Showing posts with label fluid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fluid. Show all posts

Thursday, July 26, 2012

nouveau reframed

Update: Project was just suckerpunched - be sure to check it out.

soustitre3
bonsoir-paris-logoOur conventions in architecture are to always work within the frame, the box, the cube. I suppose artists are the same in many ways – their work is so often defined by an edge or frame. Bonsoir Paris released a series of frames which begin to negotiate form within the construct of the frame itself, in a way reorganizing the frame to suit the aesthetic.
From the website:
DURAMEN is a series of handmade wooden sculptures. Born of a simple impulse, the one to break with conventional ways of exhibiting, Bonsoir Paris and its team have imagined a series of frames so strongly mistreated that they have become unrecognizable. Their wish is to break the properties of the compound, a form of compromise as minimal and it is efficient. They found a subtle twist while remaining faithful to a primitive form of revolt, without getting lost in vain styles effects. The choice of noble materials (Oak, Fir, Wenge, Pear, Linden) and the quest for finesse, enables them – with the DURAMEN series – to position themselves on the razor’s edge between two opposites, that of the deformed and that of the elegant, instinctive and thoughtful.
[website]
In terms of craft, no computation was used: hand-carved, sketched, hand-carved, sketched, done. Not sure if the distinction matters though – the end product is still pretty affective.
Also note the background: the formal paneling in clean white. Working in contrast, each index supports the other: the raw, fluid wood aesthetically reinforces not only the frame (being “melted”), but also the frame engaged with the wall beyond. It allows some motion to occur in the raw wood frame that would be lost in another setting.
soustitre13


sous-titre-legende1_0

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Thesis: Asemic High

final image 03 - project from windsor

final image 02 - rail station from above

final image 01-1 - rail station first floor

final image 04- from below

final image 05 - from above

Section i04 Final - Complete Section

Rail Interchange Floor 01 Plan

Rail Interchange Floor 02 Plan

Image description:

  1. Perspective from Windsor
  2. Rail Interchange at base – Floor 02
  3. Rail Interchange at base – Floor 01
  4. Street Level Perspective
  5. Aerial Perspective
  6. Section
  7. Rail Interchange – Floor 01
  8. Rail Interchange – Floor 02

 

This project discusses the Asemic as a generator for certain geometries, certain spheres of sensation, while providing a paradigm for economically viable urban housing and integrated transit.

Asemic geometry denies signification in favor of the emotion of the glyph: that through the serialization certain geometries emerge, invoking sensations which are referential (perhaps) but maintain their independence from meaning. Exploitation of these tendencies, these geometries, yield techniques which allow for fluid conditions to exist between indices, largely defined by the line or curve.

The project is situated in Detroit just north of the Detroit/Windsor tunnel and will serve the dual purpose of a primary transportation hub for a 10 billion dollar rapid transit corridor proposed over the next several years, and a larger residential element situated atop this transportation plinth. Rapid transit will begin to connect the largely disparate suburbs of the Detroit Metro area, bringing residents back into downtown and into the recently redeveloped riverfront district. This high-rise will act as the mediator between the newly defined district and the transit system.

Economically, the project will be subsidized through a housing authority and deed restricted, reducing risk to the contractor (cost) and the government while providing an infrastructure and housing solution to the locality (similar to the Dutch Housing Act of 1901).

Sunday, August 2, 2009

FlightPath

Aaron Koblin – Sand Box – Flight Paths

The paths correlate with various data tracking various flight paths about the US. I find the output (I hazard to say work…) to be quite beautiful in a way; the geometries are figural and, though complex, they seem to resemble some sort of logic, both in direction as well as in time (see the pulsing in the video).

The project also resembles the work done on processing (link to flickr stream | example 1 | example 2), the script used by Michael Hansmeyer in his Platonic Solid project, although the two do look entirely different…

Ultimately, in all of these, its not the script or the data that really matters: it is only (and will only ever be) the geometry, the articulation, and the beauty that captivates.

Images from the site:

northeastfloridaatlanta

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

a SWELL project

IMG_2665 edit

Professor Gabriel Esquivel

Ryan R. Collier – Project Manager

Nick Cignac | Matt Richardson | Todd Christensen | Mitch Scott Rocheleau | Chris Gassaway

“life is nothing but instability and disequilibrium... a swelling tumult continuously on the verge of explosion.” ~ Georges Bataille

“Swell” emerged from the posture of presenting an argument emerging from architecture itself. Is it possible to talk about architecture from its own discourse? This project fits within the continuum of architecture through references from works of the classicists to early modernists. A significant part of the research revolved around the discussion of classical ornamentation: a layer of architecturalization that was perhaps best articulated by the early modernist Louis Sullivan as seen in his intricate, highly articulated Guaranty Bank(i) corner to cornice detailing.

clip_image001Not unlike the Baroque, there is a sense of levitation and anticipation – a feeling that the swell condition will either a) cause the entire beam to ultimately invade the floor and spread as a viscous fluid, or b) explode under the pressure of the aforementioned systems. Ironically, although the swell condition creates the illusion of weight, the project is - because of geometry, castellation, and material studies - quite the opposite. Furthermore, the form can be understood as an exaggerated moment diagram, as if the weight of the interior is causing deformation about the middle of beam.

