Studies / page 217 Floor Plans / page 219 Floor Plans / page 221 Sections / page 223 Perspectives / page 225


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CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll

CHAPTER 17 / 227 Project/ ANCHORED / page 229 Site / page 231 Massing / page 233 Plans / page 235 Experience / page 237


Project // ANCHORED ANCHORED establishes the NSS Heaquarters as a center for program focus, public outreach and environmental protection. In a move towards valuable membership succession, the headquarters will function as an “anchor” for the NSS in pursuit of a position that bridges the realm of cave exploration, scientific research and natural preservation. The investigation within the ANCHORED project began with an analysis of the “rack” rappelling device in comparison to NSS stakeholders and interdependent relationships of the headquarter program. The ANCHORED NSS Headquarters mixes the museum experience of a visiting non-caver with the training realities of an experienced member; exhibition program wraps around a focal rappelling tower, a synthetic, vertical “cave” interior. The act of caving is exposed, a living and constant display of dynamic, exciting technique.


The “rack� frictional descending device

to top anchor

guide rope brake bar

guide rope rack control hand harness - rack connection

brakehand loose line

friction bars

line of descent harness attachment

NSS HQ Investment Lines Visitor

Member

Administrator

transient interests

ubiquituous loyalties

local populace

229 active receptors future members concerned public

shared passion practicing explorers conservation researchers

linking organizers knowledge dispersal structured perpetuation

NSS HQ program as frictional device social outreach

educational bridge

administrative brain

CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll


Site // ANCHORED Mammoth Cave St. parcel Cave City, KY

I - 65

Mammoth Cave St.

exit 53

generative site model Project studies developed through an understanding of three specific program stakeholders, their interaction with specific parts of building program and ultimate role in the further ambitions of re-conceived NSS trajectory. These relationships were physically translated onto a “generative� site model that served to represent through overlapping building masses, possible connections and arrangements of the NSS headquarters.

31 W


terrain

administrators

The existing terrain of the site in Cave City includes the convergence of a subtle ridge and a shallow gulley at the east corner of the parcel. Terrain anchors traverse the highest and shallowest points of these landforms, spaced every 50’ on the site diagram.

Considering the administrative pragmatics of the NSS as a book distributor and archiving agent, administrative anchors recognize a link to external transportation infrastrctures; this is in consideration of the NSS HQ facility as a both an information distribution center and an accessible landmark.

231

members

visitors

As a major crux of the existing NSS framework, membership establishes a geographical spine within the site. NSS membership is invaluable to the succession of the NSS as a society of collective interests, however, it is through the passion of cavers and enthusiasts that such precious environments can be preserved and better inform our surficial impacts.

In order to succeed an aging membership base, visitorship to the NSS HQ should be readily accomodated through attraction programming, training facilities and on-site accommodation facilities. The orange visitor anchor follows along the perimeter of what was initially perceived as a forest campground for overnight visitors.

CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll


Massing // ANCHORED

ANCHORED final model


building studies massing / structural apparatus

233

CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll


Plans // ANCHORED

section A section B

Mammoth Cave St.

site plan

rear camping terraces


e a f

c b

d

level 1 a......rappelling pit b......administration c......rappelling gallery d......salon e......lockers f......camping terrace

b c a

e d

level 2 a......rappelling pit b......recreation terrace c......multipurpose hall d......rappelling loft e......exterior rappelling

235

section B CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll


Experience // ANCHORED

rappelling tower interior


237

section A

CHAPTER 17 Spencer Kroll


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