Monday, March 10, 2008

Episode 3.2-Design of a mixed-use building in West Chelsea, NYC
Analysis: The buildings within the block

Your research continues on the analysis (transformations over time, traces of the past) of buildings contained in the project’s block.

You should focus on general dimensions of the buildings, on floor height (analyze the façade), on depth and width, and how they are related to other adjacent buildings in the same block, structurally, functionally, and formally.

- We will talk of ADJACENCY between buildings in one block.

- We will also look for urban or architectural EXCEPTIONS in the city of New York.

Program

Your mixed-use building will include:

Lot: Total LOT Area: 48’ x 75’

Max Building Height: 64’

Floors: 5

First floor: Commercial space.

You will design a Coffee shop with the following program:

Serving desk and equipment area, products display and refrigeration area, milk and sugar area, sitting area, small kitchen, storage, restrooms. Exit to back courtyard, exit/entrance from 11 Avenue.

Max interior Height: 13’ft.

Coffee shop area Max: 32’x32’ , including eventually outdoors decks/patios.


First floor: Entrance/lobby for Residential units.

Reserve enough space for entrance to the residential units. You should provide stairs, elevator, and mechanical space. Entrance/exit from 11 Avenue. Possible connection with courtyard.

Lobby Area Max. 32’x16’


Second, third, fourth, fifth floor: Residential units.

Area max for each floor-plan: 32’x32’

Option A:

Two-Bedroom Unit on one level of aprox. 1025/1050 sq.ft.

Three-Bedroom Unit, duplex on two levels, with a 2-story height space, of aprox. 1550/1600 sq.ft.

Option B:

One-Bedroom Unit on one level with working space for an artist, of aprox. 1025/1050 sq.ft.

Two-Bedroom Unit, duplex on two levels, with a 2-story height space, with working space for an artist, of aprox. 1550/1600 sq.ft.


Max interior Height: variable from 10’ (one level unit) to 20’ (duplex unit with double height).

Each unit must have main living/dining/cooking/sleeping places with bathroom and closet.

Each unit should also have an additional small bathroom serving the living area, and laundry/small storage spaces.

Each unit should have outdoor spaces and maximize adjacency to outdoor spaces.

Process

Reconsider your Site-diagrams as generators of the new spaces.

In your design, you must include:

Circulation systems. Consider paths and transitions spaces serving the units inside and outside.

Entrance/exit options that establish relationships between indoor and outdoor spaces.

Diagram of densities (unit/voids). Combinations and spatial variety of solids and voids. Voids could be considered as surfaces (ex. ground floor garden, outdoor paths, open terrace or deck), or volumes (covered terrace, space underneath or above the unit, patios, voids within the unit). You could involve the space below or above the unit, so that this communal space could pass underneath, flow into your unit, or be treated vertically.

Façade treatment. Skin and structure. Cladding or sunscreens. Think about differentiated materials. You must integrate the Patterns’ exercise.

Parameters

  • Modular dimensions; hierarchy of parts; adjacency of spaces; organizational possibilities;
  • Spatial flexibility over time with possible expansion of the unit, possible volumetric addition, and/or combinations of more units;
  • Horizontal and vertical combinations of parts of the unit;
  • Sectional interlocking possibilities;
  • Spatial relationships.
  • Commodity and delight — ease of entry into the house and circulation among the public and private zones; accommodation of natural light and airflow; generosity and sufficiency of space; surprises; unusual use of materials; surface manipulation.

Requirements

Process drawings using Autocad 2008

3d Investigations and modeling using 3D studio Max

Study Physical Model and Final Physical Model (see further Instructions).

Final presentation

Due Mon, April 28/2008

Thursday, March 6, 2008






















Episode 3.1- Site Diagrams

You should represent 3 diagrams with AutoCAD or 3D-Studio, related to the project-site.

Some suggestions for your analysis:

Circulation north-south-east-west, linear voids, hierarchy of infrastructural systems, vertical and horizontal connections, access-exit to the site, paths of specific destinations, views from the building lot, views towards the building lot, existing green spaces, congestion, densification, rarefaction, events, programmatic bands-stripes, layering of activities or of traces, grids, use of the site, people flow, cars, movement, in different hours, during the day, at night, presence of nearby buildings, use of buildings next to our block, courtyards, open spaces, water, waterfront elements, edges, voids, residual islands, composition of major elements-founded and added, elements in different scales, etc...

Read the site graphically in a creative way, but concentrate on urban elements. You can be more conceptual or analyze real conditions.

The 3 diagrams will be printed in 3 color-pages letter size (8 1/2 X 11).

Analysis Example: Existing buildings within the nearby blocks

Before conceiving any diagram, you need first to research on specific conditions, elements, presences, etc.

- Your research could focus on the analysis (transformations over time, traces of the past) of historical buildings, or on the analysis of exceptional buildings, in the projects’ block or nearby.
-
You should focus on general dimensions of the buildings, on floor height (analyze the façade), on depth and width, on openings, on volumes composition, and how they are related to other adjacent buildings in the same block, structurally, functionally, formally.

Narrate your site analysis through 3 diagrams exploring 3 site conditions. You might explore only one condition through 3 diagrams, especially if that condition or presence has several components.

See how to analyze cities through diagrams in the following Books:

Rem Koolhaas, “SMLXL”

Ben van Berkel, Caroline Bos, “MOVE”

MVRDV, “Metacity, Metatown” and/or “FARMAX”


Due Fri, March 07

PHASE 3: Building

You will design a mixed use, but mostly residential structure that reacts to,
and/or could affects changing environments, places, views, use, and program.
The building will be located in West Chelsea, NYC, at 166-168 West 11th Avenue, between 22nd and 23rd Street.
Its contemporary conception engages materials and surface treatments.

SITE OVERVIEW

www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/home.html

City planning-PROJECTS/PROPOSALS-MANHATTAN-WEST CHELSEA- LAND USE, buildings, zoning, high line.

http://gis.nyc.gov/doitt/mp/Portal.do

New York City Map Portal- type in street intersection (22nd street and 11 avenue)- Site information-New York City Map- Lot info- Street/Aerial

GOOGLE MAPS-STREET VIEW

You should particularly concentrate in:

- Analysis of nearby buildings: lot info, front dimensions, deep dimension, number of floors, height, use.

- Analysis of vacant spaces or vacant lots.

- Analysis of courtyards, open private spaces within the buildings in the nearby blocks.

- Analysis of public open spaces, parks, green areas, waterfront.

- Analysis of infrastructural systems, circulation systems.

- Analysys of new developments in West Chelsea:


100 11 Ave./ Jean Nouvel/ www.nouvelchelsea.com/ neighborhood

11 Ave./18th street/ F. Gehry/ www.IACbuilding.com

524 W. 19th Street/ Shigeru Ban/ Metal Shutter Houses

Diller and Scofidio, project for the High Line in Chelsea; project for a Patisserie in NYC

www.40bond.com/ Herzog and De Meuron, Greenwich Village, NYC

More buildings in NYC: Mies van Der Rohe, R. Meyer, S. Calatrava, J. Pawson, Winka Dubbeldam, Libeskind, Renzo Piano, etc.