upper level portfolio
DESCRIPTION
Second Year portfolio Submission for Upper LevelTRANSCRIPT
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The Behavioral Setting was designed specifically for a plot of land in College Station, Tx located on a lake side. It was also designed to be compliant to the ADA standards so that a client with a wheelchair can live with out any inconveniances.
There are three main words that describe the house in a nutshell. There is a natural Flow of human traffic that guides one through the house. Everywhere there is an action, there has to be an equal and opposite reaction. In this case, the opposite flow is from the Wind off of the lake.
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The second major design aspect to this house is the Spacial Relations and how they corrolate to each other. The three main public areas are all very Open. The Kitchen, Dining Room and Living Room do not have walls that separate each one from another. They are each defined by what is in it, and are all connected in an L Shape. The Living Room has huge Nana Walls that open onto the deck to bring the traffic flow of humans outside and allow the airflow in the opposite way.
The third major design factor to this house is the large amounts of windows that allow an abundance of Light into the major living spaces. There are three places where Clear Story windows emerge from the roof and bring light into the middle of the house where a window would not suffice.
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West Elevation
South Elevation
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East Elevation
North Elevation
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Azimuth RedesignColor Pencil on Toned Paper
Azimuth Redesign PlanPen on Paper
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All Faith’s ChapelColor Pencil on Toned Paper
Case Study DrawingPencil on Paper
Case Study DrawingPen and Color Pencil on Paper
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This house is the pure depiction of an outdoorsman’s dream weekend getaway house. It is located a few miles north of Barksdale, TX off of Ranch Rd 335. There is a beautiful river within walking distance from the house where fly fishing is spectacular. It is nestled in with many mature Oak trees that give shade. The reason it is called “Hunter’s House” is because it was designed specifically for the client whose name is Hunter.
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Ironically he is an outdoorsman and one of his big hobbies is hunting. He requested a meat locker attached to the garage and a big closet he can store his camo, guns, camping and fishing gear. There are many clear story windows and many large windows all around the North, East and South Eastern walls to allow an abundance of light in. There are two protected decks that face opposite ends to allow for different viewing depending on what time of day it is so one is not glared upon harshly by the sun. There are two bedrooms, one master and one guest, to allow for friends and family to be able to stay. The living room is also extremely large and can have the couches turn into beds if needed.
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The nail project is a translation of a historical event to a 15” x 15” board of plywood by placing hammering nails strategically to depict the event. This project is the first phase of the two part project. This board depicts the Great Depression specifically the Dust Bowl. The tall grey nails that are placed on a grid shows how America was before the Great Depression. The nails start to depreciate in size and tend to get off of the grid base. This shows the crash of the stock market and how it starts the destruction of America. The smaller black nails that are intertwined within the smaller nails explain the dust bowl and how it starts to take over the middle of the continent. They literaly “tackle” the grey nails and tear down what is left of the bread basket. At the other corner of the wood, the smaller grey nails are almost all torn down and obliterated when there is a rise in a “broken grid” of extremely small silver nails. This explains where the dust bowl dies down, the economy starts to gain back momentum and rebuilds itself.
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1 - ENTRANCE2 - COUTURE SHOWROOM3 - LOBBY4 - MENS CHANGING ROOM5 - WOMENS CHANGING ROOM6 - AUDITORIUM
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SCALE 1/8” = 1’ 0”
50’ 10’ 5’25’ ARCH 205 FALL 2011GABE ESQUIVEL
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This Project is a high end fashion Boutique for Thierry Mugler, which will be located in Soho, New York on the corner of Canal and Hudson Street. It is a project that caters towards the new age in Fashion and Architecture Culture. It looks forward to the new styles in fashion through Thierry Mugler and the revolutionary building materials that are available at present. Even though the building uses Carbon Fiber and ETFE Glass for the building materials, it does not only look towards the future, but reflects on parts of the past and really presents itself in a new way.
