final review schedule - university of nebraska–lincoln fall 2016 schedule12.6.16a.pdf · rumiko...

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Final Review Schedule CoA Fall 2016 Final Reviews Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon Wed., Dec 7th (Morning) 8:30 -11:50 am ARCH 210 Peter Olshavsky Corral Jason Griths Sanago Perez Vising Cric- Michelle Laboy Introducon to architectural design (representaon) through reecve and projecve techniques. Divergent and convergent approaches focus on fundamental ways in which the user, maer, and environment inform architecture. The nal project is a pop-up theater at the Gene Leahy Mall in Omaha. ARCH 210 Guillermo Yanguez S. Barn Timothy Hemsath Jerey L. Day Vising Cric- Michelle Laboy Same as above. ARCH 210 Crisna Murphy S. Barn Steven Hardy David Karle Vising Cric- Michelle Laboy Same as above. IDES 210 Lindsey Bahe Gallery Nate Bicak Stacy Spale Mark Hinchman Peter Hind Betsy Gabb Gabe Bugelwicz Becky Rae This 6-week long project asked students to design a retreat for a parcular hobbyist. Students were challenged to integrate their acquired knowledge of design principles, space-making strategies and the intenonal integraon of core space-making elements of: structure and organizaonal grid, enclosure order, volumetric order, program development, and circulaon and movement. Developing a frame in to which to operate, while considering the user and parcular funcon of the hobby were the added layers of learning and exploraon for this project. The given site of the project ulizes Le Corbuiser’s Dom-ino frame as an inll project within an exisng fabric. Students were addionally challenged to consider how the interior space aects the design of East and West facades. Wed., Dec 7th (Aernoon) 1:30-5:30 pm Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon ARCH 310 Thomas Laging Wayne Drummond Gallery West Rumiko Handa Sharon Kuska The ACSA COTE compeon requiring students to respond to Ten Sustainability Measures was the basis of the nal challenge. Students designed a hybrid oce building for the parks department that included a ground oor with a variety of interacve public uses and neighborhood park acvies. ARCH 310 Mark Bacon, Dennis Coudriet Gallery East Mark Hoistad Steven Hardy Brandon Dake Andrew Wells This studio will observe the banal through the study of unassuming typologies to provide the conceptual underpinning for program and organizaon. The goal of the studio will be to expose the contradicons found in the observaons to propose a hybrid crasmanship museum to include a maker’s space, gallery, and housing. ARCH 310 Sanago Perez S. Barn Jerey L. Day (1 st 1/2) Crisna Murphy Timothy Hemsath Vising Cric- Michelle Laboy (1st 1/2) The GROW lab studio explores spaal and programmac innovaon through adapve and transformaonal hybridizaon of programs and logics of assembly. The nal project, a Cultural Center / Market / Arst Residency in Chicago, explores the intersecon of ART and FOOD in a Public-Private context, taking cues from the Seale Sculpture Park, NYC Highline, and similar references blurring architecture as Objects and Infrastructure. ARCH 310 Guillermo Yanguez Corral Brian Kelly Jason Griths JeChadwick Tim Rogers The geoglyphs studio addresses architectural design based on the concepts of ritual and trace; architectural program as response to a behavioral sequence which imprints its surroundings. The nal project is a 10,000 sq-design for the Frank H. Woods Telephone Museum in Lincoln (on four alternave sites), which must relocate. Its permanent collecon counts numerous objects from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. ARCH 500 David Karle Gallery Central Peter Olshavsky Nate Bicak Jerey L. Day (2nd 1/2) Michael Harpster (BVH) Vising Cric- Michelle Laboy (2nd 1/2) Introducon to architectural design through spaal and formal projects using representaonal techniques. A series of collaborave and individual projects introduce design process, iteraon, tectonics, representaon, and structure as fundamental aspects of design that relate architecture to the human subject. An urban pool will be the focus of our fourth and nal project. IDES 310 Stacy Spale Link Lindsey Bahe Wayne Drummond Mark Hinchman Arlan Johnson Cindy Paustain Margaret Woeppel Amy Dishman Penny Johnston Jennifer Ankerson Jane Austen David Paerson A 'connuum of health' in the form of a rural wellness center in St. Paul, Nebraska. Within the shell of a proposed addion to the current crical access hospital, Howard County Medical Center, students have designed a program and implemented strategies that will impact the health and wellness of the community. 5:30pm ARCH 510/610 Crisna Murphy (Hyde) Gallery Jerey L. Day Jason Griths Fri., Dec 9th (Morning) Design Thesis - ARCH 613 Student Guest Crics Faculty Crics Student Guest Crics Faculty Crics 8:00 am Mahew Kreutzer (Gallery) A. Morey / A. Trandarescu Steven Hardy Brian Kelly Caitlin Tangeman T.Leslie David Karle JeDay 8:50 am Zebulun Lund A. Morey Jason Griths David Karle Kristen Schulte T.Leslie / A. Trandarescu Mark Hoistad Rumiko Handa 9:40 am Kaitlin Frankforter A. Morey / A. Trandarescu Rumiko Handa Jason Griths Lenora Allen T.Leslie Peter Olshavsky Steven Hardy 10:30 am Zoe Cope A. Morey Peter Olshavsky Brian Kelly Bryan Perez T.Leslie / A. Trandarescu Mark Hoistad Sharon Kuska 11:20 am Kae Horn A. Morey / A. Trandarescu JeDay Steven Hardy Thurs., Dec 8th (Morning) 8:30-12:30 pm Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon ARCH 510/610 Jason Griths Gallery Sharon Kuska (8.30- 10.45) Jerey L. Day Brian Kelly Chris Turner Vising Crics- Michelle Laboy Tom Leslie Architecture, translated through Mathew Crawford (Shop Class to Soul Cra), suggests the teaching of Design-Build gives us the opportunity to reassess a