Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

56

description

Portfolio of Architecture Work

Transcript of Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

Page 1: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK
Page 2: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK
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aBraham n. rodríguez WorK

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INDEX

acaDEmIc

cOmPETITIONS

PROFESSIONaL

SkETchES

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kaSe Study

khmer housing cORE

milwaukee River Projects

equinox skin boat school

caesar’s park boathouse

PDX alternative high School

chemeketa community college Building 40

Sunnyside Reading Room

The Wilmore

Irene c. hernandez middle School

Europe Sketch Journal

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Khmer housing CorePhnom Penh, cambodiaLow cost mass housingw/ Peter Barich, copeland Downs, & Eric Nielsen

A locally sourced material palette works well for a variety of wooden and woven grass wall assemblies that are innovative in keeping weather out.

It is common practice to have a house on stilts in response to the seasonal floods. This interstitial space provides important storage and gathering space during the dry season.

Open floor plans allow families to adapt to a variety of family sizes, storage needs and activity support. The open plan also allows free flow of natural ventilation.

In starting to look at the design for this Cambodian Sustainable Low Cost Housing Competition, be studied the characteristics of rural Khmer vernacular housing. We discovered that this housing style often has the following three primary characteristics (illustrated in the diagram to the right); a locally sourced material palette, open floor plans, and housing on stilts. Rural Khmer housing tells of the long history of living in a cyclically flooding area with stilts, stairs and floating housing illustrating the adaptation Cambodians have made to living in their unique ecological conditions. While the living conditions may seem dilapidated to an outside eye, the major physical structure of Cambodian housing is rational, well ordered, and is rooted in the family’s customization of their home to meet their required spaces. Our research shows that It is not the vernacular housing unit that must be improved, but rather the key to addressing issues of health, safety, and affordability is to provide sustainable solutions to the following key points: water collection & filtration, waste management, and cooking. All of these issues must be addressed in ways that take into account the drastic changes between Cambodia’s dry and wet seasons, where flooding can reach a meter deep. Thus we need to design for both the dry, and wet seasons.

typiCal Khmer rural housing

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CORE CONCEPTBecause of these issues, we designed the housing CORE to address all of these issues in a single unit that could be used in both new construction, and retrofitted to existing housing. The addition of a CORE to a home will sufficiently provide the basic daily needs for a family of six. Along with benefitting the family, the Core is linked to the ecology of the site with the intake of rainwater and production of fertilizer for crops.

ADAPTABILITY & SCALABILITYAdaptability and scalabilty are important aspects of the Core and allow the Core to be used beyond new construction. The Core can function as an integral element to new construction, or alternatively as an addition to existing homes. At a community level, the Core can be scaled larger or duplicated to provide services to multiple families.

CORE + NEW HOuSINg

CORE + ExIST HOuSINg CORE + NEW & ExISTINg COmmuNITY

RAINWATER COLLECTION

WATER fILTRATIONBIODIgESTER:fuEL fOR COOKINg

BIODIgESTER: fuEL fOR CROPS

ConCept diagram

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WATER WASTE COOKINgThe housing core serves as a way to efficiently deliver lacking sanitation, storage and fuel services. Water from the rooftop collection is stored in barrels which is routed to a toilet and spigots for cooking and bathing. Waste is deposited and flushed into a biodigester set into the ground which allows anaerobic decomposition treatment as well as producing methane fuel. This methane is used to supplement fuel needs for cooking. The cooking areas also contain rocket stoves that make more efficient use of wood fuel for cooking.

ELEvATED mONSON WATER LEvELSA cooking area on each the first and second levels of the housing core make it possible to enjoy preparing and gathering for meals under the shade of the house in the hot, dry seasons while maintaining an elevated cooking space accessible year round. Both share a brick chimney that reduces the chances of respiratory harm.

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Page 10: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

WOOD COLumNS + JOISTS

PALm LEAf mATTINg

WOvEN BAmBOO ROOf

BAmBOO SCREENS

WOOD WALL CLADDINg

materials/assemBly diagramThe design of the house itself honors the vernacular of rural Cambodian housing while at the same time being optimized for modular construction and use of housing core. The roof pitch is optimized for water collection to the housing core. It is constructed of woven bamboo for water collection, while also allowing the structure to breathe. Wall construction is dimensional lumber, allowing for modular construction, while window shutters are constructed of traditional woven palm. Lastly, the house maintains the open plan of the traditional Cambodian house; allowing the occupants future flexibility and customizability in it’s use.

