4th Year Interim Design Portfolio

Page 1

METRO

mela

SANA TABASSUM

SPRING / SUMMER

2121

UNIT 18


Literary Inspirations

3

Catalogue of Artifacts

4

Metro Centre

5

Durga Puja Pandals

6

Mall Pandal

7

deadmalls.com 8 Shopping Typologies Anatomy of a Mall

9 10

Cathedral of Consumption

11

Monuments Left Behind

12

Exhibition of Forgotten Artifacts

13

Shopping Trolley: The Musical

14

Programme 15 Britain’s Most Depressing High Street

16

Anatomy of a High Street

17

High Street Furniture

18

Supermarket Articles

19

Shopping Devices

20

Short Elevation Collage

21

Glass Chapel

22

Garden of Eat’n

23

Hall of Forgotten Artifacts

24

Supermarket LARP Arena

25

Massing Studies

26

Initial Building Study

27

Sketch Plan & Elevation

28

RMIT Design Hub

29

Wim Delvoye Sculptures

30

Playing Shop

31

Garden of Eat’n

32

Shutter Ceremony

33

The Eat’n Booth

34

Eat’n Booth Elevation

35

Garden of Eat’n

36

Section Collage

37


Literary Inspirations

1

2

1. Motel of the Mysteries

2. Kingdom Come

Illustrative book describing the career of archaeologist Howard Carson as he discovers a buried motel room in the year 4022 which allows him to fabricate the story of an extraordinary civilisation.

This novel follows the exploits of Richard Pearson, a rebellious, unemployed advertising executive, whose father is gunned down by a deranged mental patient in a vast shopping mall outside Heathrow Airport.

3


Catalogue of Artifacts

motel room 26

HC01

HC02

HC03

HC04

Great Altar

Ceremonial Chest Plate

Sacred Communicator

Golden Band

HC05

HC06

HC07

HC08

Ceremonial Platform

Coin Holders

Unnamed

Unnamed

HC09

HC09

HC10

HC11

Containers for Offerings

Containers for Offerings

Unnamed

Unnamed

HC12

HC13

HC14

Mosaic Tile

Unnamed

I.C.E Internal Component Enclosure

[TV Unit]

[Bed]

[Beverage Bottles]

[Perforated Ceiling Tile]

The book is a satirical take on the archaeological profession, our views about past society and how objects are the gateway to learning more about the way we live our lives when importance is given to material culture.

[Bra]

[Shoes]

[Cups / Glasses]

[Lamp]

[Mobile Phone]

[Women’s Sandals]

[Picture Frame]

[Wristwatch]

[Underwear]

[Wallpaper]

[Ice Bucket]

4


Metro Centre

Collage of Metro Centre from Kingdom Come, novel by J.G. Ballard set in dystopian West London where shopping is treated as the sole cultural activity, removing the need for other community spaces in the city.

5


Durga Puja Pandals

1

2

Durga Puja Pandals take on a temporary presence within the streetscapes of Kolktata. They are inticately hand-crafted, emphasising the grandeur of the festival that encroaches on everyday spaces, causing a shift in the urban fabric.

1. Pandal taking over the street corner, pedestrianising the space 2. All remnants of the pandal are erased, returning back to its original purpose

6


Mall Pandal

A second iteration of a mall-inspired collage, exaggerating the use of Gothic architectural elements with the warm tones typically used in Pandals.

7


deadmalls.com

1

2

3

Dead malls are a phenomenon made popular by the closure of hundreds of malls in the past decade alone. These are documented and archived by ‘retail historians’ on their website.

1. Abandoned mall in Randall Park, Ohio 2. Jamestown Mall in Florissant, Missouri 3. Dead mall in Montreal

8


Shopping Typologies

Regional Centre

Shopping Park

Corner Shop / Off Licence

Supermarket

High Street

Local Shopping Mall

Relationships between various shopping typologies in the UK including High Streets and shopping malls in relation to suburban homes. There are overlapping characteristics in each as well as distinctive features that make each one an evolved version of the last.

9


Anatomy of a Mall

1

2

4 3 5

6

7

8

9 10 11

Pictured are both Westfield Malls in London, each with an indistinguishable architectural language, designed to replicate the qualities of the outdoor market place (or high street) and introduce natural qualities whilst providing a clear circulation throughout.

