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TOM
FRYER
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YSoA 2219b Craft, Materials, and Computer-Aided ArtistryInstructor Kevin Rotheroe
Semester 6, Spring 2012
Contents
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Tom Fryer is interested in exploring the potentialof architecture and urbanism to both represent andalter contemporary conditions.
Coming from a fine arts and design background,Tom decided to pursue architecture following aperiod of living and studying in Tokyo, a city whereboth the legacy of urban thinking, and lack thereof,is writ large. He is currently a student in the MArchI program at The Yale School of Architecture, due tograduate in 2012.
Tom,s work has been exhibited in Australia, Japan,
Italy and the United States. His work has beenpublished in wallpaper*, Object, Monument, Muteand Yale
,s Retrospecta.
Architecture
Surface Translations 6
Seam 10
Move 16
Replication 20
Yale Building Project 28
The Yale Contemporary 36
Dun Laoghaire Public Baths 46
CoLocation Tower 64
Brooklyn-Queens Waterway 68
Visualization + Fabrication
Blue Murder Studios Partition Wall 72
Visualization II 74Visualization III 76
Visualization IV 80
Architecture and Books 82
Rome: Continuity And Change 86
Inner Worlds 88
InterruptionFor Anna Zmyslowska 90
Writing
DIY Lesson / Oyster Magazine 94
Late Inversions / Peter Eisenman 96
MetaRegionalism / Retrospecta 2010 - 11 98
Other Works
Mute Magazine 102
Anime Lighting System 104
Atelier Van Lieshout, 2002 106
Workshopped 108
Tomato For Kenwood 110
Nelson Traveling Scholarship 112
TOM
FRYER
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Peter de Breteville
Semester 2, Spring 2010
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Architecture
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Surface Translations
1011a Design StudioInstructor Joyce Hsiang
Semester 1, Fall 2009
1/8 = 1! Model
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which is subdivided, cut and folded to spatially amplify prevailing weather
conditions in a self supporting structure. Within the minimal structure,precincts are generated to observe the verticality of rainwater passage,the horizontality of wind movement, and the slow interplay of shadow
movement upon the complex surfaces.
Architecture
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1011a Design StudioInstructor Joyce Hsiang
Semester 1, Fall 2009
section aa
a
a
Surface Translations
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section bb
b
b
Sections
Architecture
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SEAM called for a landscape treatment and kayak rental facility for
Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens.
This proposal generates a new transitional topography between the
East River and the park. The decomposition of an implied super latticeof repeated modular forms in relation to topographic surface generates
moments of legibility, emergence, and spatial containment.
Above
Programmatic Diagram
Opposite
Pedestrian Circulation AnalysisWith A. Forman
Architecture
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View From East River Towards Park
Architecture
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1011a Design StudioInstructor Joyce Hsiang
Semester 1, Fall 2009
Matrix AssemblyIn Folded Steel 1 and Concrete 2
Long Span Part In Concrete 3
Seam
1
2
3
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Architecture
Lower, Left And Right
1/64 = 1! Model in CNC Milled Foam
Top Right
Waterfront Perspective
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1011a Design StudioInstructor Joyce Hsiang
Semester 1, Fall 2009
1/32 = 1! Sectional Model
Move
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Architecture
1/64 = 1! Model
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1011a Design StudioInstructor Joyce Hsiang
Semester 1, Fall 2009
Perspective - Main Courtyard
Move
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Peter de Breteville
Semester 2, Spring 2010
Replication
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Using the precedent of the anomylous municipal brick vernacular foundin traditional New Haven stick frame neighborhoods, this proposal
confronts issues of privacy, membership and access in a residentialconcept for at risk youth.
Tectonic / Circulation Diagrams
Architecture
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Peter de Breteville
Semester 2, Spring 2010
LeftSectional Perspective
AboveNew Haven Brick Structure Precedents
Replication
SENIOR ROOMS
DINING / MEETINGROOM
COMMONROOM
SUPERVISOR
APARTMENT
SENIOR ROOMS
JUNIOR ROOMS
BATHROOM LEVEL
(SPLIT)
STAIRS
KITCHENSTUDY
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WEST STREET
WASHINGTONAV
ENUE
Site Plan
Architecture
The typical New Haven neighborhood is comprised ofwood-frame constructed houses. There are prominentexceptions to this rule in the form of brick buildings,of a similar scale to residential structures, butusually conceived as club houses, meeting places,certain small businesses.
The requirements of a home for children who areliving in close proximity to abusive parents or
relatives are unique. This New Haven prcedent is anexcellent type to be deployed for this brief. The brickcommunicates the status of the home as performinga particular service within the community, andspeaking to structural integrity.
While fostering a domestic environment, this projectnegotiates the line between a public and privateprogram. In compensation for the opaque materialityof the envelope, a light-filled frontal volume isachieved with a triple height space and a frosted,glazed street facade.
Tectonically, the structure is informed by a requisite
fire wall on the eastern lot line. From this wall, thenew envelope spans across the short dimension ofthe lot, establishing a wrapping logic. Toward therear of the building, the envelope flares open to catchthe southern light.
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Peter de Breteville
Semester 2, Spring 2010
Sections
Replication
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AboveExterior (Night) Perspective
Model Photos
Architecture
Architecture
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Peter de Breteville
Semester 2, Spring 2010
Interior Perspective
ReplicationReplication
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Plans - Ground to Fourth Floors
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Architecture
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1012b Building ProjectInstructors Alan Organschi, Adam Hopfner, Paul Brouard
Semester 2, Spring 2010
1/16 = 1! model Team D approached the design of their house from the perspective ofaccessibility. A spatial sequence was articulated with a shaped ceiling
simple layout that expands in both front and rear to become wheelchair-accesible outdoor areas.
