Gaelle Gourmelon Landscape Architecture Portfolio

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gaĂŤlle gourmelon landscape architecture design portfolio



00 P E R S O N A L S TAT E M E N T Revealing the invisible—or, rather, celebrating the overlooked—drives my interests in landscape architecture. I find great beauty in the workings of hidden biologies and seek to tap into the enigmatic power of plants and soil to enhance wellbeing. I tap into the cryptic ecological, social, and sensorial landscapes by contributing ideas that stem from an intense appreciation of site and a sensitivity to the generative power of context.


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01 RAM NAGAR ECONURSERY & W E T L A N D PA R K

AL

CALIFORNIA AQUEDUCT

ACTIVE AND CAPPED OIL FIELD

TULE ELK RESERVE STATE PARK

AGRICULTURAL LAND

KERN COUNTY WATER BANK

RR

I

T

I OR

02

TE

TO BAKERSFIELD

1 inch of rain

ON SHIFTING GROUND SEEDING PATCH DYNAMICS IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN N

JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

NOV

DEC

EQ

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AVERAGE MONTHLY RAINFALL, BAKERSFIELD

L AB

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03 FRIENDSHIP COURT A CHARLOTTESVILLE JEWEL


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SELECTED WORKS

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B AT D I S COV E RY PAT H

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07 PROFESSIONAL WORK

PROMENADE-EDDY

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06 IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCES AND VIRTUAL WORLDS

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08 DRAWING | MODELS | CRAFTS



01 RAM NAGAR ECONURSERY & W E T L A N D PA R K | J A I P U R The project focuses on unfolding a dignifying space that economically supports the informal community of Ram Nagar in Jaipur, Rajasthan and ecologically connects the site to a larger Indian context, feeding into state afforestation efforts and bird migratory flyways. By bringing value to a degraded zone where the city, the hills, and the river of Jaipur meet, this project proposes a phased assembly of lively systems organized primarily through the integration of a working nursery and wetland. Individual Project | Fall 2019 Research Studio, Profs. Maria Gonzalez Aranguren & Pankaj Vir Gupta


JAIPUR FOUNDED by Maharaj Jai Singh II

BRITISH GAIN JAIPUR

DEFORESTATION: RAILWAYS

MESQUITE INTRODUCED

as a protectorate

640,000 wood ties used for Delhi rail

aggressive tree overtakes hills

JAIPUR FOREST ACT banned cutting trees in protected zones

DEFORESTE only 9% of fo on Aravalli H

1975

dunes at base of hills

1939

1930s

1863

1818

1727

1700s

SITE: UNINHABITED

1865

SITE: EDGE limit of urban development

1973

after East India Company

for commercial exploitation

1947

after East India Company

BRITISH FOREST POLICY

1939

INDIAN FOREST SERVICE

1919

BRITISH RULE IN INDIA

1894

1864

1858

FOREST PROTECTED annual tax due, forest products could be used

DEFORESTATION: WORLD WAR I

DEFORESTATION: WORLD WAR II

INDIAN INDEPENDEN

increases wood extraction in India

increases wood extraction in India

ends colonial rule


ED orests remain Hills

outlawed bovine slaughter

in 10 days due to botulism

SITE: FAILED RESETTLEMENT hills flattened and water diverted

2018

2008

EXISTING SITE CONDITIONS The existing site is considered a void. Trash and wastewater are disposed of near dirt paths and shrubland.

2016

2006

1990

DROUGHTS below average monsoons

18,000 BIRDS DIE

2019

1995

SITE: INFORMAL SETTLEMENT limit of urban development

2005

1969 1970 1972 1979 1982 1983 1987 1992 2000 2016 2017

NCE

NOTICE ISSUED TO STATE for air pollution cased by deforestation

RAJASTHAN BOVINE ANIMAL ACT

JOINT FOREST MANAGEMENT

FOREST RIGHTS ACT

COMPENSATORY AFFORESTATION FUND

failed due to lack of participation

gives communities co-management over forests

industry funds used for reforestation

◀ REGIONAL TIMELINE Major national and regional policies and shifts shape the site, including divisive livestock laws, conflicts about forest rights, and limited climate change responses.