12

1

Tree Nodes

2

Stall

3

Makeup Counter

4

Large Seating Area

5

Wayfinder

6

Escalator

7

Glass Roof

8

Interior Lighting

9

Shop Windows

10

Signage

11

Information Point

12

Digital Billboard

10


Cathedral of Consumption

A visual representation of possible mall spaces at varied scales, ilustrating potential ideas relating to shopping as a religion or escape. This collage expresses a temple-like structure situated in Stratford.

11


Monuments Left Behind

This collage represents an exclusive and secretive architecture that is fenced off by columns that act as monuments for this shopping festival which are left behind each time the building moves location, making its mark on the high street.

12


Exhibition of Forgotten Artifacts

Imagining a future society where the activity of shopping in actual shops is a mere myth, the hall of forgotten artifacts displays history’s most valued and purchased items and memorabillia through the decades.

13


Shopping Trolley: The Musical

14


Programme

Kumbh Mela

Shopping Mall

Maha Aarti

Hall of Forgotten Artifacts

Prayer songs are recited twice a day on a platform near the Ghats (banks of the holy rivers)

An exclusive collection of worldy possessions and material objects from lost eras of civilisations that are exhibited in an immersive digital wonderland

The priests lift the dazzling lamps and start rotating them in circles whilst mantras are chanted

Artifacts include plastic credit cards, disposable face masks and the biggest collection of coins

Deep Dan: The Lighting of Earthen Lamps Lighting of handmade earthen lamps called Diyas that are placed inside the temples, near river banks and in other sacred spots This ritual is to symbolise driving darkness out from any place

A Shopping Trolley: The Musical Theatrical performance re-enacting life through a series of decades that explore the ritual of shopping and its transformation that led to the demise of shopping A historical and educative experience

Snan - Religious Bath

Shop Till You Drop

The religious bathing is the most significant ritual of the entire festival which starts from as early as 3am

Free-for-all shopping experience that revives lost retail chains and stores with veteran actors and exact shop replicas of some of the world’s most famous shopping malls

Pilgrims take a dip and bathe, hoping to achieve atonement of their sins and reach salvation

Shoppers are given digital spending credit based on their performance through the year

Darshan: Interacting with the Sages Darshan is a form of interaction with the Sadhus; orthodox religious worshippers who are free from materialistic desires This interaction is also known as Pravachan where the saints recite notable texts from holy books as a way of passing on the teachings of the religion that are rooted in Hindu mythology

Superstore LARP An exclusive, interactive role-playing activity where users can take on the persona of the shopper, employer or employee to indulge in several levels of shopping. Treated as a popular game, the LARPing has an incredibly competitive side as shoppers race each other and compete at checkout tills.

Mahaprasada and Langar: Celebratory Feast

The Garden of Eat’n

Street vendors set up stalls to indulge locals and tourists with local cuisines. Auspicious food is also prepared and distributed to pilgrims as a blessing of God.

Traditional shopping-mall food is not the only thing available in this multi-faceted food court.

A communal, vegetarian feast is prepared for the priests and hungry pilgrims that is funded by donations

The court is perfect for all ages ranging from children on sugar highs, teens on awkward first dates or adults enjoying the cocktail bars. The Garden also has amazing views of the entire festival.

15


Britain’s Most Depressing High Street

Burslem in Stoke-on-Trent is the country’s biggest ghost town, with 44 shops sitting empty, at a time when High Streets across the country are experiencing record store closures.

16


Anatomy of a High Street

6 1 4 5

2

7

3

9

11

8 10

Relationships between various shopping typologies in the UK including High Streets and shopping malls in relation to suburban homes. There are overlapping characteristics in each as well as distinctive features that make each one an evolved version of the last.

12

1

Signboard

2

Signage

3

Bollards

4

Street Sign

5

ATM Machine

6

Street Light

7

Bench

8

Post Box

9

LED Street Light

10

Outdoor Seating

11

Awning

12

Public Bin

17


High Street Furniture

Bus Stop

Photobooth

Postbox

Bike Stands

Digital Billboards

Public Litter Bin

Toy Capsule Vending Machine

Phone Booth

Metal Circular Bench

Bollards on Pavements

Pop-up Temporary Stalls

Street Lights & Hanging Baskets

Kit of Parts; typical high street objects and external furniture that is commonly found in a British high street.

18


Supermarket Articles

Checkout Till

Meat Counter

Checkout Till (Small)

Product Basket

Card Machine

Frozen Counter

Shopping Basket

Magazine Stand

Shelf

Flat Trolley

Shopping Cart

Vertical Trolley

Kit of Parts; typical supermarket articles that involve some kind of interaction with the user. These will begin to inform the materiality and structure of the building in further design studies.

