Archive for July, 2008

UO Architecture Academy – Design Studio: Project 4: An Eatery Along a Lane

Description

A client has retained your services to design a wayside eatery within a unique setting. The property is located on a small lane off an Oregon scenic highway. The lane leads you past an inn, shared parking and gardens where visitors are encouraged to stroll through the artiest garden into the manicured landscape room and continue walking towards a prospect point where they can enjoy short, medium and long views of the landscape. The landscape is planned and designed from the enjoyment of the guests and is harvested by the owners for use in their cooking and decor.

The client envisions five 12′ x 12′ 12′ cubes that house the dining activities, a kitchen, a small office, and restrooms. Three of the five cubes hold the kitchen, office and bathrooms. the chef will plan and design the layout of the kitchen for one of these cubes. The placement of the five cubes must occur within the bounds of the given pad.

The client requests that the cubes are physically joined and/or connected by a lightweight structure. The material palette for the cubes, connections and terrace(s) must meet the intent of the client. All surfaces need to be level. The client requests that the arrangement and design of the cubes and the proximity landscape reflect their concept of the eatery and the ethos of the place.

The client asks for a careful analysis of the local climatic conditions and requests a terrace that is designed to receive southern exposure and extend the activities of the pavilions into the landscape.

All ADA accommodations must be met (and surpassed when possible).

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Restaurant/Inspiration

I decided to choose the restaurant Wildfire for this project. I created an identity/brand development for a wood fired eatery during a previous project and thought that this would be a great opportunity to expand on the visual elements, as well as the look and feel of the space to compliment the identity.

Background

Wildfire is a restaurant that serves healthy foods with all ingredients being organic from local farmers. The atomosphere and ambiance are cozy, and there is a wide selection of food. Sustainable fine dining: dedicated to the principles of sustainability, serving the finest local organic cuisine.

Research

About the Restaurant

Organic Agriculture offers a sustainable system for growing nutritious, delicious foods through the use of crop rotation, composting, natural amendments and selecting hearty strains through traditional plant breeding. Wildfire offers over 98% local organic ingredients.

Earthen Building. 9 foot tall wood fired earthen oven, designed and built by Kiko Denzer. The oven consists of a foot-think clay thermal core surrounded by a foot of volcanic pumice insulation. The pumice enables the fire to burn with high efficiency maintaining a core temperature of 700 degrees F while the outside of the oven is just warm to the touch. Examples of "Cob", an earthen building technique consisting of an adobe mixture of clay, sand and stray. Cob is hand formed, offering unlimited sculptural potential.

Recycled, Natural and Non-Toxic Materials. The renovation of Wildfire Restaurant incorporated as many recycled building materials as possible, from the brick path in the courtyard to fir flooring from the ReBuilding Center which was once part of a school gym in Portland. "Forbo" natural linoleum was used for beautiful flooring in the bar, hallways and kitchens. The White Oak trim on the bar and fir floor were both finished with "Osmo" natural wax from Your Green Home.

Premaculture Landscaping. The original landscaping of Wildfire was compiled by applying permaculture principals in selecting bamboos, native and heirloom grasses, flowers, annuals and perennials. Drought resistant varieties were also used to limit midsummer watering.

More info here.

Materials

Cob, Forbo, Recycled materials, Clay (art/relief)

Cob (from wiki )

  • clay, straw, water, earth sand
  • fireproof, resistant to seismic activity, inexpensive
  • used to create artistic, sculptural forms
  • revived in recent years by natural building and sustainability movements

Forbo

Adobe (from wiki )

  • bricks created from natural materials
  • sand, clay, water, fibers (sticks, straw, dung)
  • bricks are molded and dried – extremely durable
  • hot climates, greater thermal mass
  • Note to self: consider using Adobe roofs

Cob Buildings

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*For this project, Wildfire has expanded to a location on the Oregon Coast, offering a variety of seafoods, seasonal produce, and more.


Part A: Sensory of Cuisine

Setting the Scene

Note to self: Emphasize the verticality of the wood grain, napkin, wispyness of the logotype. Consider surrounding plants and grasses, foilage. Possibly bring in a cooler color. Current colors can be very rich and warm. Cool it down with a new menu color for new foods (seafood)… blues?

Site Plan

Model

UO Architecture Academy – Design Studio: Project 3: Two Cubes in the Garden

Description: A sculptor has requested your services in designing two 10′ x 10′ x 10′ cubes located in his garden. These cubes are for the enjoyment of the sculptor and are used as places to view the landscape, meditate, nap and picnic.