craethos within educaon. This noon of “learning by doing” derived from the American Arts and Cras is explored through three projects under development for construcon in 2017. ARCH 510/610 Steven Hardy Gallery David Karle Briany McClure Vising Cric- Anthony Morey ProCon DRS: Flat Horizontal Envelopes and ‘Mat-like’ Housing Vising Cric- Anca Trandarescu The studio explores conguraonal issues relave to envelope, distribuon, and programmac types. Currently experimenng with the combinaon of two dierent suburban envelopes: large-at (big box retail) and small- point boxes (houses) within the urban context of the Pershing Center redevelopment area in Lincoln. Students are also developing disciplinary polemics and explicit architectural/polical agendas. Thurs., Dec 8th (Aernoon) 1:30-5:30 pm Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon ARCH 510/610 Mark Hoistad Link Peter Olshavsky Steven Hardy Timothy Holland Thomas Laging Joyce Raybuck Vising Cric- Tom Leslie Sustainable Urbanism: There is an urgent need to evolve the way we (re)develop cies. Urban challenges such as blending density, global migraon to urban areas, segregation of high carbon paerns of selement, and the need to address the basic requirements of survival for a growing planetary populaon are all important issues that today’s designers should address. These students are exploring new forms of urbanism that respond to these contemporary challenges require soluons that blend human selement into the natural world and address the challenges of dense integrated development. This new form of sustainable urbanism requires both aesthec and performance goals to be pursued that respect cultural landscapes. This studio working with a steeply sloping, seven-hectare site, adjacent to a major river in Chongqing, China, is taking on this challenge. ARCH 510/610 HDR (re)FORM Gallery Guillermo Yanguez Sanago Perez Tom Trenolone Mike Hamilton Bill DeRoin Joyce Raybuck Mark Bacon Vising Cric- Anca Trandarescu This studio is working to expand the dialog and conceptual framework for “healthcare” as a broad sense of improving health and wellness in our communies. Students are exploring this topic through research in conal literature as a basis for future projecon and addressing current large scale issues related to public health. These students are developing individual architectural posions from topics related to food health and safety, physical tness, technology, transportaon, mental health, and urban development. ARCH 510/610 Crisna Murphy (Hyde) Gallery Jerey L. Day Jason Griths Dennis Coudriet` Vising Cric- Anthony Morey Michelle Laboy "The aim is to organize an area to be harvested to produce organic food. The facility will also be a demonstraon center to train neighboring peasant farmers, instuons and visitors on integrated organic farming pracces. The project must be self-sustainable, environmentally friendly, organic, and it must create jobs and opportunies within the community." Friday, Dec 9th ( Morning) 8:30 - 11 : 30 am Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon LARC 210 Sarah Karle New Crit Space Catherine De Almeida Vising Crics- Bret Betnar Kevin Benham Introductory design studio exploring design principles central to landscape architecture. Three interrelated aspects of design are pursued: 1) the elements of composion and their formal and spaal manipulaon, 2) meanings conveyed by formal choices and transformaons and 3) response to cultural and environmental forces in the landscape. 12-1:00 pm Lunch Break Vising Crics and Design Thesis Students Dean's Conf. Room Friday, Dec 9th (Aernoon) 1 - 5:00 pm Course Instructor Locaon Faculty Crics Guest Crics Descripon DSGN 410 Brian Kelly, David Stasiuk Corral Jason Griths Steven Hardy Guillermo Yanguez Sanago Perez Vising Cric- Tom Leslie Co-Lab is an interdisciplinary exploraon into the potenal of open-source design for the built environment design disciplines. Student teams engage in a ‘research through design’ process aggressively challenging the tradional mindset of copyright with regards to authorship. Precedent is sampled for its genotypical traits to generate various phenotypes and content is shared through a copylementality. Final design invesgaons propose an open- source construcon system for condions where me and resources are less than ample. DSGN 410 Kim Wilson, Emily Andersen Gallery (center) JeDay Mark Hoistad David Karle Vising Crics- Anthony Morey Kevin Benham Starng with the idea of recasng a vision of the future of the suburb, the Living Suburbia studio uses the Boys Town site in Omaha to develop strategies for new ways to live in suburbia. Students are reimagining land use and housing to design neighborhoods that encourage social interacon, connecon to open space and nature, and agricultural uses. DSGN 410 Nate Bicak, Vanessa Schue S. Barn Peter Olshavsky Lindsey Bahe Rumiko Handa Jim French Vising Cric- Anca Trandarescu Through the design of elementary schools in Omaha and rural Adams County Nebraska, this studio focuses on the queson: how can design create environments that transform the elementary learning experience? The proposed design soluons aim to create spaces that support social engagement, individualized development, and respond to mulple learning styles. LARC 310 Catherine De Almeida New Crit Space Sarah Karle Richard Suon John Dempsey Carla Welding JJ Yost Vising Crics- Mira Engler Bret Betnar This studio explores a broad, holisc approach to site design for transforming a large, complex waste landscape – the North 48th Street Landll in Lincoln. Using a telescopic lens, projects propose design strategies for an acve, regional, public infrastructure that engages with the economy, ecology, and culture of the surrounding community. Gallery Crisna Murphy (Hyde) Peter Olshavsky

