week 15 presentation board
2011/06/16
design process
highlighted cliff view
experiment building as lightbox with translucent building marterials
view of location of the building
design process
perspective views
wall where living/vege wall will be inserted, looking up the skylight
over view from the roof top
looking up the artificial cliff
design process
sketup 3 d models
3d model made folowing the designed masterplan
facsia follwoing ant's nest
feature wall following/extending existing contour line
2011/06/11
biomimicry inspiration
GEOtube Building Grows its Own Lace-Like Sea Salt Skin
a concept for Dubai that features a self-built exoskeleton made from accumulated sea salt deposits.
a concept for Dubai that features a self-built exoskeleton made from accumulated sea salt deposits.
The lace-like skin forms once the seawater, misted onto its exposed mesh, evaporates and leaves a layer of salt behind. Because the Persian Gulf has the world’s highest salinity for oceanic water, the salt deposits accumulate quickly, making the transparent skin take on a new crystalline appearance.
the Bird's Nest
similar concept to my first project.
The Bird’s Nest: Fantastic Treehouse Room in a Forest Hotel
The Bird’s Nest: Fantastic Treehouse Room in a Forest Hotel
blending in – it looks like a giant bird nest, complete with a retractable staircase for privacy, security and visual completeness.
it used a series of existing trees to support this new cylindrical structure. A healthy helping of fallen forest branches clouds the shape, though, making it appear amorphous and organic.
design inspiration
wall in multiple use.
‘Woodpile’ Cabin: Log-Lined Fire Pit = Four-Season Shelter
‘Woodpile’ Cabin: Log-Lined Fire Pit = Four-Season Shelter
The concept itself is very cool – or rather, hot … then warm … then cold? A metal frame wraps all four sides of the structure, with slots to fit felled lumber to be used as fuel for a central fireplace. An open void in the top lets out excess smoke, as do the natural openings between pieces of wood tucked into the walls.
As the winter wanes, so does the supply of burnable logs – the walls slowly open up and let in more light, reducing the protection needed in otherwise cold Canadian climates.
wall makes the boundary but that boundary has no limit when logs are all used or when it's not in use.
2011/05/19
bio filter 'living wall'
4 Story biofilter - A Living Wall, University of Guelph-Humber
Another benefit of course is the positive psychological effect of green plants.... Studies from Washington State University found that greening indoor space can reduce absenteeism by 10 per cent and increase productivity by 12 per cent.
The wall requires pruning and trimming so that it doesn't get weighed down so the student at guelph college maintain the wall on a weekly basis. Also, because this is a continuous living research project the student study the plants and filters.
$21,000 annually for maintenance.
Air Quality Solutions has installed smaller biofilters at Queen's University in Kingston, the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority head office, and an office building in downtown Toronto, but the Guelph-Humber system is the largest so far.
The wall installation was the idea of architect Birgit Siber of Diamond and Schmitt Architects Inc., who also designed the building that houses classrooms, offices, labs and an Internet cafe. This was a joint venture with the University of Guelph and Humber College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning.
As with most innovative ventures...a major selling points of the wall is the potential to save money. "Most buildings maintain indoor air quality by bringing in fresh air from the outside through ventilation systems. In the winter, outdoor air must be heated to room temperature, and in the summer it needs cooling....A biofilter can substantially reduce the need to bring in fresh air by generating clean air indoors. If it is used to its fullest capacity, Darlington estimates it can save 0.3 to 3.5 kilowatts per person in the height of summer and winter."
As with most innovative ventures...a major selling points of the wall is the potential to save money. "Most buildings maintain indoor air quality by bringing in fresh air from the outside through ventilation systems. In the winter, outdoor air must be heated to room temperature, and in the summer it needs cooling....A biofilter can substantially reduce the need to bring in fresh air by generating clean air indoors. If it is used to its fullest capacity, Darlington estimates it can save 0.3 to 3.5 kilowatts per person in the height of summer and winter."
Another benefit of course is the positive psychological effect of green plants.... Studies from Washington State University found that greening indoor space can reduce absenteeism by 10 per cent and increase productivity by 12 per cent.
The wall requires pruning and trimming so that it doesn't get weighed down so the student at guelph college maintain the wall on a weekly basis. Also, because this is a continuous living research project the student study the plants and filters.
$21,000 annually for maintenance.
Air Quality Solutions has installed smaller biofilters at Queen's University in Kingston, the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority head office, and an office building in downtown Toronto, but the Guelph-Humber system is the largest so far.
ant colony
ant colony(nest) is ideal to resolve the horizontal movement
- The first ant finds the food source (F), via any way (a), then returns to the nest (N), leaving behind a trail pheromone (b)
- Ants indiscriminately follow four possible ways, but the strengthening of the runway makes it more attractive as the shortest route.
