Entries in Academic GSAPP (3)

[CRAMP]us

Posted on May 5, 2005 by Registered CommenterAOP in , | Comments1 Comment

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This is my proposal for the expansion of Columbia University into the adjacent neighborhood of Harlem and Manahattanville.  The [CRAMP]us is designed to have a minimal social and political impact to the surrounding community of Harlem, by merely touching down with structural elevator cores on pre-existing open lots.  The remaining 5.5 million square feet of program is built above these pillars, allowing for future real estate to be developed on the site below.  The C(r)ampus would be constructed in phases; 1) a phase of vertical support structures 2) constructing a ribbon-like network of programmable space using a two-dimensional frame structural system 3) providing flexible and future programmable space to be cantilevered off of the main structure up to a maximum capacity.

Kinematic Pavilion for Transient Passengers

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This was a exploration in embedded Inverse Kinematic systems.  Each plywood panel has a IK system with 3 nodes embedded into it's surface, so that as each node of the bone structure moves, the panels begin to change into various facetted forms.  I then rigged each node's X, Y, and Z values up to sliders in 3D Max so that I could specifically calibrate each node's movement and be able to track that through time.  The animation frames on the right show a few still images of the process of erecting this small pavilion that would be utilized by transient passengers.

Nodal Networks

Posted on November 4, 2002 by Registered CommenterAOP in , | Comments Off

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Starting with medical tube diagrams, a organizational model was created by the process of applying pins or constraints to a network.  Accupuncture became a theoretical model, utilizing local pressure points to create maximum effects on the structure.  Eventually, nodal networks were developed at both the macro scale (the urban scale) and the micro scale (a structural pavilion prototype) to create a series of programmatic follies at Columbus Circle in New York City.