1

4

6

9

9 10

4

3 A

11 6

13

8 14

1

2

Wetland overlook

3

Wetland park

4

Service road

5

Compost station

6

Public toilet

7

Wastewater collection

8

Seedling production

9

Grazing pasture

10

Stormwater retention

11

Sand extraction

12

Mature grove

13

Water distribution point

14

Research park

6

6 14

13

Vendor stalls

10

7

2

1

13

12

14 6

5

4


proposed

existing

5-STEP STRATEGY ▶ In response to marginalization and habitat destruction on the site, this project proposes that this region become a hybrid of production and inhabitation through five major moves.

1 | INCREASE ACCESS FOR PEOPLE & GOODS IN/OUT

bus stop primary road secondary road tertiary road

ACCESS PATHS

RING ROAD

2 | ESTABLISH SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE AT EDGES

water piping

DECENTRALIZED WASTEWATER COLLECTION

trash pickup & water source (500 m radius)

TOILETS TRASH PICKUP WATER SOURCE WASTEWATER PIPING

COMPOST STATION

3 | REUSE WASTEWATER & RETAIN RAINS MONSOON RETENTION POND

stormwater waste water storage pond

WASTEWATER CAPTURE

MONSOON RETENTION POND

4 | CREATE ZONES THAT SUPPORT LIVELIHOODS commercial zone productive zone SMALL STOREFRONTS

400 ft

N

◀ PROPOSED SITE PLAN The project proposes a system made up of a productive tree nursery, mature grove, and wetland park. Most easily accessible to the community for daily tending are north-facing terraces.

SEEDLING & SAPLING PRODUCTION

TREE PRODUCT & TIMBER PRODUCTION

COMMERCIAL ROAD

5 | IMPROVE HABITATS FOR PEOPLE, LIVESTOCK & BIRDS recreational park protected reserve open access land

ROTATIONAL PASTURES COMMUNITY MANAGED GROVE

WETLAND PARK


CONSTRUCTING

DECISION-MAKING

x1 researching

SOIL-PREPARING

x5 assisting

x4 x3

RESOURCE-COLLECTING

coordinating

x5 management

x50 construction

promise-making

x10

x2 advocating

x50

manure collecting

wetland planting

LEGEND

x30

high-skilled trained traditional

x10 path building

waste collecting

temporary seasonal constant

x2

estimated number of people involved

x50

fence building

sand harvesting

x10

waste shredding

x5

compost turning

x5

soil amending

x5

soil baggi


ing

PRODUCING

SELLING

TENDING

x50

seed processing

x100

x20

fruit selling

patrolling x60 x50

twig processing

x20 x20

seed planting

x40 caring for seedlings

x20 thinning

x20 transplanting

x30 caring for saplings

protecting

x10

x100 distributing

direct selling

teaching x30

x30 watering

x30

intercropping

x100 x100 lumber cutting

trash removing

JOBS CREATED Operation of the site would be an experiment in urban forest management. It would produce hundreds of jobs, which would vary seasonally. Women, whose mobility is culturally more limited, would benefit most from having employment close to home.


INTERCROPPING

SAPLINGS

SAND

TREE PRODUCTS

BIRDS TO HOMES

MATURE GROVE

SAPLING TERRACES

STOREFRONTS

MONEY

URBAN SERVICE JOBS

SE AS O

TO HOMES

AL N

ER AT NW I RA

LIVELIHOODS MONEY

WATER PIPING

VEGETATIVE BUFFER

BIRD HABITAT

INFRASTRUCTURE

HABITATS

TOURISTS

DRINKING WATER

SERVICE ROADS

WETLAND

TO HOMES

BIRDS

WASTEWATER COLLECTION

GRAZING LAND

PARTIALLY TREATED WATER

SLUDGE LEGEND

MANURE

BROWN WATER

SOLID WASTE COLLECTION

SERVICE ACCESS CORRIDOR

new ring road WATER COLLECTION

EXISTING

SOLID WASTE

STORMWATER HARVESTING BLUE WATER

FLOW

COMPOST

ENHANCED

ADDED

WATER STORAGE

retention pond

TO LANDFILL

SAPLING PRODUCTION

shade structures

MAN UR E

TO CANAL

NEW METABOLISM Compared to its previous linear waste flows, the site will have a new metabolism that attributes value to all of its inputs and outputs.

RESOURCE FLOWS â–¶ Most seedlings will be sold for reforestation efforts, but others will be planted on the flattened region, allowing them to mature into a large communal grove used to harvest leaves, branches, and wood.