LONg SECTION SHORT SECTION

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In 2007, greensburg, KS was hit by a tornado devastating the entire town. In the extreme weather conditions found here, the typical midwestern house does not respond well. KaSe Study is designed to greatly reduce the amount of damage sustained in a tornado while being environmentally sustainable. The design uses recycled limestone blocks, providing a strong structure and breathable walls. At the south elevation, the sun heats the trombe wall used as the center spine; while sliding doors in the main living areas maximize passive ventilation. A cool roof system prevents interior overheating. Rafter ties are utilized to secure the roof down to the foundation. The butterfly roof blocks sunlight in the summer; lets it pass in the winter and allows rainwater harvesting. Water is conserved through smart land use practices and energy efficient appliances. The design of the home strives to be affordable, energy efficient and sustainable.

KaSe STuDyGreensburg, kS Low-cost housingw/ Danny massaro & Gail cavanagh

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SOuTH ELEvATION

PASSIvE HEAT ABSORPTION

PASSIvE vENTILATION TYPICAL SITE LOCATION

SPATIAL SEPARATION ROOf ARTICuLATION

EAST ELEvATION

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fLOOR PLAN

IOWA AvE.

SYCA

mOR

E ST

.

bioswale

native plants planted along rammed earth privacy wall

vegetable/flower planters

grey water filtration swale

nativ

e tre

es p

rivac

y sc

reen

rain

bar

rel

rain

gar

den

and

irrig

atio

n sw

ale

SITE PLAN

WEST ELEvATION NORTH ELEvATION

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white membrane “cool” roof with r-30 glass batt insulation

recycled corrugated metal cladding attached to recycled limestone wall

operable wood window assemblies with low-e glass and thermal break

voc free interior plaster

recycled limestone blocks filled with structural grout

recycled wood deck

rigid insulation and vapor barrier under floor decking on top of recycled aggregate fill , typ.

rigid insulation and vapor barrier at exterior face of foundation walls, typ.

engineered wood floor with recycled content over fsc certified floor joists, with r-30 glass batt insulation

recycled limestone trombe wall

WALL SECTION

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SE Belmont St

SE 34th ave

SE 35th ave

SUNNYSIDe ReaDING ROOMPortland, OR Public Library

The design called for a small library in a urban infill site in SE Portland’s Sunnyside Neighborhood. The parti developed from a simple exploration of the program, where distinct volumes enclosed different functions of the library (public vs private, administrative vs reading, etc.) with these different functions expressed as different materials both in the façade and interior finishes. The more private, administrative and closed meeting spaces are housed in a closed, brick clad structure; while the more public reading spaces and cafe are housed in a open metal clad volume. Even with the limited access to exterior window walls, the interior space feels open and light filled, thanks to a large skylight above the space. With this simple solution to the program, the library becomes a welcoming gathering space for the surrounding community; a tranquil respite from the activity along SE Belmont.

SITE PLAN

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SITE SECTIONSHORT SECTION

1SRT fLOOR

2ND fLOOR

PARTI DEvELOPmENT

PROgRAm SEPARATION mEET THE STREET

DELINIATE ENTRY OPENINgS

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masonry wall beyondgreen roof over metal deckmetal wall panel

high perf.window wall

concrete over metal deck

metal panel assembly

high perf.window wall assembly

sliding glass panels

cmu backing wallcontrol layersbrick cladding

high perf.glazing window

metal window frame

parapet

concrete over metal deck

fireproffed i beam

high performance window wall assembly

concrete slab

WALL SECTIONENLARgED ELEvATION

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Page 24: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

This school provides a space of refuge and learning for the disenfranchised youths of the city of Port-land. The project is sited to create an educational campus along with the existing Harriet Tubman school dividing the site in half for park and educa-tional use. The school’s entry is located on an axis with Tubman’s strengthening the connection be-tween the two schools. from here one has access to the school main commons space, daylight with diffuse northern light. The classroom bar adjacent to the commons is elevated, creating a shaded out-door space that connects the school to the outside. The existing berm of Tubman’s basketball court is partially paved and stepped, creating an outdoor classroom, gathering and event space that can be used by both schools. The building is a long bar oriented east-west for access to light, natural ven-tilation, and passive heating and cooling. Diffuse north light illuminated the commons space while south light is controlled in the classrooms other south facing spaces through the use of shading devices. The floors are untreated concrete to allow for passive heating and cooling.

PDX aLT. HIGH SCHOOLPortland, OR k-12 Educational

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UP F.E.

C.

F.E.

