Caroline Wahl Portfolio

Page 1

CAROLINE WAHL Design Portfolio


Caroline Wahl Design Portfolio

University of Kentucky College of Design


Contents 01 Coolavin Park Community Center 11 Louisville Water Company 17 Idea Festival Headquarters 23 Idea Festival Pavilion 27 Flobee Toy 35 Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant 41 Henderson Municipal Power Plant 55 University of Pikeville Student Center



Coolavin Park Community Center Lexington, KY Our design seeks to provide Jefferson Street and the surrounding area with a revitalized urban landscape with our site functioning as the nucleus of a network of pedestrian/vehicular/rail and bicycle connectors, greenery, and recreational activities, . This network will serve as a catalyst to the extensive redevelopment of Jefferson street beyond the confines of Third Street.

+ Derek Taylor

02



Through the deployment of individualized nodes focusing on social interaction, greater attention will be garnered for the surrounding area and its buildings. The nucleus of the network will function as a mechanism for change on a interpersonal and community level by bringing added amenities to the adjacent residential districts. Additionally, it will serve as a transitional intersection between athletics, neighborhood recreation, academia, and urban living. By focusing on a central node, our design will demonstrate the capabilities and intricacies of the links created by the stitching of program to heighten community involvement and social interaction.

North - South Section

04


East Elevation

West Elevation


Skin

Zooming out, our proposal is integrated with existing programs and urban redevelopment while offering its own unique formal and programmatic qualities. Taking ques from adjacent proposals, our design extends and enhances the development of greater Lexington.

2

North Elevation

Zooming in, our design will focus on creating habitats for social interaction. These microcosms will be indicative of the larger ideas at work in the design by becoming a vehicle for social intercommunication. Our designs on a whole share strong linkages but are reconfigured through a transformative scaling process. PRIORITIES 1. Connections 2. Urban Networking 3. Social Interaction 4. Community development 5. Economic viability

Ribbon Space Frame

Glazing

Vierendeel Trusses

South Elevation 06



Ribbon Space Frame

Vierendeel Truss

Glazing System Space Frame

Perforated Metal Panel System

Structural System

08


Facade Perforation Pattern

East - West Section

09


10



The Louisville Water Company Louisville, KY This project aims to create an international water research center in Louisville, Kentucky. The proposed site for the center is the city’s historic water tower, which builds on the city’s rich history and connection to water. The history of the city and river are tightly entwined.

12


Concept Diagrams : Shear

Elevations

13

North - South Section


This proposal aims to create a research hub that focuses on the connection of city to water. A main goal was to activate the site with the public through various means. Docks, kayaks, canoes and rowing facilities will be implemented as well as a water education boat and barge tours. Running and bike paths populate the site creating a procession throughout the property. The buildings are placed on the site in order to create or frame views of the historic watertower. The location of the research hub is a focal point on the site. It sits at the convergence of various programs creating an emphasis on the hub and therefore an emphasis on education.

View approaching the Water Education Center

East - West Section


2 2

FLOOR 1 1. AUDITORIUM 2. CLASSROOM 3. LIBRARY 4. HALL ENTRANCE

2 2 3

4

1

1

2 1. EXHIBITION HALL 2. CIRCULATION 3. CLOAKROOM 4. HALL ENTRANCE

3

4

Floor Plans 1 1 1 2

1

FLOOR 2 1. ADMINISTRATION OFFICE 2. MIXED USE FACILITY

1

1.RESTAURANT 2. KITCHEN

2

15




Idea Festival Headquarters Louisville, KY Design for the headquarters of the Idea Festival. The site is located on the outskirts of downtown Louisville in order to promote communal activity in the area. The headquarters incorporates a variety of programs while exploring the blending of different components. Combining program enables workplace unity and promotes a strong sense of community. The skin system was designed to allow for varying levels of natural light through the use of solids and voids creating a pattern of apertures. The material system investigates different strategies using metal and glass ribbon windows, while developing the interior space and separating it into usable programmatic elements.