GRAZING PASTURE

TRANSPORTATION CORRIDOR

PEDESTRIAN PATH new paths


WATER STORAGE

SAPL ING S

UCTS OD PR E E TR

TREE PRODUCTS

PO , COM ST, SLU ER DG AT E W E T AS W

GOODS SHIPPING CORRIDOR

SAND water storage SANITATION toilets & water ATM SEEDLING PRODUCTION

retention pond


failed resettlement structures

end of vehicle access

free-roaming livestock

sand

sparse grazing zones

standing wastewater

non-functional latrines

trash

EXISTING

EXISTING

GROWING TREES SUPPORT BIRDS; BIRDS HELP DISPERSE SEEDS

GROWING TREES SUPPORT BIRDS; BIRDS HELP DISPERSE SEEDS

LEAVES FOR FODDER

trees grown to maturity SAND FOR TERRACE AMENDMENT

trees for shade and shelter

new service road COMMUNITY-REGULATED LUMBER EXTRACTION

ROTATIONAL GRAZING LAND SUPPORTS FREE-RANGING CATTLE

tree guardians

grasses regrown after fallowing

TREES REDUCE TEMPERATURES THROUGH SHADE

Forest Service officer path to commerce corridors CATTLE PRODUCE FERTILIZER FOR NURSERY

COMMUNAL HARVEST OF TWIGS, FRUITS, LEAVES

CANOPY CREATES COOLER MICROCLIMATE

fodder to supplement grazing

PROPOSED

PROPOSED

KEY:

existing feature

design element

IMPACT

KEY:

existing feature

design element

IMPACT


main road trash

outlet to city canal

free-roaming livestock

wastewater

wastewater

monsoon spillway

trash

city edge steep slopes

free-roaming livestock

EXISTING

EXISTING

street shade trees

planted wetland shared sidewalk

sculpted ponds STREET VENDOR CORRIDOR

service road

TRANSPORTATION CORRIDOR

linear boardwalk

PARTIAL WATER TREATMENT

DIRECT CONNECTIONS TO TRANSIT AND COMMERCE

SERVICE

ECOTOURISM INCREASES VISITORS

CORRIDOR

ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION SAPLING PRODUCTION

paths stairs SEEDLING PRODUCTION

path

BIRD SPECIES ATTRACTED TO SITE

livestock exclusion barriers

MANURE COLLECTION

PROPOSED

GRAZING

PROPOSED

KEY:

existing feature

design element

IMPACT

KEY:

existing feature

design element

IMPACT



CALIFORNIA AQUEDUCT

ACTIVE AND CAPPED OIL FIELD

TULE ELK RESERVE STATE PARK

AGRICULTURAL LAND

V I R G I N I A A S L A C O M M E N D AT I O N A W A R D

KERN COUNTY WATER BANK

02 ON SHIFTING GROUND TO BAKERSFIELD

SEEDING PATCH DYNAMICS IN THE SOUTHERN SAN JOAQUIN

The thriving agricultural and oil industries of the Southern San Joaquin Valley are quickly approaching their limits. Instead of aiming to fix the region’s problems of subsidence, saline soils, contaminated groundwater, poor air quality and vulnerability to drought, we propose a menu of strategies to layer flexibility and complexity into the system as it meets difficult realities. When layered together, the strategies can transform, repurpose, or hybridize obsolete, static land use types into a responsive system of rotating land patterns and maintenance regimes. We acknowledge the unavoidable obsolescence of infrastructure and contemporary land use and provide an alternate vision for the process of “failing.” 1 inch of rain

Manifesto: https://vimeo.com/360571478 N Group Project | Spring 2019 Foundation Studio, Profs. Bradley Cantrell, Brad Goetz, Andrea Hansen Phillips Te a m : Ta r y n W i e n s , C h l o é N a g r a j JAN

FEB

MAR

APR

MAY

JUN

JUL

AUG

SEP

OCT

AVERAGE MONTHLY RAINFALL, BAKERSFIELD

All work is individual contribution unless marked otherwise.

NOV

DEC


~0-1850s

x-1911

ACTIVE AND CAPPED OIL FIELD

485

CALIFORNIA AQUEDUCT

WORKERS CAPPED WELLS ACTIVE PUMPS ROADS TRUCKS PRODUCED WATER

WATER CONCRETE WATER MONITORS POLLUTANTS

450

400

350

300

281 250

200

1880s-1930s

x-1953

TULE ELK RESERVE STATE PARK PARK RANGERS TULE ELK GRAZING LAND FLOOD WATERS VISITORS

1930s-1991

KERN COUNTY WATER BANK BIRD SPECIES FLOODABLE AREAS SHRUBS ACCESS ROADS PUMPS WATER

x-1953


Bakersfield

AGRICULTURAL LAND CROPS TRACTORS FARMERS IRRIGATION PESTICIDES FERTILIZERS

◀ EXISTING LAND USE In Kern County, California, extremes in oil production, wildlife conservation, water banking, and agriculture define patterns in the landscape. These functions are currently highly segregated from each other.


