Tuesday 17 March 2020

Experiment 1 Final

 Experiment 1 Brief:

I chose to design studio spaces for The Kyza (above: sneaking) and Trent Jansen Studio (below: waffle). The following post is a summary of the development process for this experiment, and consists of:
- The 18 Sketch Sections
- The 36 Custom Textures
- The Three Words
- The Developed Stairs
- The Architecture





The 18 Sketch Sections
















The 36 textures
scarred


woven

metallic

ornate

foreign

frosted

cloudy

conductive

bare

branded

brittle

charred

crisp

etched

exposed

fibrous

jagged

luminescent

malleable

matte

refined

reflective

rippled

rustic

smooth

vintage

 violent

viscous

aged

grainy

pixelated

sheen

corrugated

abrasive
sharp

aerated



 The Three Words

The brief required us to describe pieces of work from three different clients. We must use a verb, adjective and noun to describe each piece of work.

The Kyza:
- Verb: sneaking
- Adjective: geometrical
- Noun: future

Trent Jansen:
- Verb: melt
- Adjective: malformed
- Noun:waffle

Mountain and Moon:
- Verb: link
- Adjective: timeless
- Noun: treasure



The Developed Stairs

Upper Level Stairs (The Kyza- sneaking):

The aim of the staircase design was to reflect the distinctive and significant aspects of The Kyza's work. The staircase represents the sharp, defined nature of the client's work. The use of tread-less stairs represents the light sneaking nature of the clients work. The sides of the treads are shaped like arrowheads which, when viewed with other treads, integrate to create a sharp linear pattern that represents the sneaking nature of the client's work. The cables, which are connected to the ceiling of the studio, support the weight of the stairs.

PERSPECTIVE

ISO

TOP

FRONT

LEFT

RIGHT


Lower Level Stairs (Trent Jansen Studio- Waffle):

The aim of the stair design was to demonstrate the critical aspects of Trent Jansen's work. The melting wall design is derived from the idea of maple syrup, which has direct social connotations with waffles. The stairs are supported by a cross-grid bar system which is partially hidden by the stringers. The culmination of the concept results in a design that reflects the abstract nature of the client's work. The external melting motif, which represents the weirdness of the client's work, is developed into a functional concept through the underlying "waffle" cross-grid structure, which reflects the solidity of the client's design process.
FRONT PERSPECTIVE
FRONT-RIGHT PERSPECTIVE

BACK LEFT PERSPECTIVE

RIGHT SECTION
TOP


The Architecture

Externally:

ISO
Size: The upper studio is designed to be larger than the lower studio. This allows the client to customise large vehicles, and also provides a large gallery space for both clients at the datum/ground level.

PERSPECTIVE



TOP VIEW


FRONT VIEW

Proportion: While the upper studio is greatly larger than the lower studio, the lower studio is proportioned in a way to maintain its usability as a work space and its significance as a reflection of the client's work.

RIGHT VIEW

DRIVEWAY/VEHICLE EXHIBITION


Relativity: The breakthrough of the lower studio integrates seamlessly into a landscape dominated by the gallery space and upper studio. Whilst appearing connected to the above-ground elements, the client's nature is clearly shown in its underground studio design.

Internally:


GALLERY GARDEN ENTRANCE

UPPER STAIRS OVERLOOKING UPPER STUDIO


UPPER STAIRS OVERLOOKING GALLERY

Texture: The combined use of the "violent", "corrugated", and "crisp" creates an aggressive appearance and, when compared with the pristine walls of the gallery, communicates the distinctive change between the upper studio space and the gallery.

UPPER STUDIO: VIEW FROM UPPER CENTRAL HUB

Colour: The upper studio uses differing colours in its glass structures. The purple glass represents windows, whilst the blue glass indicates a sturdier structure.


UPPER STUDIO: VIEW FROM LEFT PLATFORM

LOWER STAIRS

Texture: The lower studio stairs portrays how different textures can be used to communicate the nature of the client's work to its users. The use of the "fibrous" texture in the stringers is contrasted by the texture-less cross-grid support system to show how, beneath the client's work, lies a foundation of infallible design.

LOWER STAIRS: WITH LOWER STUDIO

Relativity: The use of the "fibrous" texture is extended to the undulating solid forms surrounding the lower studio stair, which causes a continuation that effectively assimilates the stringers of the stair into the melting ceiling structures.

LOWER STAIRS: STRINGER AND TREAD DETAIL

LOWER CENTRAL WORKSPACE





Sections:


SECTION: RIGHT VIEW UPPER+LOWER STUDIO INTERACTION

SECTION: LEFT VIEW UPPER+LOWER STUDIO INTERACTION

SECTION: TOP VIEW UPPER STUDIO
SECTION: TEXTURAL INTERRELATIONSHIP

Texture: This section reveals the interactions between different textured surfaces. The use of the "refined" texture of the stair rest contrasts with the "metallic" texture of the stair treads to represent the sleek, defined nature of the client's work.


SECTION: RIGHT VIEW UPPER STUDIO


SECTION: LEFT VIEW UPPER STUDIO



SECTION: UPPER STUDIO PERSPECTIVE




SECTION: LOWER STUDIO TOP VIEW



SECTION: LOWER STUDIO PERSPECTIVE


Sketchup 3D Warehouse:

Model Name: #BenjaminJing#ARCH1101#EXP1#2020









































































No comments:

Post a Comment