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Page 1: Final Review Schedule - University of Nebraska–Lincoln Fall 2016 Schedule12.6.16a.pdf · Rumiko Handa Jason Griffiths Lenora Allen T.Leslie Peter Olshavsky Steven Hardy 10:30 am

F i n a l R e v i e w S c h e d u l eCoA Fall 2016 Final Reviews

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description

Wed., Dec 7th (Morning) 8:30 -11:50 am

ARCH 210

Peter Olshavsky Corral Jason Griffiths Santiago Perez

Visiting Critic- Michelle Laboy

Introduction to architectural design (representation) through reflective and projective techniques. Divergent and convergent approaches focus on fundamental ways in which the user, matter, and environment inform architecture. The final project is a pop-up theater at the Gene Leahy Mall in Omaha.

ARCH 210

Guillermo Yanguez

S. Barn Timothy Hemsath Jeffrey L. Day

Visiting Critic- Michelle Laboy

Same as above.

ARCH 210

Cristina Murphy S. Barn Steven Hardy David Karle

Visiting Critic- Michelle Laboy

Same as above.

IDES 210

Lindsey Bahe Gallery Nate Bicak Stacy Spale Mark Hinchman

Peter Hind Betsy Gabb Gabe Bugelwicz Becky Rae

This 6-week long project asked students to design a retreat for a particular hobbyist. Students were challenged to integrate their acquired knowledge of design principles, space-making strategies and the intentional integration of core space-making elements of: structure and organizational grid, enclosure order, volumetric order, program development, and circulation and movement. Developing a frame in to which to operate, while considering the user and particular function of the hobby were the added layers of learning and exploration for this project. The given site of the project utilizes Le Corbuiser’s Dom-ino frame as an infill project within an existing fabric. Students were additionally challenged to consider how the interior space affects the design of East and West facades.

Wed., Dec 7th (Afternoon) 1:30-5:30 pm

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description

ARCH 310

Thomas Laging Wayne Drummond

Gallery West

Rumiko Handa Sharon Kuska

The ACSA COTE competition requiring students to respond to Ten Sustainability Measures was the basis of the final challenge. Students designed a hybrid office building for the parks department that included a ground floor with a variety of interactive public uses and neighborhood park activities.

ARCH 310

Mark Bacon, Dennis Coudriet

Gallery East

Mark Hoistad Steven Hardy

Brandon Dake Andrew Wells

This studio will observe the banal through the study of unassuming typologies to provide the conceptual underpinning for program and organization. The goal of the studio will be to expose the contradictions found in the observations to propose a hybrid craftsmanship museum to include a maker’s space, gallery, and housing.