MACHINES AND PEOPLE Existing land uses are not erased, but by 2060 the edges start to blur. This drawing shows the many machines and plants that may be involved at a particular moment in the shifting mosaic. (Lead design by Chloe Nagraj)


VISUALIZING CHANGE ▶ These animation stills show the transformation from the existing grid of “productive” and “non-productive” parcels with rigid infrastructure to a landscape where those boundaries are released and the form of the landscape can respond to conditions of soil, hydrology, and climate. https://vimeo.com/360578724


â—€ OIL FIELD SALT PARK Imagining new hybrids in regions nearing obsolescence are needed to blur land use lines. Here, salt from increasingly saline cropland is placed in a park of decommissioned oil rigs, celebrated rather than dismantled.


RIVER PULSE FLOW â–ś Inspired by a decision to periodically release dammed water in the Colorado River, this project proposes the use of farming equipment to shape the ground before a temporary wet ecology is created in the dry San Joaquin River bed.



â—€ DOCUMENTING: CENTRAL VALLEY photography | 2019 | field work The Central Valley of California has a complicated relationship with water and land. During a site visit, I documented questions of access, change, and dependence on water.



03 FRIENDSHIP COURT: A CHARLOTTESVILLE JEWEL

This proposal uses the ground as a tool to shape social spaces. Rather than use coarse, orthogonal terraces that often separate neighborhoods from each other, sculpted facets connect people to one another, to the earth, and to places. Like those of a gemstone, the facets of Friendship Court reveal existing potential. Beyond simply modifying the surface, this proposal challenges the segregating topography of the city. The neighborhood pushes back against the barren flatlands of parking lots, contrasts with the elevated markers of racial exclusion, and counters the past’s timidity of design through a celebration of identity. Individual Project | Fall 2018 F o u n d a t i o n S t u d i o , P r o f. B et h M e y e r


ELEVATED-ESTABLISHED

COURTHOUSE

CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL

LEE

JACKSON

◀ EXISTING: SEGREGATING TOPO Today, Charlottesville is racially and economically divided, a separation that is reflected in the topographic variation of the city. High points in the city are dominated by institutions of power and symbols of racial repression. Public housing projects are sequestered in lower elevation stream corridors.

• • •

highest elevations within original city lines institutions of power

• • •

areas separate from daily life rotating industrial uses artificially lifted railroad tracks

• • •

lowest elevations patched after Urban Renewal megablock separate from matrix

TED F A R ED-G

399’ OR LOWER

FRIENDSHIP COURT

LIFT

400’ – 442’ 443’ OR HIGHER PUBLIC HOUSING

SUNKEN-PATCHED


COMMUNITY-RUN RETAIL

vertical exaggeration 3x

CAREER TRAINING INDUSTRIAL KITCHEN COMMUNITY GARDEN COMMUNITY-RUN CAFES AND RESTAURANTS

PARK COMMUNITY STAGE GATHERING SPACE OUTDOOR MOVIE THEATER

BASKETBALL

MIXED CAFE SEATING BUS STOP HUB OUTDOOR EVENT SPACE SEATING CRAFT MARKET

GRILLING PRIVATE PARTIES/GATHERINGS OUTDOOR SEATING

FRONT YARDS PLAYSPACE EARLY EDUCATION PARENTING SUPPORT

CONVERSATION POCKET

SHARED BACKYARD

CONVERSATION POCKET BASKETBALL PARKING GRILLING PRIVATE PARTIES/GATHERINGS OUTDOOR SEATING

FAMILY

COMMUNITY

REQUIRES SPENDING MONEY

â—€ PROPOSED: FACETED TOPO Modifying the topography of the site allows the ground to be activated for a variety of uses, while maintaining a separation between spaces for the residents and those where the broader Charlottesville community can gather.


FACETED SURFACES Through simple faceting, spaces are activated to address the needs of the Friendship Court community. Places of intimate meeting, family connection, and neighbor gathering are unified by a common design language. The design can easily be modified to respond to evolving desires of the residents.



