Showing posts with label project series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label project series. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

Design+Innovation: Menchville House Project

Today, I'm continuing to post about our project at Menchville House. Last week, we got together and combined the best parts of our individual designs, and created 2 separate group designs. Some of the positives from my design were the innovative material (100% recycled PET plastic felt), the color, and the mobility. The final design was mainly based on one team members design with addition of elements from everybody else's designs.

Here are our final presentation boards from that group's design solution. 
Click on a picture to expand. Enjoy!

Title and Description page
Design Process
Floor Plan and Construction Details

Sections and Elevations

Interaction Page

Saturday, October 1, 2011

What's So Great About Granby Street?

Downtown Norfolk is a place I've tried to avoid. I had a bad experience there, and have tried to keep it at an arms length ever since. Enter 3rd year Architecture Studio, and guess where we're headed? You guessed it. My classmate and I took a trip down there a couple of weekends ago, to take pictures and sketch our new project site. I didn't have time to post them due to various things, most of them being other classes. However, since the project is due next week, and I want to show process, I figure better late than never.


Our project is for a company called Retail Alliance. The site is located on Granby Street in Downtown Norfolk and is currently a parking lot. The site is facing the TCC's Roper Performing Arts Center from the front and the Freemason Parking Garage from the back, and is sandwiched between the Madison Hotel and the TRDance Center.
Our professor wants the building we design to be an arcade on the first floor, with office spaces on the second. One of the hardest parts about this project is that it's going to be our first time dealing with Zoning and Building Codes.

Site as of today.
We also passed by the company's current headquarters, which was a bit farther up on Granby. You can tell me what you think about the building in the comments, but all I know is that those windows are killing me. Earlier this week I was describing to my friend "windows that look like they were done on a computer", and this describes my point perfectly.

Retail Alliance's Current Office
Since I had the whole day for Site Analysis, I decided to give Downtown Norfolk a proper look. Once I did, all I could think was, "I have to come back!". The architecture by itself was enough for me to stare at facades for hours, but when coupled with the history and (very important) walk-ability, we have a match made in heaven. 
Norfolk College for Young Ladies
Mini Site History 
  • Granby Street was named in 1796 to honor Englishman John Manners (1721-1770), Marquess of Granby
  • In 1889, to the right of our site was the Leachwood Seminary. The Norfolk College for Young Ladies was located where the College Plaza of Tidewater Community College is now.
  • The Loew's Theater, was opened in 1926, but was closed in the 1970's. It was reopened as the Jeanne and George Roper Performing Arts Center in 2000.
  • In 1935, the current TRDance Center was a Hofheimer's Shoe store, and "it claimed that it was the most modern shoe store in the South, with all retail space on one floor, including a children's playground and children's and ladies' barber shop".
  • From 1976 to 1986, part of Granby St. was closed and was renamed the Granby Mall.
Though a lot of Granby's Roaring Twenties grandeur is gone, some of the buildings still survive to gives us an idea of what Norfolk would've looked like back then. 
The Roper Performing Arts Center. The inside has been restored to its former beauty and the interior is what I like to call "swank". They found some old movie posters when they were redoing the inside, from back in the early 1900's and they are now displayed in the lobby. 

The Maddison Hotel, with a truly grand entrance. Some of my classmates were able to go inside, but from all that I can tell on the internet, the hotel itself is closed. This place has the honor of having the craziest windows that I have ever seen. 
The designers for this building beat symmetry like it stole something, but somehow, it works. 
Two of my classmates checking out the window display for the building next door, the TRDance Center. We got to meet the owner, Mr. Todd Rosenlieb, and got to see the interior of the building as well. After some digging I found that it was called the Strand Theater, probably after it was a shoestore.

The Velvet Lounge, one of the several nightlife spots on Granby. 

The Monticello Arcade, the prettiest of the two Norfolk arcades in my opinion. I have a thing for the color green, as you may have noticed in my previous posts. We didn't get to go inside the building, as it's closed for the weekend, but the facade was definitely worth the trip.

I would have no idea how to replicate this in an actual drawing. This entrance is located right next to the Monticello Arcade, and is a pretty impressive sight.

I like this building for the horizontal articulation and for the first floor especially. I wonder if it was just the first floor and they added the other floors later on.

The Selden Arcade, one of two arcades in Downtown Norfolk. This particular arcade is filled with art galleries and stores, and has interactive pieces of art. There is also a gallery on the second floor, unseen on the far side of the building. 

I'm not sure of the name of this building, i know that it contains a bookstore called Prince Books, and that  I love the arches at the entrance and the color of the brick very much. 

Not all of the buildings I have shown here are on Granby Street, but they're only a couple of blocks away, mostly on Main Street. This is only a drop in the ocean of what Norfolk has to offer, and I'm sure I'll be back soon. 

Thursday, March 24, 2011

The Aquatotter is Coming........

So this will be the beginning of my first Project Series. The name of this project is the Aquatotter, and I will put the project guidelines in my next post. It is generally a floating boat/raft/thingy that is supposed to be able to float on the water, exchange crews, and go back to the dock. We are supposed to use mainly Reclaimed materials, like plastic bottles, cardboard, found wood, or anything generally that we didn't pay for. I think this is going to be a fun project, and I'm bursting at the seams with ideas already. Here's a link to previous year's Aquatotter adventures. 

The first portion of the project, the anchor has been completed, and I shall have pictures up of the final thing in a couple of days. It went pretty well, and I believe our anchor fulfills all of the criteria established by the professor. Here are pictures of the original design which contained the initials of all the people who were in our group at the time. For the record, my group currently consists of RM (me), TC, RB, and EC. Since TC was a later addition to our group his initials didn't get on the anchor, but he helped with the lab report, so it's all good.



I did the anchor design in Google Sketchup. The anchor came out a bit rounded on the sides because of expansion, but otherwise came out as designed. We added fabric in between the layers of concrete for reinforcement, and a chain was added to pull it up by. There is also a hole in the center in case the chain breaks. Yellow and Red paint were used as colorant as well as red yarn. We emptied the whole bottle of yellow paint and the cement was eating it like m&ms but it showed up in the end, ditto with the red. 


The R, with the chain coming out for securing and hoisting the anchor. There's also the hole in the center in case the chain breaks.


One of my group members giving an idea of scale. 


The black stuff is the fabric reinforcement that we used. We were happy that we saw some color differentiation at the end of the day, because the cement was straight gray last time we saw it. You can see bits of the red and yellow paints we put in there.


The E/M & C, which came out pretty well considering that part of the E/M support collapsed while we were putting the cement in. More color visibility from this side.


Finally the B shape, where you can see the red yarn we put in. It turned out looking like red veins, which was an unexpected bonus. 

So all in all, our anchor was a success. Its definitely heavy enough for the project requirements, the color is visible and we have 2 things to secure it with (the chain and the hole) when we get out on the water. And its light enough for one person to carry. Here's one of my group members describing our anchor.



I went to Ben Franklin's Art Supply mentioned in my earlier blog to grab some supplies for the coming project. It was a short trip, I only bought wax candles for sealing the plastic bottles we are collecting and some sketch paper for a different project. I went to 7 eleven afterward to get a pack of matches. You can get a whole lot for $1.19. My next post will be about the plastic bottles and the sealing process. Stay tuned.