18


Program Organization

Lobby / Info Gallery / Lounge

Exhibition Space

Offices

Conference Room

Kitchen

Mechanical

Storage / Copy / Supply

Theatre / Lecture Hall

Parking

Guest Residence

Guest Studio

LINKAGE

19


West Elevation

North Elevation

South Elevation

East Elevation

20


Roof Condition

Organizing Grid

Public Space Semi-Private Space Private Space

Punctured Skin

Ribbon Windows

Circulation Diagram

Floor Condition

Amphitheater

Ground Condition

Exploded Axonometric 21




Idea Festival Headquarters Pavilion Louisville, KY The objective of the project was to design an open air pavilion that seeks to raise awareness for the Idea Festival. The form was created through constructed geometry. Three separate curves, rotated and skewed were used to create the structure of the pavilion. The curves were then lofted together to create the interior and exterior facades of the pavilion.

24


North Elevation

West Elevation

25


Chip Board Waffle Grid Model

26



Toy Studio Flobee Through formal manipulation and material investigation Flobee was created. A bouncy toy in essence that has calculated trajectories of bounce. Material exploration was used through the use of 3-D printing, balloons, and urethane rubber.

28



Progression

Front Elevation Planar Experimentation

Top Elevation Pod

Flobee I

Flobee II

Flobee I

Flobee III

Flobee IV

Balloon Placement

Flobee II

Balloon Bridge Placement

Back Elevation

30


31

Mold Making Process


Front Elevation

Mold for Bridge Balloon

Back Elevation

Flobee III

Mold for Standard Balloon

Side Elevation

Front Elevation

Flobee IV Side Elevation

Back Elevation

Bouncing Form Trajectories

Bouncing Form Trajectories

32


33




Paducah Gaseous Diffusion Plant (PGDP) Paducah, KY The PGPD was once the sole source of all uranium enrichment for the US's nuclear weapons and energy programs. The Department of Energy grows ever closer to decommissioning the facility and leaving Paducah, KY with job loss and a 10 square mile underground plume of heterogeneous contaminants that was created by enrichment operations. Sponsored by a DoE Grant through the Center for Applied Energy Research, our Atomic Cities Research Group spent 18 months investigating how Paducah might turn this "problem" into solutions for building a prosperous future. We developed a strategic vision, proposed interactive tools, and produced an exhibit "(re)Making City" that outline a way forward. + Matt Gannon Maggie Clines Anne Schwab

36


PADUCAH

ATOMICITY

Models of underground contamination and surface conditions.

COMPOSE A WELL- FORMED PROBLEM 37

The Manhattan Project History The Manhattan Project, a research and development program led by the United States with participation from the United Kingdom and Canada, began in 1939 with the Einstein-Szilard letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The letter warned of the potential development of “extremely powerful bombs of a new type.� It urged the United States to accelerate their research into nuclear chain reactions. In a few short months, the Manhattan Project grew to employ more than 130,000 people and cost US$2 billion (roughly equivalent to $24.4 billion as of 2011). 90% of the total cost went toward building the factories and producing the fissionable materials, with less than 10% for development and production of weapons. Research and production took place at more than 30 sites across the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada. Ultimately, the research led to the development of two different types of atomic bombs which were used on Japan and led to their surrender.