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3ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

8ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

8ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

ATS

T-40and 41 T-43

GENERATOR

CT-40 CT-41

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939291 94 95

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20' - 7 1/2" 9' - 4 1/2" 18' - 10 1/2" 11' - 1 1/2" 19' - 2" 100' - 0"

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BUILDING40

BUILDING41

BUILDING43

harriet tubman middle school(exist)

lillis albina city park

n russell st

n fli

nt a

ve

SITE PLAN SOuTH ELEvATION

gROuND fLOOR PLAN

1RST fLOOR PLAN

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northern ligth

prevailing summer winds

summ

er

equinox

winter

SECTION

EAST ELEvATION

summ

er

equinox

winterwinter

summ

er

equinox

winter

stack effect ventilation

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WALL SECTIONPARTIAL ELEvATION

corrugated metal roof

curtain wall assembly

pv-panels

vegetated roof

metal ligth shelves at classroom windows

wood panel cladding

curtain wall assembly

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Page 30: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

The two projects in the following pages sought to explore the milwaukee River as a pocket of nature within a dense urban environment. While these two projects, the Caesar’s Park Boathouse and Equinox Skin Boat School, share a common programmatic element (skin boats); the academic focus of each was quite different. Caesar’s Park Boathouse focused on an aesthetic and spatial solution to the program, while the Equinox used a simple program to focus and materiality and skin options.

mILWaukEE RIvER SkIN BOaT PROJEcTSmilwaukee, WI

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Page 32: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

The design is driven aesthetically by the site’s variation, and pragmatically by the program’s need of surveillance. When you approach from the pedestrian bridge you pass a series of newly constructed structures and if you descend the trail from Caesar’s Park you will be surrounded by trees as you go along. This is the main aesthetic driver for the building’s parti. When you approach the building from the park trail, you see the building engulfed in nature; merging into the landscape with its green roof. On the other hand, when one arrives to the boathouse via the pedestrian bridge, you see a strong rectilinear façade composed of cubic volumes that echo the surrounding development. Thus the cantilevered cube of the office becomes a unique object within the park’s landscape.

caESaR’S PaRk BOaThOuSEmilwaukee, WIRecreational

SITE PLAN

ROOf PLAN

1RST fLOOR PLAN

BASEmENT PLAN

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LONgITuDINAL SECTION

TRANSvERSAL SECTION

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The cube of the office cantilevers out into the loading level outside, allowing the manager in charge of the boathouse constant views of all patrons using the boathouse. This cantilever allows for surveillance to the patrons out in the water, ensuring their safety. A split level glazed wall allows for constant surveillance into the skin boat storage bellow and the observation deck above. These simple moves come together to form a design that is both aesthetically pleasing and also highly pragmatic.

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The EQuINOx project was conceived as a sister project to the earlier Caesar’s Park Boathouse, and as such they share opposite sides of the same site along the milwaukee River. The program consists of creating a school for the creation of traditional skin boats, and a small residence for the owner of the school in the back of the building. These skin boats would then be transported across the bridge in order to be rented out in the aforementioned boathouse across the river. After much deliberation, it was decided that the design exploration would take its starting point from the idea that the program can and would be best accommodated in a simple double story box; that the architectural richness of the project would be achieved via skin and material options.

EQuINOX SkIN BOaT SchOOLmilwaukee, WILight Industrial

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Page 38: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

With this in mind I set out to create a long linear box scheme that would allow plentiful natural light to enter the space, while exploring different high performance building skins. The double skin facade is composed of Structural Insulated Panels (SIPs) clad in cement board, with a corrugated metal screen hung in front of them. This metal screen adds articulation to the façade and allows for clearstory windows with deep metal window frames to punch through the SIP panel walls in order to bring light across the workshop space bellow. This corrugated screen is continued over the railings of the balconies of the attached residence, unifying the building’s façade. Above the workshop space a suspended gallery, allowing onlookers and students to view the creation of the skin boats bellow. The workshop space is further illuminated by low level frosted glass openings in the walls. Because of these openings and double skin when seen from afar, EQuINOx brings to mind the idea of the classic modernist box on pilotis; a long narrow box that extends into space and is seemingly suspended in the air. SITE PLAN

gROuND fLOOR PLAN

1RST fLOOR PLAN

2ND fLOOR PLAN

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NORTH ELEvATIONSOuTH ELEvATION

KIT Of PARTS DIAgRAm

structural insulated panel roof panels

long-span steel beam structure

corrugated metal screen wall

metal window frames & light shelves

structural insulated panel walls

steel truss

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green roof insert

structural insulated roof panel

long-span steel beams and columns

frosted glass window wall

structural insulated wall panel

fly ash concrete floor slab

corrugated metal screen

metal window frames & light shelves

WALL SECTION

low e-glass clearstory windows

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Page 42: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

UP F.E.