19


Shopping Devices

Paper Bag

Wallet

Coffee & Receipt

Parking Ticket

Sanitizeer Station

Shopping Bag

Coins

Cash

Face Mask

Kit of Parts; a collection of various shopping devices and objects which is usually on a person. Since shopping isn’t restricted to a location the objects are also part of this lexicon.

20


Short Elevation Collage

1 2

4

3 6

5

7 8 9

10

11

12

13

14

17

18

15

16

1

Plastic Bag

2

Flat Trolley

3

Security Gate

4

Bike Rack

5

Telephone Booth

6

Bollards

7

Shutters

8

Shop Door

9

Shopping Trolley

10

Shopping Baskets

11

Street Light

12

Closed Shutter

13

Public Bin

14

ATM Machine

15

Escalator Step

16

Digital Billboard

17

Scaffolding

18

Pavement

Prospective collage utilising high street furniture and consumerist objects to create a building structure that encroaches on a space without being permenant.

21


Glass Chapel

Designed by Rural Studio, the chapel serves multiple purposes including a transportation stop created from salvaged car windows that make up the striking roof form. In a similar way, we can repurpose shopping objects to form architectural elements.

22


Garden of Eat’n

Food Court and Viewing Deck

Plan

Food Stall

Long Elevation

Viewing Booth

The Garden is a autonomous atrium that caters to a diverse range of cuisines from fast food to gourmet. A minimal conveyor system helps deliver food to the exclusive viewing booths.

23


Hall of Forgotten Artifacts Exhibits Archive of lost British memorabilia

Plan

Hallway

Long Elevation

Sensory Chamber

Lost artifacts and quintessential British objects are displayed in inter-connected hallways of the exhibition, taking the participant on a sensory journey with various material culture.

24


Supermarket LARP Arena Live Action Role Play Replica of British Supermarkets

Plan

Supemarket Aisle

Set in replicas of supermarket aisles, the LARP arena is a fluid space where participants are able to re-enact the shopping experience known as the ‘grocery run’. The space is then closed with a grand shutter ritual.

Long Elevation

Shutter Cladding

25


Massing Studies

Initial massing studies of the previous spaces combined at various scales to form the basis of the Metro Mela shopping mall.

26


Initial Building Study

Further experiemenation of previous forms and collages to better understand scale and configuration.

27


Sketch Plan & Elevation

This sketch plan envisions the previous spaces connected and arranged as one entity. Playing with the scale of the forms allows for a greater variation and creates a new language overall.

The food court space is centrically located, ideally suspended and connected to the other areas. The short elevation depicts shop shutters as a cladding material which becomes part of the festival.

28


RMIT Design Hub

The facade of the RMIT Design Hub is comprised of a double glazed inner skin as well an an automated operable second skin shading device, reminiscent of the way a shutter opens and closes.

29


Wim Delvoye Sculptures

1

2

Delvoye’s sculptural work involves adorning mundane 1. Cement Truck objects such as cement mixers, shovels, and gas 2. Concrete Mixer cylinders with decorative Delft patterning. This process can be applied in a similar way by treating the shopping objects as the building blocks for the architecture instead of traditional materials.

30


Playing Shop


Garden of Eat’n


Shutter Ceremony


The Eat’n Booth

1

2

3

4 5 6

7

8 9

12 11

10

13

Combining previous models to create a module for a food court booth that uses shop shutters as a cladding. The parts of the module are made up of shopping related objects including the conveyor belt that connects to the food stalls throughout the building.

1

Shop Shutters

6

Conveyor Belt

11

Trolley Handle

2

Checkout Divider

7

Food Court Booth

12

Floor Frame

3

AC Vent

8

Shop Shutters

13

Pavement Base

4

Tube Light

9

Booth

5

Security Gates

10

Table Legs

34


Eat’n Booth Elevation

Elevation

Axonometric Render

Garden of Eat’n Plan

Connecting the modules together forms the initial language and structure for the Garden of Eat’n that emulates a typical shopping mall architecture, replacing the shops with booths that are connected to extracts and sensory elements to heighten the experience throughout.

35


Garden of Eat’n

Garden of Eat’n Elevation

36


Section Collage

Sectional collage of the Garden of Eat’n set in Burslem High Street.

37



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