Animated Diptychs

29 July 2009

Some perceptual exercises.

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Not sure if these are effective. What do you think?

Posted in Thesis


Complete.

12 May 2009

Well, here it is:

And now graduation. And then….



Boards

9 May 2009

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Compilation of five years.

Posted in Work


Carnegie Mellon Fifth Year Show

8 May 2009

The show is set up for tonight’s opening! This year we went for simple and classy, one board per student in the amazing modernist lobby of the US Steel Tower.

The crew at the tower helped hang the boards from the grid in the ceiling. Abramovitz even thought to reinforce the grid of the building with these suspension tracks. Unfortunately they never use them so I’m pretty excited we were able to make use of these nice details. The trees are there to stay, for better or worse.


All photos by Jonathan Tolbert.

Opening is tonight at 8!

Posted in Event


Material Studies

20 April 2009

skin sketch

The project will read differently depending on whether you view it from above the hollow or within the hollow. I’m investigating the effects of different materials, so that the building will at times appear light and reflective, and at others will be dark and mute. The fractured formal language, however, will generate a flicker between the two perceptions of light and heavy.

The following are some photographic studies of reflective, transparent, and matte materials.

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These materials are then arranged three dimensionally. The resulting cube seems to be both pushing into space and pulling out of it, obscuring the true limit of the architecture.

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Surface Volume Structure

16 April 2009

a_surfacevolumestructure

Carnegie Mellon School of Architecture’s 2009 B.Arch senior show has arrived! Friday May 8 at the US Steel Tower, Pittsburgh.

As we finish our thesis projects, we are also in the midst of organizing our senior show. Should be classy and fun, a definite must.



Panther Hollow Research Park

11 April 2009

Max Abramovitz’s 1963 proposal to fill Panther Hollow in Pittsburgh would, without any modesty, “transform into one of the architectural wonders of the world a desolate ravine.. The net result will be a center for research which aesthetically and functionally will have no equal.” While researching the site of my thesis project, I found this great promotional pamphlet for the project.

The cover:
This is an Urban Area
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives

The cover itself was enough to amaze me, it felt exactly like a concise thesis for the project. Knowing the site makes this project more amazing than just seeing these images,but imaging that where the building is currently is a very large ravine.

Overview of Panther Hollow Research Park
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives

As the description continues, “According to architect Max Abramovitz, Panther Hollow may well become the nucleus of the nation’s first 21st century city, a city in which the individual can find rewarding employment, recreation, culture, and higher education, all within walking distance of his home. A person could live his whole life within a half-mile radius of this center – and an extraordinarily rewarding life it would be.”

Section of Panther Hollow Research Park
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives

Area of Panther Hollow Research Park
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives

In a way, I think its great to see this modernist project of Utopian life pop up here in Pittsburgh in a way that possibly would have transformed Pittsburgh. But like all those projects, it seems like there a few drawbacks of living deep in the guts of the building. Also, the hollows of the city highlight the topography’s connection to the urban fabric, and negating it completely ignores the potential of this condition. Either way, it blows my mind.

View of Panther Hollow Research Park
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives

And the final trademark image:

Model of Panther Hollow Research Park
Courtesy Carnegie Mellon Architecture Archives