45 0 460

+HP 459

+454

0

46

+452 +441

44

0

450

+457

440

+455 +455

450

INTENTIONAL TOPOGRAPHY ▶ Taking a found surface, a product of Urban Renewal, the site is intentionally transformed using three scales of faceting.

+452

+443 +436 +450

440

+438

+436

+444

44

+432

0

+446

+442

+435

43

0

+434 +436

+430

+432 +434 +432 +431 +430

+436

+434

+424

+424

+426

45

0

+LP 422

+432

+424

+431 +432

430

FLEXIBLE VARIATIONS ▶ Facet dimensions, edge thickness, slope amount, and orientation are manipulated to activate spaces for a variety of uses, avoiding “lost” spaces in the compact building plan.

+430

0

+430

43

+430

44 0

430

+LP 425

+428

UNIFIED LANGUAGE ▶ Using a simple geometry allows for a cohesive design language throughout the site and into neighborhood connectors.

+426

45

0

+430 420

+432

46 0

+430

+428

+434

430

+LP 425

+426 +434

Ficus carica Amelanchier laevis

0

0

43

46

0

45

Diospyros virginiana

0

44 0

Carya illinoinensis

41

Cercis canadensis

420

Existing tree

47 0

+430

N +437

47 0

+LP 402

◀ EXPANDABLE LANDSCAPE Faceting can expand into nearby streets, bus stops, underused parking lots, and entrances to nearby nieghborhoods. The planting pelette supports gathering areas, while also providing foods for harvest, as requested by current residents.


CONCEPT: FROM FOUND SURFACE TO INTENTIONAL FACETING

common gateway

gathering dip

serendipitous seat

conversation pocket

edible woonerf

harvesting hill

dutch door garden

sunny slope

CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL SPACES

concrete, wood, turf or plantings

3.5’ max

PHYSICAL CATALOG OF FACETS

18” 6”

18”

2%

5%

15%

45%

100%

NE

SW



04 B AT D I S COV E RY PAT H

This path challenges the invisibility of wildlife in the city, particularly of the solitary, nocturnal Eastern Red Bat, Lasiurus borealis. By providing opportunities to respectfully view these secretive animals, the path reminds us that wildlife exists in spaces and during times that we tend to overlook. It reconnects us with the living unseen. The design focuses on using vegetative structures to disperse visitors, modified topographies to increase daytime bat roosting interactions, and a series of glowing panels to visually highlight nighttime foraging. Individual Project | Fall 2017 Foundation Studio, Profs. Leena Cho & Brad Goetz


DISPERSAL

OBSERVATION

INTERACTION


PATH | HABITAT

Leaf litter collects on West-facing slopes for winter roosting; steep slopes prevent human passage through winter habitat

Quercus montana provides preferred roosting habitat; high canopy provides safety for day-roosting bat

Fraxinus species provide preferred roosting habitat; high canopy provides safety for day-roosting bat

Respectful introduction of human exploration into the Eastern Red Bat habitat requires dispersal of groups of people, provides opportunities for observation from a distance, and allows for interaction through modified topography.


N 10

0 ft

20

25

PEOPLE

DISPERSION

Possible path Bat viewing

N 10

0 ft

20

25

PEOPLE

High

Low

Traffic over path

1. PLACE PATH

Possible path Bat viewing Dispersion point BATS

2. PLACE DISPERSION CUES Direct

Subtle

Vegetative dispersion cues

00 ftft

25

5050

100 100

OBSERVATION

Canopy gap for flight Roosting site

3. CREATE VISIBLE ROOSTING SITES

4. MAINTAIN CLOSED CANOPY, USE EDGE

INTERACTION

Closed canopy forest Forest edge No canopy

RETENTION

Managed canopy gaps

5. SELECT PLANT FORM AND SPECIES

Dispersion point BATS

Canopy gap for flight Roosting site


◀ STRATEGY DIAGRAM Four parameters define the path and placement of plantings and mounds. ◀ MANIPULATIONS Serial sections along the site depict interactions between ground and canopy, showing spaces of dispersion of people, observation of bats, retention of mounds, and interaction between visitors and bats. MOUNDING & CURVING ▶ A curved wall along each mound catches sediments as the soil erodes and recreates a new, climbable form.