IN D

PO

TE NT IA L

US AG E

UE LS BIO F

PO

TE NT IA

USA GE

L

OLE UM

POTEN TIAL

M

PETR

NUCLEAR

AY SUBW

IN TR A

GASEOUS DIF

W E AG US

PO

SS

L IA NT TE D HY

E

RO

US

E AG

TIA T EN PO

BAS

E

AIR F O RC E BA

AR FAC

R AL

UN DS ITE

MIL ITA RY

NUCLE

ET YP

ST E I T SY

PE RF

PE TY

SIT SU

USAGE

S RAN

Y

BU SI NE

R AI

M LT U

TION TRANSPORTA

LIC T PU B

TO

NO

O U

IN DU ST RI AL

R TE WA

AU

EC AG R IC

ANALYZE & DRAW RELATIONSHIPS

AR SO L

SE

E USAG

ILITY

POTENTIAL

FUSION

NATURAL GAS

LABORATORY

TYPE OF CL

POTEN

ENT EATM ER TR DWAT PING

USA G

ON ATI

E

M ER TH

NU P

NT IAL

UP

E

WATER

PLUME AFFECT ON HEALTH

CRIME INDE X

PITAL TO HO S

M

CO LL EG E

N

PROXIM ITY

HEA LTH

PL U

SI TE

BR AN CH

G

STRE SS IN DEX

MP LA NT

FR O

F

AT

IT Y/

Y

CO NT AM I NA

CH

TIO

ES AT

BS

O

MU N

T CI

E EG LL CO

ITU

NR

ATE

LIVIN

JO

ES S

IN

AL ON

ST IN

YR

IO AT DU

S IT

T OF COS

D NT SUPPLIE

PRINT FOOT

GOVERNME

N CARBO

OBE

A GR

NT S

GI

CL EA

AW AR EN

SE AR

CH AR

O

SE RE

IC YT AL AT

R JO MA

C

D XI

N IO AT

CL EA N

IS

O

D XI

RE

N IO AT

RE

US O

DR HY

S LY RO PY

CO M

ON TI IA

OF

OR YT

ED EM

TE

TY PE

G IN PP RI ST

N

PH

AL

L

AIR

PO

TO

RED DEG

LE VE

BIO

TIAL

CO A L

SP EN

CA P

SQ. MILES

USAGE

EANUP

MO NE Y

N GROU

L

38


[ PADUCAH, PORTSMOUTH, TUCSON ]

ENVIRONMENT

CHALLENGE

ENERGY

[ SHANNON, SAN BERNARDINO, RICHLAND ]

SOLUTION

SAN BERNARDINO

COLLABORATE & LEARN FROM OTHER CITIES

6 DAMS WILL BE BUILT BY 2020 TO GENERATE MORE HYDROPOWER & WILL CREATE 2500 JOBS CALIFORNIA HAS 124% SELF RELIANCE POTENTIAL FROM HYDROPOWER

ELEMENTS OF AN AUTOCATALYTIC CITY COMMUNITY An autocatalytic community is one that has successfully been developed in Education, Economy, Environment, and Energy. By using these four themes to evaluate a community, there is a thorough understanding of the opportunities and challenges each community faces. Assessing multiple communities in this manner establishes comparisons and relationships between them. This in turn, allows communities to learn from each other and become a single global community.

LEADING HYDROPOWER PRODUCER IN THE UNITED STATES

A

B

C

A

B

A

B

C C

D

F

C

F

C

F

INCREASE IN WIND POTENTIAL IS THE GOAL IN CANADA

UNDERSTANDING THE CORRELATION BETWEEN ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITIES AND ENERGY ALLOWS FOR A HOLISTIC ANALYSIS OF THE VARIOUS PROS AND CONS OF SPECIFIC ENERGY SOURCES.

[ SAN BERNARDINO, TUCSON, PORTSMOUTH ]

ECONOMY CHALLENGE

OF WASHINGTON’S ENERGY COMES FROM WIND POWER

ARE SET TO

OPEN IN 2012

OF CALIFORNIA’S ENERGY COMES FROM WIND ENERGY

LEADING CITIES IN SEARCH OF RENEWABLE ENERGY ACT AS AN EXAMPLE FOR PADUCAH, PORTSMOUTH, AND TUCSON TO FIND ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCES TO IMPROVE THEIR ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY.

EDUCATION

[ OAK RIDGE, AIKEN, RICHLAND ]

SOLUTION

89.3%

38.5%

ENVIRONMENT

82.6%

23.0%

A healthy community relies on a healthy environment.