One of the cubes must have a floor located 18" above the ground and built of stick frame giving it a sense of lightness and airiness. The artist has requested four open views out to the garden from standing and low sitting positions.

The other, a monolithic cube, must sit 18" into the ground with an opening(s) to the sky for viewing stars and small selected openings to let in rays of light. The walls are 18" thick. The artist would like a soft place to recline and watch the sky.

The sculptor asked that the cubes be placed opposite each other with in the garden. Each cube must have a ramped approach (no steps, with 1 to 12 slope (maximum).

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My chosen sculptor: Choi, Byung Hoon

From designboom.com

at the beginning of his career, byung hoon choi was very involved with modernizing the traditions of korean design. his early work and research explored the relationship between functional objects and art. because this practice was not common at the time, choi broke new ground with his research and practice. he experimented with form, texture and material to develop his own formal language that brought a modern approach to korean tradition. like the traditional korean furniture makers, choi employs natural materials, a sober and rigorous style as well as a balance of functionality and aesthetics. along with the work of his colleagues’, choi promoted a new direction in korean furniture that favoured an artistic approach to design, differentiating it from industrially manufactured goods.

choi’s furniture demonstrates the intent of an artist creating furniture, rather than a designer just adding artistic touches to pieces of furniture. his work appears fluid and improvised, acting on an emotional level while still fulfilling the functional requirements. choi tries to anticipate changes in taste, working free from the current trends. his aesthetic evolved slowly over-time, while remaining simple enough to maintain a timeless quality. by borrowing from the past, both locally and from cultures abroad, choi reinterprets exiting ideas, building on them and modernizing them in his own way.

by using a minimal palette of natural materials combined in primitive ways, choi’s work accentuates the inherent beauty of nature. he allows room for the natural elements to speak for themselves. because choi uses such minimal manipulation, his pieces retain the feeling of being untouched and raw. when choi must intervene, his mark is hidden or masked to allow for an uninterrupted viewing. as a result, his work captures the essence of nature through the eyes of man. he doesn’t manipulate the material into a new form, he accentuates and focuses on the natural beauty. the elements look as though they were merely plucked from nature and arranged, demonstrating choi’s belief that the craft is secondary to the beauty of nature.

choi’s recent work explores a formal language he refers to as  ‘modern organic’. the work pairs smooth wood with the hard lines of raw granite in an array of combinations and forms. the wood is light and soft, while the granite is hard and heavy. the contrast of the two textures is obvious but at the same time, they share many similarities. the final pieces are majestic, serene and spiritual while evoking meditative, tranquil and mysterious characteristics. his original style and approach to designing furniture make him one of korea’s most revered designers, at home and abroad.

Preliminary Scheme sketches:

Sketch Model:

Detail Model:



Site Model:







Presentation Boards:

Text:

Verdent Retreat

Verdent Retreat is a garden inspired and created for sculptor Byung Hoon Choi in his studio’s garden in Seoul, Korea. These spaces are used for the enjoyment of the sculptor, as well as places to view the landscape and artwork.

The altana is open to the air and frames a view of Choi’s sculpture, the landscape, and a gathering area. It is made of maple and pine, and raised above ground with support by natural rocks.

The grotto, a space created with  granite and ebony wood, is sunken into the earth which contrasts with the lushness of the surrounding hills.

These spaces were designed to compliment the landscape, where natural elements and designed pieces come together allowing for uninterrupted viewing.

This garden is ‘modern organic’ evoking meditative, tranquil and mysterious characteristics. By pairing smooth wood with the hard lines of raw granite in an array of combinations and forms, the spaces, as well as the sculpture pieces, become majestic, serene and spiritual.

Sculptor: Choi, Byung Hoon

Choi is a modern sculptor that modernizes the traditions of Korean design. Early in his career, he explored and researched the relationship between functional objects and art. His experiments involved developing his own formal language with form, texture, material, functionality and aesthetics, differentiating it from industrially manufactured goods.

By using a minimal pallete of natural materials combined in primitive ways,
Choi’s work accentuates the inherent beauty of nature, allowing room for the natural elements to speak for themselves; untouched and raw.

UO Architecture Academy – Design Studio: Project 2: The Five Stones Game

The exploration of spacial composition; figure ground reversal.

Part A: Arranging "rock" pieces using the terms movement and organic.
Part B: Interpreting composition using straight lines using the terms movement and organic.
Part C: Interpreting "Line" composition using intersecting planes on the X axis and Y axis using the terms movement and organic.

Part D: Images of built forms that share characteristics with each part (Part A, Part B, Part C)