The site for this project is best described as a courtyard in between two buildings; therefore my Project formally can be identified as an object in a court similar to Bramante’s Tempietto which is a perfect position within a courtyard. It describes a flow within a site that invites one in with multiple tactics. One is brought from the exterior to the interior under these strands that serve as a canopy and public space. This area can be explained as “middle ground”.
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The exterior shell takes precedent from the Art Nouveau movement in terms of the figural sensibility and ornamentation; this produces an affect similar to Bernini’s Baldacchino. One can gaze upon Bernini’s Masterpiece for hours and continue to find new and interesting parts to it, due to its ornamentation as well as surface articulation. It is almost as though one is underneath this “Baldacchino” and can stare at the interior of this shell for hours and continue to see different things about it. Every step that one takes inside, there is a new sensation that one feels and a new experience that they get by looking at the interior.
The exterior shell is based on a previous prototype design, but instead of interweaving the strands to itself, they strand to multiple prototypes. Each “main body” is strategically placed to form the shell of the building. The web of strands conform the entirety of the project and wraps around the program of the project. In every place that one goes, they experience a new affect that complements the fashion that is being sold.
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The project, while inspired by the Art Nouveau sensibility, in turn it misbehaves and becomes bad and hardcore. The strands that make up the shell can be referred to as “Straps” recalling the idea of “bondage”. This body is explained as the archaic form of Architecture that holds up this new form of building material. This archaic form is really being strapped down and bonded to the ground. These straps are tightly bound around a now void thus the form of the outer shell. This archaic form of Architecture is denied existence and is now only used in the construction portion of the progressive movement of architecture. Many people believe that as one life dies, another begins and replaces the old one. This explains the death of the archaic form and the beginning of the way architecture will be in this new form.
continuously moving and changing. This gives a sensation of curiosity to those who are on the exterior of the building. They are able to experience the fashion on the inside in a different way at first and this makes them want to know what it really looks like. The distortion of the fashion gives the affect of intrigue and the interest moves one from the exterior to the interior where the painting of the glass takes on a whole new meaning and purpose. It creates privacy and protection from the exterior since the distortion of the glass allows one to not fully understand what they look like from the exterior.
Within the strands, glass has been placed strategically to create multiple affects. It is mostly transparent, but due to the variance in thickness, it creates a translucent feeling. This way, the glass is really making a painting that is alive,
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The coloration of the interior is meant to reinvent the red carpet feeling, and to produce an integration of the culture of architecture to the culture of fashion via the “red carpet” ground. Architecture needs to be integrated to contemporary popular culture and this strategy becomes a vehicle and a commentary on how to and the importance of achieving it as well as gain this sensation of importance. However, this sensation is temporary and normally dies once they enter the event. This project addresses the idea that we can continuously reinvent the red carpet feeling by recreating it so that it runs throughout the entirety of the project. This idea also helps in the way that because they are important, they will buy clothes that are also important and highly fashionable. If the red carpet idea stopped at the door, then why would the clothes be important if they are after the entry, away from the red carpet? On the bottom floor, one is engulfed in this idea of the red carpet, where they are not only walking on the carpet, but really walking in the carpet itself because it surrounds them and creates a canopy like structure. The red carpet or ground condition flows upward and creates a journey to the top. The pleats that make up part of the ground condition allude to a carpet that may have been bunched up, but instead of giving when one steps on it, they stay stiff and rigid.
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The red carpet feeling does not only cater towards how people feel about themselves, but also to how this building plays an important role in the history of Architecture. The aggressive strides it is taking to be very different in a city where almost all the architecture is in the archaic form of building, it stretches to makes itself different, obviously by materials, but also by this idea that the red carpet flows throughout the entirety and does not just end at the footsteps. This creates the impression that it must be extremely important on its own.
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Self-generation through agents that align themselves and create a 2D image depending on several factors including cohesion, alignment, and separation.
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3D linework generated from agents to create form.
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3D linework generated from agents placed on the form.
Fall 2010 -Spring 2012