SOLAR FARMS

92.6%

38.9% ENERGY Research is required for environmentally sound energy solutions. 3 COMMUNITY COLLEGES 4 UNIVERSITIES

ECONOMY Growth occurs through supply and demand of heterogeneous goods and services.

39

3 COLLEGES 2 COMMUNITY COLLEGES 3 UNIVERSITIES

OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY SAVANNAH RIVER ECOLOGY LABORATORY PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY

EDUCATION Empowers communities to maximize economic, environmental, and energy potentials.

3 TECHNICAL COLLEGES 4 UNIVERSITIES

THE EDUCATION LEVEL OF A COMMUNITY DIRECTLY INFLUENCES THE ECONOMIC POTENTIAL OF THAT COMMUNITY. ( I.E. LOWER PAYING JOBS, HIGHER CRIME RATES, HIGHER POVERTY RATES )

LEADING CITIES IN EDUCATION AND RESEARCH ACT AS AN EXAMPLE FOR SAN BERNARDINO, TUCSON, AND PORTSMOUTH TO SOLVE THEIR ECONOMIC CHALLENGES THROUGH EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS


SIMULATE & TEST SCENARIOS 1. AIKEN, SOUTH CAROLINA

ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE: “High-level” waste tanks store highly radioactive liquid waste and are considered by the DOE to be the greatest health risk in South Carolina. ENERGY SOLUTION: Strip down the radioactive materials to recycle as much as possible; invent new uses for the waste materials.

2. OAK RIDGE, TENNESSEE

ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE: Oak Ridge is the 8th largest consumer of coal and the 18th largest consumer of petroleum in the country. ENERGY & EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Educate younger generations to rely on renewable energy as a cleaner power source. Work with the National Energy Education Development (NEED) to implement programs in local schools.

ENERGY & EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Transformation of stored nuclear materials turning waste into energy for the entire country for twelve years. Education develops remediation technologies and clean energy solutions.

ENVIRONMENTAL SOLUTION: Plume clean up creates thousands of jobs and potentially millions in intellectual property.

ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE: Contamination renders valuable infrastructure and large land areas useless.

4. PORTSMOUTH, OHIO

ECONOMIC CHALLENGE: Crime rate is twice the national average; US average is 313, Portsmouth's average is 723.5 (out of 1000) EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Develop after-school programs / peer mentoring within schools that involve children in positive activities to develop attitudes and values; Neighborhood watch programs

ECONOMic CHALLENGE: How to replace the Cold War expenditures that fueled the local economy for half a century.

5. TUCSON, ARIZONA

ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE: Tucson ranks 80th out of the top 100 worst traffic congested cities in the United States (study by INRIX, Inc.). ECONOMIC SOLUTION: Work to phase in bicycle lanes (Ex: Over the course of one year, New York City completed 38 miles of bicycle lanes).

6. SAN BERNARDINO, CALIFORNIA

ECONOMIC CHALLENGE: 48% of the citizens live in poverty in the city. EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Create jobs / programs at California State University (largest employer in San Bernardino); Create incentives for high school graduates to attend college (programs through the university, scholarships, etc).

7. SHANNON, QUEBEC, CANADA

ECONOMIC CHALLENGE: No major institutions in Shannon, though there are some nearby in Quebec City. EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Form a branch research institution in Shannon to educate residents about the cleanup activities going on at the site.

8. SEASCALE, CUMBRIA, ENGLAND

ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGE: The power plant Sellafield is at the center of an international dispute concerning the discharge of radioactive waste into the Irish Sea. EDUCATIONAL SOLUTION: Develop technology that can effectively filter the contaminants out of the water and control the waste problem.

9. RICHLAND, WASHINGTON

ECONOMIC CHALLENGE: 120 billion is predicted to be spent on cleanup activities in the next 50-60 years ENVIRONMENTAL SOLUTION: Use passive remediation techniques to lower the cost of cleanup, thus putting money back into the economy.

