Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Ladies and Gentlemen....

We have a house, and although a lot of our feedback was very positive from HAC, there are some considerations that we must consider. Considerations such as the location of courtyard and how the elements will interact with it. Here are two links of small homes that may serve as some useful precedence studies.

Although we are moving forward with the last bit of our research perhaps these may stir some potential solutions.



Here is the house as it stands thus far.






Saturday, April 24, 2010

floors!

Good websites:

I have all the floor research saved, but it's too many pages for it to be worth posting on here.
Here's the important stuff:

Conclusions:

Recycled flooring no expensive

FSC certified hardwood maybe expensive

Laminate flooring maybe cheap

Eucalyptus no expensive

Bamboo maybe mid

Engineered wood maybe expensive

Marmoleum yes mid

Cork yes cheap

Porcelain tile no expensive

Terracotta yes cheap-mid

Stone no mid-expensive

Friday, April 16, 2010

Design Iterations and Moving Forward

Here are a couple of the design iterations we were working on last week and the refined design we will be moving forward with.





Final Design Solution and Process behind it.




Below is the concept sketch of the wind turbine ideas. We can flesh these out later as I have been doing some research on the subject and the scale of these may need to be increased as well spacing.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Project Schedule

Hey guys here is the draft of our project schedule for the rest of the semester. If you think it should be adjust just let me know.

EDIT: I have updated the schedule below with corrected dates and timelines.





Friday, April 2, 2010

Mid Term Presentation Boards

Hey Everyone,

Here are the boards that were presented last night. Remember this is as much your work as it is mine! I hope I did you guys proud.









Wednesday, March 31, 2010

House Iterations

Here is what I have been working on in the last couple of days as far as design iterations are concerned.


This first design is focused on purely breaking the house up into the programatic elements of Public, Private, and Education. The middle entry serves as the Education aspect of the house as it would be the greenhouse and filtration center for the home. All of this would be on display while retaining a senese of privacy for the people in the home.


This second iteration focuses on the idea of using Procession through the spaces and the arrangement of them to help establish Public, Private, and Educating spaces. This would also allow for some overlapping in program. Note how the Master Bedroom is on the second floor and the roof planes are being engaged for various potential activities.



The third iteration is a reconciliation and expansion of the previous two ideas combined into one house. The central entry feeds directly into the greenhouse all while serving as the center of the water collection so that it can be displayed as well. While the living room is off to the left the rest of the house is not fully formed but will follow a similar logic to Iteration 2, such as a second story bed room.

Iteration 3 is the one I will be developing first and then possibly combining 1 and 2 for a second iteration. All of this depends on time which we are quickly running out of. Overall though we have a lot of great ideas being generated and it will be interesting to see what we can do by combining various aspects of each of them.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Origami house





Main ideas underlying design:
-Nature as filter (each space has an indoor/outdoor component)
-community outreach (the roofs reach out and spread toward surroundings)

We were thinking about the post-its from the workshop and how they had been arranged. We didn't have a copy of it with us, bu we settled on 8 main spaces: kitchen, dining, laundry, muli-use (office/guest bed), living, bedroom (x2), bathroom. We arranged them as we remembered and tried to fit in open outdoor spaces in the overlap...this didn't work like we thought it would, so we shifted some spaces and came up with a 'star-like' shape in which the arms were outdoor spaces which defined the overlap between main interior spaces. We then covered the spaces in a roof which defined each area separately and could be arranged in an origami-like shape...the mechanics of this may be difficult, but there are a lot of different ways this could be viewed. Also, walking through the outdoor areas may be fascinating due to a variety of shadows and overhangs-each space could have a personality of its own.