This project addresses a classic architectural problem of the column/beam or more literally the corner/beam condition, a swelling condition in this case. The space includes a logic of ornamentation through aggregation of apertures and voids about the surface. To the benefit of the whole, two subservient (submissive) systems work concurrently, interdependently to erect an affect of Swell. Arguably, the one system without the other would be beautiful, but without any sense of abjection. Abject then is the state in which the object begins merging with the subject, literally dissolving the boundary between the two; the abject replaces the object. As the two systems invade the other and create such interaction, the composite condition begins to swell under pressures, literally ripping the surface: apertures graze the surface where there were none. The micro condition of the porous appears taut via stretching of certain geometries, ultimately achieving a high porosity the swelling turning into poché. This poché is the condition of the surface against the softbodies, a system beginning to distend: an infinite cleavage, a condition of invaded interstitial spaces.

The interstitial space, implied or contained is interpreted as a suppression of the paradox of physics and metaphysics of space that aims for an argument of desire, or that of the seductive void.

The void then can assume various shapes/relations. The question is whether or not the void is understood as a condition of interiority or exteriority. Our subjective affiliation to the project could be explained as the classic repression exercised by the superego, exposing another way to look at it in terms of the “other," in which otherness is present within the subject: a condition of abjection. “The interiority of exteriority is not understood until the internalization of absolute alterity disrupts the self conscious subject by revealing the presence/absence of an unconsciousness that can never fully enter consciousness”.(ii) Since the outside is always inside, the self is, in some sense, forever outside itself. The seductive “within” is not merely a need that can be filled by the possession of an object: the discourse of the other signifies an insatiable desire.

“Swelling” is presented as a disruptive condition that argues emotional possibilities, from its sensual and ominous ornamentation to questions whether it is psycho sexual, an explosion, or simply a disruption of the condition of the surface?


(i) Image provided by: http://www.wrightnowinbuffalo.com/whattodo/images/Guaranty4.jpg

(ii) Jacques Lacan, Ecrits. A. Sheridan. New York; Norton 19

*Construction documents available upon request.

 

IMG_2648 edit IMG_2697mdf   

IMG_2675 edit (2)

IMG_2579 edit IMG_2392

IMG_2661 edit IMG_2666 edit IMG_2656 edit

IMG_2380 IMG_2360

IMG_2344 edit IMG_2381 IMG_2157 edit

IMG_2273 edit

Monday, June 1, 2009

Education and Sensation: Renderings

I put this off till I had a bit more time. Here are the renderings (along with some images from before) that I’m submitting to a competition later on this month.

street facade

perspective_02

exterior perspective

Picture1

exterior perspective

Picture5

interior perspective – typical affect condition

Picture2

interior perspective – typical toddler area

Picture3

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Fluid as Fashion

Just thought this was beautiful:

ambiancepaint

The making of fashion for walls (although it has nudity, watch it full screen if you can – the video is small):

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Thinkering Space

Picture10

This project seeks to redefine the idea of “thinkering space.”

Greg Toppo argues the thinkering space as one cure for the growing “complexity gap” in students educated under the no child left behind program. Because students have up to this point been focused solely on quantitative goals such as reading and writing, and not qualitative learning such as art, design, music, etc. the ability to critically think in abstract terms has been lost. Quantitative logic without qualitative logic proves inadequate over the long term.

This project proposes an interactive, topological space for digital play – inclusive of touch walls, sensispheres, and multi-touch in an interactive, fully immersive digital environment.

Such a condition creates new level of spontaneity which allows for interpersonal conditions to emerge. The space is designed to be installed inside, but it is otherwise site independent. The surface articulation, using morphological geometry, is purely performative and aesthetic.

Peter Sloterdijk via wikipedia.com: “Spheres is about ‘spaces of coexistence’, spaces commonly overlooked or taken for granted that conceal information crucial to developing an understanding of the human. The exploration of these spheres begins with the basic difference between mammals and other animals: the biological and utopian comfort of the mother's womb, which humans try to recreate through science, ideology, and religion.”

Geometrically speaking, the space, via the “blended” spheres, allows for a more pliant, woven condition between the various matters of existence which provide for the intellectual stimulation of the participant. Such programmatic overlap allows for the emergence of new programs which are generated by the participant through hands-on interaction with the digital aspect of the space as well as a blending affect will allow for certain environments to bleed over into other environments creating interaction not only between the participant and the space but the space and the space itself - a programmatic lava lamp if you will.

perspective showing the Coliseum “bleeding” into the solarium

Picture11

interior perspective – notice the Coliseum on the left and the solarium on the right

Picture12

plan showing interior spaces | plan showing surface pattern articulation

Picture7 Picture8

elevation

Picture9

preliminary studiesPicture5

Picture4Picture6

Picture2 Picture3

morphoginic surface porosity script (much thanks to Jeremy Harper)ARCH 606 Thinkering Final Presentation Script