DEPLOY AND ITERATE

MAINTAIN CONNECTIVITY

REMEDIATE PROBLEM IMPLEMENT PHASED REUSE

CONTINUED CULTIVATION OF AUTOCATALYTIC COMMUNITY

40



Henderson Municipal Power and Light Plant Henderson, KY HMPL 1: A 65,000 square foot retired coal-fired power plant, located in downtown Henderson. The proposal accentuated the HMPL1 building’s pre-existing structural character based on the premise that the industrial space was a valuable and sentimental local commodity. As such, our proposal maintained the pre-existing plant by developing and inserting structures into the building and park.

+ Matt Gannon Bart Gillespie Brian Richter

42


As it sits now HMPL #1 is surrounded by barricades with the Ohio River to the north, railroad tracks to the west, and paved roads to the south. It sits among a rich system of parks; however, the power plant acts as a barricade that blocks the continuation of nearly 2 mile long system of public parks. We propose to break down these barriers and breathe life back into the site. Strategies to facilitate this continuation include introducing a rooftop park, a physical cut through the building in order to reach the riverfront, and multiple areas of greenscape on the extended site. This proposal seeks to create a new cultural and civic center in the heart of downtown Henderson, KY. Bringing amenities such as convention space, a restaurant, a clean energy research facility and integrated public space will do just that.

HMPL #1

Connection to Park

Convention

Connection to City

Restaurant

Energy Research

hmpl1

Integrated Public Space


A PERSON CAN TRAVEL FROM HENDERSON, KY TO 2/3 OF THE UNITED STATES IN 1 DAYS DRIVE. THIS PUTS HENDERSON AT THE CROSSROADS OF MANY OF THE MAJOR CITIES IN THE UNITED STATES.

TRAIN RAILS, THE OHIO RIVER, AND THE PROPOSED I-69 INTERSTATE ALL PASS THROUGH HENDERSON, PUTTING IT AT THE CENTER OF THREE DIVERSE MODES OF TRANSPORTATION.

HENDERSON KY IS A RIVER CITY WITH LARGE EXPANSES OF ITS DOWNTOWN ALONG THE RIVERFRONT.

RIVER FRONT PARK SYSTEM

OVER TWO MILES OF PARK STRETCHES ACROSS THE EXPANSIVE RIVERFRONT OF HENDERSON.

44


We proposed two major design changes – the addition of an exterior stair through the building and a new public space on the site. The stair would separate the public functions from the private industry and connect the park to an elevated area set aside for dining and events. The public space was intended to function with the convention center in HMPL #1, providing new programmable space and incorporating the two and a half mile park into the design. The strategy of inserting a program under the park was conceptualized to extend into the city and to reclaim the existing parking lots as urban parkscapes, allowing the adjacent buildings to gain a visually attractive double amenity where there once was only function.

45

View 01 Cut Through


View 02 Restaurant / Bar

View 03 Convention


G D B E

A

F

C PHASE 1: (+ 1 YEAR)

PHASE 2: ( +5 YEARS ) PROGRAM:

ENERGY RESEARCH RESTAURANT CONVENTION

PARKING REQUIREMENTS:

1 PER 1.5 EMPLOYEES OR 1 PER 500 SQ FT 1 PER 300 SQ FT AND 1 PER 2 EMPLOYEES 1 PER 30 SQ FT

PARKING SPACES

SQ FOOTAGE/SIZE

PARKING SPACES

SQ FOOTAGE/SIZE

30 45 200 TOTAL: 275

A B C D E F G

PHASE 3: ( +5 YEARS ) PROGRAM:

MARINA RETAIL HOTEL

PARKING REQUIREMENTS:

1 PER 2 BOAT SLIPS 1 PER 300 SQ FT 1 PER ROOM AND 1 PER 5 EMPLOYEES

10 25

TOTAL: 95 RELOCATION OF WATER TREATMENT PLANT

PHASE 4: ( +10 YEARS ) PROGRAM:

RESTAURANT RECREATION

PARKING REQUIREMENTS:

1 PER 300 SQ FT AND 1 PER 2 EMPLOYEES 1 PER 4 SEATS IN STADIUM

PARKING SPACES

45 50

SQ FOOTAGE/SIZE

TOTAL: 95

Ex

to

y by

v

t

y.

t t

PHASE 5: ( +10 YEARS ) PROGRAM:

PARKING REQUIREMENTS:

RESIDENTIAL

2 PER DWELLING UNIT

PARKING SIZE:

(8’) X (12’)

TOTAL COMPLETION TIME: 30 YEARS

PARKING SPACES 20

SQ FOOTAGE/SIZE

485 TOTAL SPACES T OF PARKING

y.