ARCH 310

Santiago Perez S. Barn Jeffrey L. Day (1 st 1/2) Cristina Murphy Timothy Hemsath

Visiting Critic- Michelle Laboy (1st 1/2)

The GROW lab studio explores spatial and programmatic innovation through adaptive and transformational hybridization of programs and logics of assembly. The final project, a Cultural Center / Market / Artist Residency in Chicago, explores the intersection of ART and FOOD in a Public-Private context, taking cues from the Seattle Sculpture Park, NYC Highline, and similar references blurring architecture as Objects and Infrastructure.

ARCH 310

Guillermo Yanguez

Corral Brian Kelly Jason Griffiths

Jeff Chadwick Tim Rogers

The geoglyphs studio addresses architectural design based on the concepts of ritual and trace; architectural program as response to a behavioral sequence which imprints its surroundings. The final project is a 10,000 sq-ft design for the Frank H. Woods Telephone Museum in Lincoln (on four alternative sites), which must relocate. Its permanent collection counts numerous objects from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.

ARCH 500

David Karle Gallery Central

Peter Olshavsky Nate Bicak Jeffrey L. Day (2nd 1/2)

Michael Harpster (BVH) Visiting Critic- Michelle Laboy (2nd 1/2)

Introduction to architectural design through spatial and formal projects using representational techniques. A series of collaborative and individual projects introduce design process, iteration, tectonics, representation, and structure as fundamental aspects of design that relate architecture to the human subject. An urban pool will be the focus of our fourth and final project.

IDES 310

Stacy Spale Link Lindsey Bahe Wayne Drummond Mark Hinchman

Arlan Johnson Cindy Paustain Margaret Woeppel Amy Dishman Penny Johnston Jennifer Ankerson Jane Austen David Patterson

A 'continuum of health' in the form of a rural wellness center in St. Paul, Nebraska. Within the shell of a proposed addition to the current critical access hospital, Howard County Medical Center, students have designed a program and implemented strategies that will impact the health and wellness of the community.

5:30pm ARCH 510/610

Cristina Murphy (Hyde)

Gallery Jeffrey L. Day Jason Griffiths

Fri., Dec 9th (Morning)

Design Thesis - ARCH 613

Student Guest Critics Faculty Critics Student Guest Critics Faculty Critics

8:00 am Matthew Kreutzer (Gallery)

A. Morey / A.Trandafirescu

Steven Hardy Brian Kelly

Caitlin Tangeman T.Leslie David Karle Jeff Day

8:50 am Zebulun Lund A. Morey Jason Griffiths David Karle

Kristen Schulte T.Leslie / A. Trandafirescu Mark Hoistad Rumiko Handa

9:40 am Kaitlin Frankforter

A. Morey / A.Trandafirescu

Rumiko Handa Jason Griffiths

Lenora Allen T.Leslie Peter Olshavsky Steven Hardy

10:30 am Zoe Cope A. Morey Peter Olshavsky Brian Kelly

Bryan Perez T.Leslie / A. Trandafirescu Mark Hoistad Sharon Kuska

11:20 am Katie Horn A. Morey / A.Trandafirescu

Jeff Day Steven Hardy

Thurs., Dec 8th (Morning) 8:30-12:30 pm

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description ARCH 510/610

Jason Griffiths Gallery Sharon Kuska (8.30-10.45) Jeffrey L. Day Brian Kelly

Chris Turner Visiting Critics- Michelle Laboy Tom Leslie

Architecture, translated through Mathew Crawford (Shop Class to Soul Craft), suggests the teaching of Design-Build gives us the opportunity to reassess a craft ethos within education. This notion of “learning by doing” derived from the American Arts and Crafts is explored through three projects under development for construction in 2017.

ARCH 510/610

Steven Hardy Gallery David Karle Brittany McClure Visiting Critic- Anthony Morey

ProCon DRS: Flat Horizontal Envelopes and ‘Mat-like’ Housing

Visiting Critic- Anca Trandafirescu

The studio explores configurational issues relative toenvelope, distribution, and programmatic types. Currently experimenting with the combination of two different suburban envelopes: large-flat (big box retail) and small-point boxes (houses) within the urban context of the Pershing Center redevelopment area in Lincoln. Students are also developing disciplinary polemics and explicit architectural/political agendas.

