New Day in the Design Field
Every since I graduated for Interior Architecture at University of North Carolina Greensboro, It has been extremely hard to find a position in the design field. Maybe it is location, location, location. I have a lot to offer and recently i have worked on a couple different freelance projects. Some of them were for different clients that I got in touch from networking and some where competitions that I have entered. The last work that I completed was the Smart Office competition that was sponsored from HP, Microsoft and Talenthouse. I had a good experience at Talenthouse and made me realize alot of things. I have to keep working hard and keep showcasing my work and talent that I have. Hard work pays off, and a position in the design ( architecture, interior architecture, graphic design, GIS) field will open with time and I will take every opportunity. Time will tell if everything will work out. Till then, every day is a good day that I will keep working hard, and today it's a new day.
Project 3[Historic Preservation]
106 Parrish Street, Durham, NC 27701 is the site address for project 3. We
documented and observed both building and site context thoroughly and analyzed and interpreted data observed in a useful and meaningful way to inform the conceptual design process that we are going to do. My group[3] looked at:
building’s structure/ codes/ ADA exploration)
-the zoning and building code details of the site
-in its existing state, consider the egress system and accessibility issues in the building
-ADA as it applies to the site
-the structural system of the building to examine what changes the building is ready to take in
-the other present problems faced by the facility and how it can be rectified
-constraints and opportunities of the site
-what is/ are the unusual/dominant feature(s) of the site
-show the existing building drawings illustrating the interpreted features
Capturing the city, shifting from urban to interior space
Environmental psychology is important in this space because lighting is going to support social interaction while affecting many social, cultural aspects. The steel columns holding the underpass together is an inspiration where we could use stranded fiber optics. The role of the design could be to support and facilitate public realm whether people walking through it or on bikes or rollerblades.
Thank you
Thank you for visiting my page. Currently working on couple freelance projects and will be posting new content every week! Meanwhile, check out my portfolio and/or other pages. Have a great weekend!
Fallingwater-revisited
Architects : Frank Lloyd Wright, Edgar J. Kaufmann
Year: 1934
Owner : Western Pennsylvania Conservancy
Location: Mill run, Pennsylvania
" merging man with the surrounding landscape..."
"one of a kind..."
"It is a work of man for man; not by a man for a man..."
Year: 1934
Owner : Western Pennsylvania Conservancy
Location: Mill run, Pennsylvania
" merging man with the surrounding landscape..."
"one of a kind..."
"It is a work of man for man; not by a man for a man..."
Photographs
of Fallingwater, a private home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the 1930s are
certainly as beautiful as they are plentiful. The home is so stunning, in fact,
that people who heard of it or saw a photograph after it was built travelled to
the mountains of Pennsylvania to see it for themselves. This wasn’t a fleeting
fad; visitors are still just as drawn as they were over eighty years ago. It is
ironic that the home has been photographed so much. A picture can say a
thousand words, it’s true. But a thousand words aren’t enough to describe
Fallingwater.
Fallingwater
is more than a home, it is more than a structure that bears its name. It is
remarkable and stands out among other architectural works as much for its
setting as it does for its design. There are as many reasons a person wouldn’t
want to build on the land as the Kaufmann family, who’d enjoyed vacationing
there for years, had for embracing it and choosing it as their home. Wooded
acres surrounded by more wooded acres, a waterfall and streams and creeks, and
not-so-gently rolling terrain isn’t land usually considered prime for building.
But Fallingwater was built on just such land and has since become such a part of
American history that the property can hardly be imagined without Fallingwater
there. The mist from the nearby waterfall and the stream that runs beneath the
home catches the light and covers the view of the foundation, creating the
beautiful illusion that the home is floating in air. As spectacular a sight as
Fallingwater is to behold, it seems to belong, as if it’s always been there,
blending seamlessly in color and strength with the towering trees that still
stand tall around it. The land seems to
have been designed for Fallingwater as much as Fallingwater was designed for
the land. This takes nothing away from Frank Lloyd Wright’s brilliant work. The
acclaim and recognition he received for his design was well-earned. He was
given the daunting task of designing a large, luxurious home that would sit
above a waterfall, fit into the natural beauty of the land and be structurally
sound, and he did just that. The fact that he was so remarkable he made it look
simple speaks even more to his ability.
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