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Showing posts from April, 2018

EXPERIMENT 2: The Space Between

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Light Rail Station The floating blue rectangles were inspired by one of Le Corbusier's five points of techniques which is roof gardens. Although there are no plants on it, the floating polygons creates a sense of elevation above the ground. One of Le Corbusier's five points of architecture is pilotis which is adding columns to a building. This picture shows that the cylindrical columns are added, inspired by Le Corbusier. The outer shell of the light rail station is inspired by Servo Stolkholm in which it gives a sense of two combined elements meshing into one spatial structure. The light rail station is lifted above the ground level, hence representing Le Corbusier's architectural style. The picture below shows that the enclosure of the lightrail station has glass windows which was inspired by Le Corbusier's  Notre dame du haut, ronchamp, France, 1954 which has many coloured glass windows all over the walls. The model was based of

WEEK 8

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Textures (light -> dark) 1.  2.  3.  4.  5.  6.

WEEK 7

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Parallel Projections Two set of 5 blocks axonometrics were combined together forming the following parallel projections below: 1. Pilotis + Roof Gardens 2. Coexistence + Acoustic 3. Acoustic + Shifting

WEEK 6

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The Concepts Architects: Servo Stolkholm  -acoustic: walls/facades that can give a sense of harmony -shifting: being able to blend from one state to another, creating abstraction  -coexistence: having many concepts together such as "digital and analog design techniques" Le Corbusier -pilotis: adding columns to extenuate the height of the building -roof gardens: adding a garden on top of the building instead of fully occupied lower ground floor -autonamous: buildings that can be placed anywhere, no matter the location The 12 Axonometrics : 1. Roof Gardens 2. Pilotis 3. Coexistence 4. Shifting 5. Acoustic 6. Autonamous Rendered model of the blocks