C.

F.E.

C.

3ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

8ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

8ft CLEARANCE

3ft CLEARANCE

ATS

T-40and 41 T-43

GENERATOR

CT-40 CT-41

S

D

D

D

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T

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STO

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S TOP

1 2 3

A1

B

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1A 2A

A2

E1

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939291 94 95

ZB

ZC

ZA

20' - 7 1/2" 9' - 4 1/2" 18' - 10 1/2" 11' - 1 1/2" 19' - 2" 100' - 0"

6' -

8"

7' -

10"

60' -

0"

15' -

6"

14' - 3 1/2" 5' - 0"

19' - 3 1/2"

7' -

1"5

' - 6

"19

' - 0

"24

' - 0

"19

' - 0

"

BUILDING40

BUILDING41

BUILDING43

chEmEkETa cOmmuNITy cOLLEGE BuILDING 40Salem, ORhigher Ed. administrative Buildingw/ Studio 3 architecture, Inc.

SITE PLAN

Principal in Charge: Leonard LodderProject Team:Leonard LodderAbraham N. RodríguezScott mcDonald

10,000 Sf; 2-Story Higher-Ed. Administrative Office Building. Includes collaborative work spaces in both floors, multiple conference rooms, work room and break room that can be combined into one large room, along with an exterior staff break terrace. Designed with sustainable design features. Currently under construction.

Responsibilities Included: Schematic Design, Design Development, Construction Documents, Casework Drawings, Project Coordination, Bid Documentation, Permits Coordination, initial bid/construction meetings.

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Page 44: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

A1 B C D E FA3A2 E1A 123 1A2A

A1BCDEF A3 A2E1 A 1 2 31A 2A

A1 B C D E FA3A2 E1A 123 1A2A

A1BCDEF A3 A2E1 A 1 2 31A 2A

NORTH ELEvATION

SOuTH ELEvATION

EAST ELEvATION

WEST ELEvATION

A1 B C D E FA3A2 E1A

1/4" = 1'-0"1 SECTION 01

123 1A2A

1/4" = 1'-0"1 SECTION 03LONg SECTION SHORT SECTION

reCeption Counter

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Page 46: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

Principal in Charge: gene BolanteProject Team:gene BolanteScott mcDonaldAbraham N. Rodríguez

mixed-use New Construction consisting of 4 story wood frame over slab on grade building with 75 multi-family units and 6,700 square feet of commercial/retail space. 20% of the housing units to be affordable housing. Designed to meet LEED Silver Standards. Currently under construction.

Responsibilities Included: Construction Documents, Code Review, Accessibility Review & Revisions, Project Renderings.

ThE WILmOREPortland, ORmixed used multi-Familyw/ Studio 3 architecture, Inc.

SITE PLAN

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SITE PLAN

Principal in Charge: Donald CopperProject manager: Daniel Sumita Project Team:Elizabeth fragosoAbraham N. RodríguezEduardo Bodmer Leah Lehr

126,507 Sf; 3-Story middle School.Includes green Roof over 25% of the roof area, 1-1/2” Story Library, Science Rooms (5), Art Room (1), Computer labs (2), multi-Purpose Rooms (2), full service Kitchen/Dining and gym with Stage for School Assembly functions. LEED gold Certified. Recently completed.

Responsibilities Included: Interior Design, Construction Documents, Design and documentation of casework/furniture. fIRST fLOOR PLAN

THIRD fLOOR PLAN

SECOND fLOOR PLAN W 55TH ST

S ST

. LOu

IS A

vE

IRENE c. hERNaNDEz mIDDLE SchOOL chicago,ILk-12 Educationalw/ GREc architects, LLc.

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Page 52: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK
Page 53: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK
Page 54: Abraham N. Rodriguez | WORK

The following sketches represent some of the sites we studied in the Study Abroad program I participated during my junior year of undergrad. While we studied historical, modern, and contemporary European architecture; early 20th century modernism made the most lasting impression on me in the trip, thus these are the buildings that most frequently appeared on my

EuROPE SkETch JOuRNaLOn location sketching in various countries in Europe

BARCELONA PAvILLION 1

BARCELONA PAvILLION 2 TORRE TELEfONICA, BARCELONA

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CASA BATLLO, BARCELONAEvRY CATHEDRAL

NOTRE DAmE Du HAuT

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503.953.3994archinect.com/[email protected]

aBraham n. rodríguez assoCiate aia, leed ga