+++++++-


A

A B C D E F G

Site Plan

PLAZA HOTEL RESTAURANT POOL AMPHITHEATER RESIDENTIAL MARINA


Retail Hotel HMPL

Condos Amphitheater

Restaurant

Marina

49


B

B

B

A

C

B A

B

D D B

C

A

A

A

C

96’

B

16’

48’

B

B

96’

Basement / Lower Level

Entry Level

Upper Level / Roof

A. Kitchen B. Office C. Storage D. Loading

A. Convention B. Bar C. Entry D. Energy Research

A. Restaurant B. Terrace C. Energy Research

50


463’

435’ 5

UPPER

415’

ENTRY

LOWER

400’

385’ 377’ 370’

51

East - West Section


1 : 32 Site Model

UPPER

North - South Section

52


5th International Biennale Rotterdam The University of Kentucky’s College of Design was selected to participate in the 5th International Biennale Rotterdam under the theme “Making City”, focusing on the continued global urbanization that creates political, social, economic and ecological challenges. The Henderson Project proposes a redevelopment of the Henderson Municipal Power and Light Power Plant (HMPL #1), a decommissioned coal fired power plant located on the Ohio River, in the heart of Henderson, KY. By re-purposing HMPL #1 and bringing new public amenities to the site, the project is intended to revitalize Henderson’s waterfront and have a positive effect on the region’s business, tourism, and urban fabric.


54



University of Pikeville Student Center Pikeville, KY This Student Center for the University of Pikeville is located on the plateau of a mountain top removal site in Eastern Kentucky. A connection to the city of Pikeville was one of the main drivers of the project. Not only a physical connection with a gondola system that connects to downtown Pikeville but a visual connection as well. These visual connections include views to the highway and through the valleys of the mountainous region. The Student Center sits high on top of a mountain and glows like a beacon at night to the surrounding areas.

+ Jeff Guiducci

56


FORMAL DIAGRAM

Coal

CONCEPT DIAGRAM

Connection to City

View 2

View 1

Connection to Site

57

Thesis: The history of the site is something that is very important the University of Pikeville’s Student Center. The site in which the facility sits on is a mountain top removal site. Mountain top removal tends to have a negative and controversial reputation. We want to address the issue and what mountain top removal has done to the site by rehabilitating the site. The Student Center at UPIKE will make the site a learning and educational place. Not only will standard curriculum be taught in the Student Center, there will be educational courses that address coal mining and mountain top removal. An emphasis will be placed on creating cleaner coal extraction courses and emissions as well as creating jobs for people in the surrounding region other than coal mining. Promoting sustainable living and lifestyles is something else that is of great importance. A certain percentage of land on the site will be dedicated to agriculture which can be sold in the student centers urban market. HBEER housing will be provided to students in order to create a community on the mountain top. The building itself is LEED Silver certified and will be built with stainability in the foreground. Photovoltaics will be implemented on the roof and on certain metal panel facades in order to maximize on the suns natural energy potential. Daylighting will be used effectively in order to reduce heading and cooling loads. Geo thermal wells will be implemented in the fill land to the south of the site in order to produce the buildings own energy demands. A connection to city will be created in numerous ways. A visual connection will be made by creating views within the form of the building. Panoramic views of Pikeville can be seen on virtually every floor. A physical connection to the city of Pikeville and more directly to the main campus of UPIKE is achieved through a gondola system. This transportation system creates a unique and exciting way to visit the student center. It also reduces pollution due to automobile traffic, and simply creates an ease of movement from the main campus to the satellite center Community engagement will be a high focus in the design of the student center. A museum will be implemented that shows the history and future of coal. Community academic opportunities are present with non traditional energy education. Finally the physical attractions of the site, such as a large theater and planetarium will draw citizens to the site in order to partake in these unique activities.