GLOW: ATTRACT INSECT PREY FOR BATS

GLOW: SILHOUETTE FORAGING BAT FOR VIEWING

CURVE: SLOW WATER FLOW TO REDUCE EROSION; MAINTAIN OPEN FORAGING SITE

CURVE: TRAP SEDIMENT TO FORM NEW LANDFORMS; MAINTAIN HUMAN-BAT INTERACTION OPPORTUNITIES NEAR ROOSTS; MAINTAIN SOUTH-FACING SLOPES FOR WINTER BAT ROOSTING



05 PROMENADE-EDDY Public seating activates the in-between. It gives meaning to the spatial interface between home and the private unshared. By allowing temporary ownership of space, it makes sense of places that simultaneously belong to all and to no one—a place of both attachment and detachment. It is a material form where cross-sections of society pause to contest spatial ownership and initiate control, revealing their shared or conflicting presence. It is a multidimensional feature—not static, but rather an ever-changing representation of duration, interaction, and appropriation. This proposal modifies the distance between people on a bench and those walking along an overlapping promenade. Because of the dynamic nature of the structure, interaction is augmented, making the public space a place of negotiation and social contact. Individual Project | Fall 2018 F o u n d a t i o n S t u d i o , P r o f. B et h M e y e r


CONCEPT DEVELOPMENT Early explorations of a bench that can accomodate various experiences of privacy and sociability, responding to the body scale and site. The curved bench idea evolved into the later rotating bench concept.


ENCROACHING ON THE WALKWAY The bench is set on a circular track that overlaps the primary and secondary walkways of the allĂŠe. Different configurations of the bench create opportunities for right-of-way negotiation with strangers.

BENCH + WALKWAY CONFIGURATIONS


A DYNAMIC BENCH The dynamic bench can move to accomodate climatic conditions and desires for privacy or sociability. The tracks are set in the lawn and into the walkway, changing the flow of pedestrians.

DENSE CANOPY

BRIGHT BARK

LAWN MATRIX

PERFORATED STEEL

SECONDARY WALKWAY

ACACIA 1.5� SLATS

PRIMARY WALKWAY

IN-GROUND STEEL RAIL




06 IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCES AN D V I RT UAL WORLDS

Through engagement with a broader audience, these projects aim to open minds. Whether as site-based installations, field guides or imaginative video games, they aim to alter the way we engage with the world around us. I believe that projects like these are the gateway to engaging with the field of landscape architecture.



THE CORNER HERBORETUM A P OP- U P M US E U M OF W E E D S

The Corner Herboretum project hijacks mainstream tools of legitimization—serif typeface labels, logo branding, foamboardmounted signage, mapping and a social media presence—to bring appreciation to spontaneous vegetation, plants that are often seen as illegitimate or unwanted. By identifying, highlighting and tagging plants that are normally overlooked, this temporary installation celebrates vegetation sprouting in our forgotten spaces. Despite the short life of the project (linked to the short life of some weeds), the project found allies who carefully replaced fallen tags or shared the project online. Individual Project | Spring 2019 U r b a n W i l d s , P r o f. J u l i e B a r g m a n n Materials: PRINTED BROCHURE L AS E R- CU T L A B E LS I N S TA G R A M A C C O U N T M A P O F P L A N T L O C AT I O N S M O U N T E D P L A N T P O R T R A I TS


INTRODUCTION More than 41 store and restaurant fronts exist in Charlottesville’s Corner. This is a daunting number for a beginning site-reader who is merely trying to identify the commodification of labor in which social relations of domination are reproduced through material traces in the landscape. This field guide is the first step into understanding this unique place.

Site-reading—nowadays more frequently called “being a feminist”—is enjoyed by millions of people. The challenge lies not only in finding certain landmarks but also in accurately identifying engrained power structures, especially in places with deep historic contexts of racism and sexism, and this requires both preparation and experience.

This guide invites you to ask: Can The Corner’s present social structures of consumption and labor be separated from its allmale, all-white legacy and its historic dependence on widows and black slaves as a source of labor? Read on!


FIELD GUIDE TO THE CORNER This project is designed to question our relationship to Charlottesville’s universityadjacent commercial neighborhood, The Corner. Printed with two identical front covers, this guide juxtaposes “front of house” material traces when read in one direction with “back of house” traces when read from the other. The field guide is a collection of archival material, photographed trash, sketched clothing, and overheard conversations which present the mainstream or a feminist observations of the site, based on which direction the guide is read. Within each collection, excercises and guiding questions are folded in to encourage personal exploration. Individual Project | Fall 2019 Relational Landscapes of Care, P r o f. S a r a J a co b s

Materials: HAND-BOUND FIELD BOOK


PAST: MATURE FOREST The geological past of the Appalachian Plateau is seen in the rocks strewn around the dimpled landscape. Broadleaf trees dominate this biologically rich area.