Yale Building Project 2010
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Architecture
The ceiling reinforces public and private moments by spatially
Provided for the able bodied inhabitants, while retaining a visual
apartment arranged in a T-shaped plan to create a long living area/
kitchen and a bedroom (extending perpendicular to the living area) thatgenerates the dormer.
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Second Floor Plan
Architecture
0 5 15
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1012b Building ProjectInstructors Alan Organschi, Adam Hopfner, Paul Brouard
Semester 2, Spring 2010
West Elevation
Yale Building Project 2010
A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
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Architecture
Sectional Progression
AA BB
CC DD
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1012b Building Projectinstructors Adam Hopfner, Paul Brouard
Semester 2, spring 2010
Yale Building Project 2010Build Out
http://www.architecture.yale.edu/sites/BuildingProject/bp10/
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First Year MArch I Participation: May - June 2010
Completion (BP Interns): July - August 2010
Architecture
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Mimi Hoang
Semester 3, Fall 2010
Perspective - York Street
Yale Contemporary Art Museum
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The design for the Yale Contemporary divides the programmaticagenda into two distinct branches. The museum contains an
archival sequence that houses temporary exhibitions in addition to acontemporary sequence that houses the permanent collection. Thesesequences of the two programmatic spaces alternate across a central
atrium via a set of crossing staircases.
The exterior of the building is massive folded concrete form thatinvites exploration and interaction from the street. The atrium occurs
at the apex of the fold, where the concrete breaks to expose theprogrammatic crossover space above the atrium. Circulation becomesevent, with visitors moving beneath the belly of museum, up into its
broken interior, or through the site from York to High Streets.
Architecture
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The two sequences, contemporary (permanent) and archival (always
requirements of exhibiting pieces from the archive call for spaces with
The contemporary sequence inhabits the interstices between thearchival galleries, and are therefore articulates the structure of the
robust systems to support the extreme loads of modern sculpture.
Interior Perspective, High Street Contemporary Gallery
Architecture
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YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Mimi Hoang
Semester 3, Fall 2010
Perspective - Rear Courtyard
Yale Contemporary Art Museum
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Ground Floor Plan
Architecture
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2F
3F
Yale Contemporary Art Museum
YSoA 1021a Design StudioInstructor Mimi Hoang
Semester 3, Fall 2010
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4F
5F
Floor Plans
Architecture
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1101a Advanced Design StudioInstructors Yvonne Farrell, Shelley McNamara
Semester 5, Fall 2011
The scheme proposes the removal of the existing baths and anoccupation of the new topography, the newly exposed edges, corners
and surfaces of which are used to reconnect the severed seafrontpaths and establish a new type of promenade. Bluffs are inhabited,stairs traverse granite faces and paths carve and ramp over the
surface of the land.
against the power of the wind and the sea, cradling and enfolding their
occupants as they enter and exit.
Dun Laoghaire Public Baths
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Dun Laoghaire Public Baths
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1101a Advanced Design StudioInstructors Yvonne Farrell, Shelley McNamara
Semester 5, Fall 2011
Perspective - Main Pool Deck
Dun Laoghaire Public Baths
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Architecture
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Dun Laoghaire Public Baths
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1101a Advanced Design StudioInstructors Yvonne Farrell, Shelley McNamara
Semester 5, Fall 2011
1/16 = 1! Sectional Model
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Perspective - Changing Pavilion Interior
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CoLocation Tower
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2211a Structures and Facades for Tall BuildingsInstructors Kyoung Sun Moon
Semester 5, Fall 2011
On-Screen Presentation
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Colocation describes the physical adjacency of servers to a dedicated,custom data cable to achieve an extremely high rate of data transfers,
represents a new typology in the evolution of very tall buildings. The
main issue with such systems is cooling.
Perspective from Lake Michigan with Steve Dinnen
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CoLocation Tower
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2211a Structures and Facades for Tall BuildingsInstructors Kyoung Sun Moon
Semester 5, Fall 2011
Systems Diagram and Programming TopPerspective - Sky Lobby
BottomPerspective - From Street Level
core diagrid structure assembly
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This project develops a formal and programmatic response to therequirements of colocation, for the Chicago Spire site. There, prevailing
winds are exploited to cool the server banks, with the core of the towerreaching beyond the envelope, creating an intake for air from outside.
to generate electricity. The modularity of server systems and their
frequent upgrades necessitate a dedicated vertical transit corridor thataccesses two opposing facades and their associated winds.
Perspective - From Lake Michigan
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Brooklyn-Queens Waterway
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4226a Ecological Urban Design
Instructors Alexander J. Felson
Semester 5, Fall 2011
Top Left Sectional Study Of Brooklyn-Queens ExpresswayTop Right Strategic Mapping
Opposite Gateway Underpass Reconnecting Hope Street, Brooklyn
To be Published in
Retrospecta 2011 / 2012
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This project proposes the transformation of the Brooklyn-QueensExpressway into a peak event stormwater infrastructure. The
anachronistic highway is rebuilt as an elevated expressway abovethe old road, which is transformed into a storm water canal. Thiscanal seeks to mitigate peak storm effects in the lower catchments
of Brooklyn, particularly seeking to dissipate the impact of future tidalstorm surges.
At the same time, the canal deploys architectural and ecologicaldevices that will reconnect neighborhoods severed by the BQE, provide
green space in a highly urban environment, and initiate ecologicalurban experimentation sites.
with Christine Dang-Vu, Brian Tang and Dinah Zhan
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YSoA 2211a Structures and Facades for Tall BuildingsInstructor Kyoung Sun Moon
Semester 5, Fall 2011