View 01

View 04 1193

1211

1203

1263

1198

1199

1196

1208

1208 1206

1282

831 816

1216

1181 826 1211 1219 1293

1181

1258 1231

1222

1216 808

1302

1298

1224

1233

801

1202

1209

1434

1037 1447 1276

1304 1175 1169

View 02

1271

1302

1442

1126 1198

1202

1221

View 05

1122

1228 1228 1236

1306 1122 1184 1311

1217

1471

1283

1297

1304

1054

1216

1182

1222

1202 1292 1304

1299

1207

1236

1237

1231

1272

1312

1283 1287

1306

1256

1277 1304 1303

1272

1253

1277

1306

1307

1302

1222

1262

1304 1307

1209

1281

1299 1303

1307 1243 1305

1194

1436

1303 1301

1302 1307

1217

1420

1297

1307

1461

1213 1292 1304

1307

1307

1386

1306

1488

1318

1477 1191

1307

1389

1312

1302 1308

1309 1321

1211

1308

1197 1314

1311

1312 1308

1311

1201 1307

1185 1308

1307

1312

1192

1333

1188

1307

1468 1313

1315

1293

1307 1723

View 03

1303

1349

1307

1336

View 06

1317 1622

1243

1312 1612 1314

1222 1317

1508

1492

1558

1317

1316

1616

1488 1319

1321 1761

1471

Site Analysis

1754

1382

1308

1477 1217 1794 1668

1618

1511 1493

1234 1716

1243 1738 1249

1492

1288

1212 1577

1268 1582 1292 1504 1276

1204

Panoramic View

58


1. Small Classroom 2. Small Classroom 3. Large Classroom 4. Medium Classroom 5. Museum 6. Building Services 7. Loading Bay

1

2

3

17. Gondola 18. Urban Market 19. Radio Station 20. Game Room 21. Coffee Shop

8. Small Classroom 9. Small Classroom 10. Large Classroom 11. Medium Classroom 12. Administrative 13. Lecture Hall 14. Food Services 15. Computer Lab

4

8

9

10

24. Dining 25. Kitchen

22. Theater 23. Gallery

26. Planetarium 27. Multi Purpose Space

11

21 16 24

26

15

20

17 7

18

19 23

14

12

27

25

6 13

22

5

Level 1

59

Level 2

Level 3

Level 4

Level 5

Level 6


Plan View 60


View 01

31

View 02

View 03


Quantitative Room Summaries

Planetarium

Level 1: Museum Small Classrooms Medium Classroom Large Classroom Building Services

Dining / Kitchen

12,348 784(3) 1,652 1,960 2,700

Level 2: Administration Lecture Hall Computer Lab Small Classrooms Medium Classroom Large Classroom Food Services

3,348 1,798 1,860 784(3) 1,652 1,960 2,380

Level 3: Gondola Coffee Game Room Radio Station Urban Market

9,300 1,595 2,291 1,760 17,60

Level 4: Theater Gallery Level 5: Dining Kitchen Level 6: Planetarium Multi Purpose Space

Theater Gondola Retail / Game / Radio Academic Administrative Lecture Hall Core

Planetarium

Museum Food Services / Building Services Community Academic Core

Dining / Kitchen

Gondola

7,497

Coffee Shop

Academic

Theater

28,276 4,950

Urban Market Radio Station Food Services

Community Academic

Game Room

2,500 32,150

Administrative Building Services

Lecture Hall Museum

View 04

1’:16” Physical Model

1’:16” Physical Model

62


Structural System View 01

Structural System View 02 63


64



Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.