PRESENT: FOREST DESTRUCTION As she keeps walking, the player reaches an altered, silent landscape punctuated only by sounds of passing machinery. The forest and bird song are gone.


WHAT’S MINE(D) IS YOURS: E X P E RI E N CI N G M OU N TAI N TO P R E M OVA L

Mountaintop removal is a brutal act of landscape transformation. For many, the scale and impact of this mining method is incomprehensible, frequently invisible, and conceived only through distant satellite imagery. This project seeks to create an experiential journey through mountaintop removal using the gaming platform Unity, from a familiar present of forested terrain to a future alien landscape of resource extraction. The side effects of harvesting coal—from loss of habitat to disruptive explosions and altered geologic and hydrological processes—are made virtually physical. The gaming platform allows players to move through space and time to experience a radically altered landscape and a pugnacious biological future after mining. Preview: https://vimeo.com/305792416 Individual Project | Fall 2018 D i g i t a l P r a c t i ce s , P r o f. M a t t h e w S e i b e r t S o f t w a r e : U N I T Y G A M I N G P L AT F O R M

FUTURE: MATERIAL EXTRACTION The player walks along a preextraction surface, passing between jarring blasts and large blocks of earth transported to nearby valleys. Eventually, the landscape is dotted only with sparse islands of trees.



07 PROFESSIONAL WORK

Extensive internship experience has allowed me to produce a variety of technical and exploratory projects. I have detailed for construction documents for embassies, rendered playgrounds for developers, created plant palettes for rememberance parks, researched rocky outcrop green roof analog communities, presented on design links to well-being and more. My previous work in public health, sustainability, communications and research inform my projects today. Firms represented in this section: SCAPE New York , NY LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE BUREAU Washington, DC AGENCE TERRITOIRES Besanรงon, FRANCE



SCAPE

N e w Yor k , N Y J a n ua r y 2020

My main project at Scape was to model and render an on-structure playground and two rooftop terraces on a proposed New York City waterfront multi-family property. Once the model was built, I helped to identify problem areas, proposed design options, and modeled alternatives. Featured here are some stills from a rendering from this project using Lumion software. Software: Rhino, Lumion Te a m : Timothy Clark, Internship Supervisor Lena Smart, Landscape Designer


A

C

D

5'-0"

3'-9"

3'-4"

2'-7 1/4"

2'-2 1/4"

B

3'-4 1/2"

3'-3"

1

A.ii

A.iii

5'-9"

A.iv

10'-0"

B.iii

5'-9"

21'-6 1/8"

C.iii

8'-5 3/8"

46.15°

D.iii

8'-5 3/8"

7'-5 3/8"

63.29°

2

C.ii

7'-5 3/8"

4'-3 3/8"

16'-10 5/8"

3'-7 3/4"

5'-0"

55.70°

3'-3"

2'-2 1/4"

3'-8 1/2" 45.00°

1'-0 3/8"

A.i

B.i

1'-1 1/8"

B.ii

7'-11 1/4"

C.i

8'-7 3/8"

5'-2 5/8"

D.i

D.ii

8'-6 1/4"

6'-5 1/2"

4'-3 3/4"

14'-11 3/4"

16'-6 5/8"

3

114.60° 73.58° 70.35° A.vii

6'-2 1/2" 6 3/8"

B.vi

A.viii

A.ix

10'-0"

6'-2 1/2"

95.85°

B.vii

8'-8 1/4"

115.49°

84.96°

C.vi

6 1/4" 8'-2 3/8"

113.65°

3'-5 7/8"

2'-9 1/2"

1'-8 5/8"

110.38°

1'-9 7/8"

1'-5 1/8"

1'-0 3/8"

D.vi

C.vii

5'-7"

5'-7"

8'-5 1/8"

22'-5" 16'-10 5/8"

11'-2"

PLANTER BEYOND, TYP.