- Ants take the shortest route, long portions of other ways lose their trail pheromones.
concept
Coexistence without being interupted
- resolve the clashes on the existing site between Natural and Built Environment
LIST OF CONFLICTION ON SITE
- resolve the clashes on the existing site between Natural and Built Environment
LIST OF CONFLICTION ON SITE
- CLIFF - BRIDGE
- NATURAL - BUILT (STEEL)
- VERTICAL - HORIZONTAL
- SOFT - HARD
- NOISE - QUIET
- FAST - SLOW
- LIGHT - SHADE
Green Building
Green Building in Zimbabwe Modeled After Termite Mounds
by Abigail Doan, 12/10/07
Biomimicry’s Cool Alternative: Eastgate Centre in Zimbabwe
The Eastgate Centre in Harare, Zimbabwe, typifies the best of green architecture and ecologically sensitive adaptation. The country’s largest office and shopping complex is an architectural marvel in its use of biomimicry principles. The mid-rise building, designed by architect Mick Pearce in conjunction with engineers at Arup Associates, has no conventional air-conditioning or heating, yet stays regulated year round with dramatically less energy consumption using design methods inspired by indigenous Zimbabwean masonry and the self-cooling mounds of African termites!
Termites in Zimbabwe build gigantic mounds inside of which they farm a fungus that is their primary food source. The fungus must be kept at exactly 87 degrees F, while the temperatures outside range from 35 degrees F at night to 104 degrees F during the day. The termites achieve this remarkable feat by constantly opening and closing a series of heating and cooling vents throughout the mound over the course of the day. With a system of carefully adjusted convection currents, air is sucked in at the lower part of the mound, down into enclosures with muddy walls, and up through a channel to the peak of the termite mound. The industrious termites constantly dig new vents and plug up old ones in order to regulate the temperature.
The Eastgate Centre, largely made of concrete, has a ventilation system which operates in a similar way. Outside air that is drawn in is either warmed or cooled by the building mass depending on which is hotter, the building concrete or the air. It is then vented into the building’s floors and offices before exiting via chimneys at the top. The complex also consists of two buildings side by side that are separated by an open space that is covered by glass and open to the local breezes.
Air is continuously drawn from this open space by fans on the first floor. It is then pushed up vertical supply sections of ducts that are located in the central spine of each of the two buildings. The fresh air replaces stale air that rises and exits through exhaust ports in the ceilings of each floor. Ultimately it enters the exhaust section of the vertical ducts before it is flushed out of the building through chimneys.
The Eastgate Centre uses less than 10% of the energy of a conventional building its size. These efficiencies translate directly to the bottom line: Eastgate’s owners have saved $3.5 million alone because of an air-conditioning system that did not have to be implemented. Outside of being eco-efficient and better for the environment, these savings also trickle down to the tenants whose rents are 20 percent lower than those of occupants in the surrounding buildings.
Who would have guessed that the replication of designs created by termites would not only provide for a sound climate control solution but also be the most cost-effective way for humans to function in an otherwise challenging context?
2011/05/03
Program
Coexistence without being interupted
Program - Art gallery (of young artists) & Exercise studio
- Natural Environment
Cliff
River
- Exercise space / Studio (Yoga Class, Tai Chi etc.)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Man Made(Built) Environment
Story Bridge
Warves
Walkway
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Art Gallery
- Frame natural Environment
- Painting
-Video Art
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Indoor | Outdoor
studio & Yoga | Activity (Tai-chi) | Natural Park
artwork (photo, painting) | Sculpture |
Performing Art | |
Program - Art gallery (of young artists) & Exercise studio
- coexistence of natural environment vs man made (built) environment
- Natural Environment
Cliff
River
- Program (possible function)
- Exercise space / Studio (Yoga Class, Tai Chi etc.)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Man Made(Built) Environment
Story Bridge
Warves
Walkway
- Program (possible function)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Art Gallery
- Nature
- Frame natural Environment
- Man Made
- Painting
-Video Art
- Human
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Indoor | Outdoor
studio & Yoga | Activity (Tai-chi) | Natural Park
artwork (photo, painting) | Sculpture |
Performing Art | |
2011/04/20
Natural Architecture
'fog pad' by n architects, 2004
CANOPY - MoMA/P.S.1 YOUNG ARCHITECTS PROGRAM 2004
|
no physically or fully blocked walls?
can a wall or dividing be defined by the different height or physical boundary but no visual limit..?
2011/04/15
john grade: la chasse
http://www.johngrade.com/
Grade moved an architectural framework into the landscape, placing the structure of a built space in the forest. this 'confronted space' mimics the plan of the interior gallery in the middle of the forest, producing a layered environment of the various structures.
Grade moved an architectural framework into the landscape, placing the structure of a built space in the forest. this 'confronted space' mimics the plan of the interior gallery in the middle of the forest, producing a layered environment of the various structures.
concept
as 'separate' or 'isolate' has a negative meaning...
"Co-Existence without being interruped"
- Natural Landscape (cliff) & Artificial/man made structure (Storey Bridge) exists together in a same space without interrupting eachother.
- people using this building/facility and people passing by visually experience the same in the same space 'Howard Smith Warves' but still no one blocks the other's way or intrerruped.
- this can be expressed simply with different height or a wall
"Co-Existence without being interruped"
- Natural Landscape (cliff) & Artificial/man made structure (Storey Bridge) exists together in a same space without interrupting eachother.
- people using this building/facility and people passing by visually experience the same in the same space 'Howard Smith Warves' but still no one blocks the other's way or intrerruped.
- this can be expressed simply with different height or a wall
2011/04/07
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