Thurs., Dec 8th (Afternoon) 1:30-5:30 pm

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description ARCH 510/610

Mark Hoistad Link Peter Olshavsky Steven Hardy

Timothy Holland Thomas Laging Joyce Raybuck Visiting Critic- Tom Leslie

Sustainable Urbanism: There is an urgent need to evolve the way we (re)develop cities. Urban challenges such as blending density, global migration to urban areas, segregation of high carbon patterns of settlement, and the need to address the basic requirements of survival for a growing planetary population are all important issues that today’s designers should address.

These students are exploring new forms of urbanism that respond to these contemporary challenges require solutions that blend human settlement into the natural world and address the challenges of dense integrated development. This new form of sustainable urbanism requires both aesthetic and performance goals to be pursued that respect cultural landscapes. This studio working with a steeply sloping, seven-hectare site, adjacent to a major river in Chongqing, China, is taking on this challenge.

ARCH 510/610

HDR (re)FORM Gallery Guillermo Yanguez Santiago Perez

Tom Trenolone Mike Hamilton Bill DeRoin Joyce Raybuck Mark Bacon Visiting Critic- Anca Trandafirescu

This studio is working to expand the dialog and conceptual framework for “healthcare” as a broad sense of improving health and wellness in our communities. Students are exploring this topic through research in fictional literature as a basis for future projection and addressing current large scale issues related to public health. These students are developing individual architectural positions from topics related to food health and safety, physical fitness, technology, transportation, mental health, and urban development.

ARCH 510/610

Cristina Murphy (Hyde)

Gallery Jeffrey L. Day Jason Griffiths

Dennis Coudriet` Visiting Critic- Anthony Morey Michelle Laboy

"The aim is to organize an area to be harvested to produce organic food. The facility will also be a demonstration center to train neighboring peasant farmers, institutions and visitors on integrated organic farming practices.

The project must be self-sustainable, environmentally friendly, organic, and it must create jobs and opportunities within the community."

Friday, Dec 9th (Morning) 8:30 -11:30 am

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description

LARC 210 Sarah Karle New Crit Space

Catherine De Almeida

Visiting Critics- Bret Betnar Kevin Benham

Introductory design studio exploring design principles central to landscape architecture. Three interrelated aspects of design are pursued: 1) the elements of composition and their formal and spatial manipulation, 2) meanings conveyed by formal choices and transformations and 3) response to cultural and environmental forces in the landscape.

12-1:00 pm Lunch Break

Visiting Critics and Design Thesis Students

Dean's Conf. Room

Friday, Dec 9th (Afternoon)

1- 5:00 pm

Course Instructor Location Faculty Critics Guest Critics Description DSGN 410

Brian Kelly, David Stasiuk

Corral Jason Griffiths Steven Hardy Guillermo Yanguez Santiago Perez

Visiting Critic- Tom Leslie Co-Lab is an interdisciplinary exploration into the potential of

open-source design for the built environment design disciplines. Student teams engage in a ‘research through design’ process aggressively challenging the traditional mindset of copyright with regards to authorship. Precedent is sampled for its genotypical traits to generate various phenotypes and content is shared through a copyleft mentality. Final design investigations propose an open-source construction system for conditions where time and resources are less than ample.

DSGN 410

Kim Wilson, Emily Andersen

Gallery (center)

Jeff Day Mark Hoistad David Karle

Visiting Critics- Anthony Morey Kevin Benham

Starting with the idea of recasting a vision of the future of the suburb, the Living Suburbia studio uses the Boys Town site in Omaha to develop strategies for new ways to live in suburbia. Students are reimagining land use and housing to design neighborhoods that encourage social interaction, connection to open space and nature, and agricultural uses.

DSGN 410

Nate Bicak, Vanessa Schutte

S. Barn Peter Olshavsky Lindsey Bahe Rumiko Handa

Jim French Visiting Critic- Anca Trandafirescu

Through the design of elementary schools in Omaha and rural Adams County Nebraska, this studio focuses on the question: how can design create environments that transform the elementary learning experience? The proposed design solutions aim to create spaces that support social engagement, individualized development, and respond to multiple learning styles.

LARC 310 Catherine De Almeida

New Crit Space

Sarah Karle Richard Sutton

John Dempsey Carla Welding JJ Yost Visiting Critics- Mira Engler Bret Betnar

This studio explores a broad, holistic approach to site design for transforming a large, complex waste landscape – the North 48th Street Landfill in Lincoln. Using a telescopic lens, projects propose design strategies for an active, regional, public infrastructure that engages with the economy, ecology, and culture of the surrounding community.

Gallery

Cristina Murphy (Hyde) Peter Olshavsky