4

3'-9"

2'-9"

45.00°

60.74°

5'-0" 3'-5 1/2"

A.v

64.21°

A.vi B.iv

6'-1 3/4"

1'-9 7/8"

B.v

C.iv

2'-3 1/2" D.iv

C.v

D.v

6'-1 3/4" 6'-1 1/2" 12'-3 1/2"

6'-1 1/2"

5'-9"

3'-3 1/2"

4'-10 7/8"

6'-0 1/8"

1'-6" 12'-2 7/8"

9'-0 1/2"

10'-11"

1'-6 1/8" 5'-0"

133.40° 3'-4 1/2"

2'-11 7/8"

5'-0"

5'-0"

2'-0 5/8"

5'-0"

3'-4 3/4"

4'-1"

4'-10 1/8"

5'-0"

2'-7 3/8"

5'-0" 113.13°

A.x

A.xi

A.xii

A.xiii

A.xiv 82.46° 4'-7 5/8"

6'-6 5/8"

5

B.viii

4'-3 3/8"

B.ix

117.36°

C.viii 62.63°

97.54°

10'-0"

C.xi

C.x

66.87°

118.47°

D.vii

8'-0 3/8"

10'-0"

7'-9 7/8"

4'-8 7/8"

4'-9 1/2"

129.95°

8'-2 3/4"

12'-3 1/2"

D.viii

14'-11 3/4" 100.54°

B.x

14'-8 1/4"

102.46° D.ix

91.16° B.xi

A.xv

3'-8"

B.xii

16'-10 5/8"

54.41°

53.94°

5'-11 3/4" 3

Assembled Planter Layout Scale: 1/4" = 1'-0"

5'-0"

6'-10 1/2"

69.07° 2'-3 1/2"

4'-11 3/4"

6'-3 3/4"

8'-5 1/2" 10'-0"

C.ix

6'-10 7/8" 21'-6 1/8"

16'-8 1/4"

5'-0"


[LAB] LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE BUREAU Wa shi n g ton , DC J ul y - Aug ust 2019

While working at LAB, I was involved in both research and design projects. I detailed four custom planters, coordinating directly with the fabricator for cost estimates and construction process information (far left). I created greenroof plant cards for native plants from rocky outcrop analogue communities, focusing on wildlife value and availability in nearby nurseries (left). I drew and rendered design options for a developer project (below). As part of an office-wide initiative, I led research on landscape design and well-being interactions. Software: VectorWorks, InDesign, I l l u s t r a t o r, P h o t o s h o p Te a m : Joe Chambers, Internship Supervisor Michael Smith, Project Manager Xibei Song, Project Manager

OPTION A

OPTION B



AGENCE TERRITOIRES Besançon, FRANCE June 2019

While at Agence Territoires, my main responsability was the full drafting, illustration and layout of a project proposal narrative in French within a three-week turn-around time. Because the call for projects stemmed from a previous planning study, I was able to learn about the site quickly, respond to the client’s priorities and develop a proposal that featured the site’s unique nature as a phased active gravel quarry site and proposed playground. The project proposed to tie together sites across multiple towns and cities from two countries (France and Switzerland) while prioritizing green corridors, active transit safety, and placespecific identity. I coordinated with our project team (including a sociologist, an educational illustrator and a playground designer) to highlight the strength of our design team.

Software: VectorWorks, InDesign, Photoshop Te a m : Etienne Voiriot , Internship Supervisor



08 DRAWINGS | MODELS | CRAFTS

Creating, making, and shaping are central to my experience as a designer. I observe the world in a deeper way with each line drawn on paper, each material in a model and each interaction. Thinking through my hands unlocks new ways of exploring and untangling complexities.


◀ TWISTED HAND charcoal 2009 | class project study of foreshortening in hands ◀ SIDE STUDY pencil 2010 | class project ten-minute study with live model


PLANT SKETCHES ▶ pen 2018 | field notes detail of flora on site

NUDE WITH LIGHTS ▶ pencil 2010 | class project thirty-minute study with live model



◀ ASPHALT SPONTANEOUS FLORA plants and glycerin 2018 | class project representation of roots of parking lot plant species

◀ REVEALING THE ICE WALL 3D printed model; stained plexiglass 2018 | class project MVVA’s Teardrop Park Ice Wall structure modeled to show concrete structure and stone veneer


◀ STACKING PLAY BLOCKS white oak, bee’s wax 2018 | personal project modeled after Tumi Ishi blocks used in Waldorf Schools ◀ COFFEE TABLE mixed wood, aluminum 2018 | personal project wood scrap coffee table with center panel riser


SUMMER DRESS ▶ fabric 2016 | personal project fitted dress with V-back SPRING DRESS ▶ fabric 2012 | personal project petal dress with pockets



THANK YOU!


gaĂŤlle gourmelon landscape architecture


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