Site Gallery - Exploded Axonometric
- All tags
- #Design Studies
- #Render
- #Interior Views
- #Section
- #Elevation
- #Exterior Views
- #Drawings
- #Floor Plan
- #Views
- #Education
- #Urban Design
- #Axonometric
- #Technical Drawing
- #Diagram
- #Laurieston
- #Perspective
- #Model
- #Site Plan
- #Art Gallery
- #3D
- #collage
- #Exploded Axonometric
- #sketch
- #Masterplan
- #Concept
- #Diagrams
- #Site
- #Front Elevation
- #Housing
- #Renderings
- #Community Centre
- #Technical Design
- #Plans
- #conservation design project
- #Context
- #hand drawing
- #isometric
- #Public spaces
- #Technical Studies
- #landscaping
- #Structure
- #Cultural Studies
- #History
- #Dementia
- #Neighbourhood
- #Professional Studies
- #Art Gallery in the City
- #Environment
- #photomontage
- #Sustainable production
- #Construction
- #detailing
- #M8
- #Market
- #Physical Model
- #Programme
- #street elevation
Model of the carers hub - Asya Gumus
This building is split in to the three. The ground floor invites the locals to join in coworker activities/ workshops and start up businesses, the middle floor proposes an activity space for both elderly residents with dementia and carers and the tower proposes private studio spaces that view the neighbourhood.
Program - Laura Krumina
Rehabilitation can be a long and complicated process. Without integration between phases, this can very quickly turn into an isolated environment. We need to redesign the way we approach this as just having rehabilitation facilities without integration within the community can emphasise further problems. I propose a facility that blends these boundaries and accommodates a healthy rehabilitation environment that concentrates on four aspects of recovery: Body_Soul_Mind_Hearth.
Flat Type A+C, Exploded Axonometric - Giulia Panedigrano
Exploded Axonometric Detail 1:50 - Conor Ryan McCormack
Down The Rabbit Hole_3B To Play
Down the Rabbit Hole_3B To Play.
The M8, currently - Exploded Axonometric - Giulia Panedigrano
Axonometric - Anthony Mazeli
Exploded view and seating arrangement separating building into its smaller features. The building is made up of (from Left to Right): balcony façade intervention, existing faced plus extension, circulation stairs, floating bridges + service area, skylight, and cinema.
Exploded Axonometric Detail 1:50 - Conor Ryan McCormack
Down The Rabbit Hole_3B To Play
Down the Rabbit Hole_3B To Play.
Exploded Axonometric View of the Facade - Gertie Leong Hei Li
The facade was designed to be modular where pieces can be replaced and restored very easily. There are three different types of variation, including Solid Walls, Glass Features and Green Walls.
Green walls are to be placed facing the South and East side of the site where solid walls are featured on the North and West side of the site, designed with holes, which are to deliver a sneak peek of what's going on inside the building from the pedestrians.
Model of a 'safe wing'- Advice cafe - Asya Gumus
This diagram shows one example of a 'safe wing'. The ground floor is designed for quick and short term access/ support making it easy for residents to drop in without an appointment and seek support over the counter. The staff are dementia trained and will have the skills to support elderly resident needs. The upper levels are designed for longer stay where private councelling can be arranged and support group meetings can take place. Transparency, signage and familiarity within the design allow locals to feel comfortable when visiting.
The Exploded Diagram of the Floating Terraformer - Sania Halim
The exploded parts of the terraformer depict the mechanism and the working of the facility. The acid collecting membrane will be made up of graphene, a material of the future, which will absorb the acid from the atmosphere. The façade of the terraformer and the elevated building is made up of graphene as well, which will absorb sunlight and converts it into electricity to run the terraformer.
Flat Type B - Exploded Axonometric - Giulia Panedigrano
G. Community Centre - Adele Melas
The Community Centre offers indoor venues for residents with dementia to enjoy leisure activities alone, with friends, family, or general members of the public. As the DFN encourages engagement with social and physical factors in the outdoor environment, the essence of this is brought internally within the community building. This is executed by continuing of the red path, the distinct orange entrance which responds to the High Street colour rhythm the internal skylight and courtyard, and exposure of light external materials on the interior facade which increase natural light reflected in the space. The building's curves, gently winding edges, surfaces, and paths, are regarded as more legible to dementia-users.
Structural appraisal - Fatema Hassan
Exploded Axonometric - Fatema Hassan
The workshop spaces are situated on the top floor in varying forms overlooking the courtyard garden. The void of the courtyard garden serves as a light well to penetrate light into lower public floors. Floors are connected by stairwells and stairwells that lead directly to the outside, these stairwells also lead you up to the food hall and top floor workshops. Ultimately, the whole proposed form is two separate volumes connected by public routes and gardens for a unique journey through spaces of various activities.
F. Moderate Dementia Housing - Adele Melas
The housing proposal is specifically targeted for individuals facing moderate stages of dementia, whom can no longer live entirely independently without forms of assistance. The concept embraces co-housing and intergenerational living with a young nurse practitioner, young carer, nurse or medical student, who are equipped to take on the role of the ‘carer’ by discretely offering assistance, in a non-institutionalised nature. Both residents would equally learn from one another, form a very strong friendship bond, and yet have their own privacy. Essentially, the two households join via the entrance-point communal kitchen and living room, and move into their own space through a progressive privacy layout.
Exploded Axonometric Detail 1:50 - Conor Ryan McCormack
Down The Rabbit Hole_3B To Play
Down the Rabbit Hole_3B To Play.
The Structure - Fiona Wylie
Construction of the building was heavily importance, taking sustainability and fire safety into account.
As an image for sustainability in the community, the majority of the structure is glulam post + beam with CLT floor panels, in attempts to reduce the amount of concrete used unless necessary. It’s lightweight, versatile, and provides a warm + natural aesthetic within the urban farm, reinforcing the idea of eco-industry.
Due to the tower being over 18m tall, it acts as an independent steel + concrete structure beside the timber structures, connected by an expansion joint. In case of fire the tower’s construction is non-combustible and a fire shutter can be placed in the atrium connecting the two structure types.
A weathered Corten steel facade was chosen to give the building a lightweight feel in contrast to the building’s size over the heavy historical wall, complimenting the colour of the surrounding red brick buildings in Tradeston. The metal is a nod to Tradeston’s metalwork history. The Matrix rainscreen cladding system align’s with the required A1 non-combustible facade buildup due to the height of the tower.