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Architectural Design Portfolio

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My graduate work from my last two years at the College of Architecture - Texas Tech University.

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  • Architectural Design

    Portfolio

  • Daniel BudkeCollege of Archietcture

    Texas Tech University 2015

  • Architecture Museum of DallasProfessor Daniel Nowak

    Texas Ballet TheaterDr. Elizabeth Louden

    Chatman Hill Historic CenterProfessor Joseph Aranha

    Cinco de Mayo RedevelopmentProfessor Joseph Aranha

    Spring 2013

    Fall 2013

    Fall 2014

    Spring 2014

  • Architecture Museum of Dallas1919 Woodall Rodgers Freeway, Dallas, TX 75201

    The Architecture Museum of Dallas, located in the Art District, serves to create an environment for the appreciation and understanding of architecture. Once a hobby of the elite, today architecture needs to be distilled to a lay persons understanding so that they may fully comprehend the importance and skill implemented by an architect and to more fully enjoy a building and its secrets.

    north harwood street

    wood

    all ro

    dgers

    free

    way

    II

    II

    V

    V

    0 50 100 150 200

    Site Map

  • 8-63

    17

    17

    17

    17

    17

    16-6

    8-63

    17

    17

    17

    17

    17

    16-6

    0 17 34 68 102

    II

    V

    Longitudinal Section

    Latitudinal Section

    The museum explores the history of American architectur with a focus on the 19th and 20th centuries use of masonry, steel and glass. Working in contrast with the surrounding buildings the exterior of the building is as much a learning tool as the interior.

  • 82

    07

    43

    16

    67

    69

    70

    71

    65

    64

    49

    50

    51

    88

    55

    54

    53

    58

    56

    57

    58

    59

    63

    64

    63

    08

    09

    61

    89

    11

    12

    17

    20

    13

    fan room

    otb

    elec.

    teleco

    m.

    ota

    0 17 34 68

    Fourth Level - Library

    The museum serves the public as a resource for education and exhibition in the second floor galleries, third floor Dallas AIA offices and the fourth floor library and archives. These spaces encourage the ongoing discussion of architecture.

  • 12

    44

    16

    86

    86

    91

    72

    93

    83

    84

    77

    78

    76

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    74

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    94

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    95

    10

    11

    85

    11

    12

    17

    20

    13

    14

    F

    F

    RE

    RE

    F

    F

    RE

    RE

    F

    F

    RE

    F

    F

    RE

    RE

    DW

    DW

    DW

    DW

    DW

    DW

    DW

    fan room

    elec.

    teleco

    m.

    0 17 34 68

    Fifth Level - Restaurant

    The fifth floor of the museum offers wide views of the Dallas skyline not genereally seen by the public. The restaurant and cafe on the ground level provide a place to sit and enjoy the scene. Places of respite allow the user to reflect and absorb what they have seen.

  • Texas Ballet Theater1012 N. Main St, Fort Worth, TX 76164

    The Texas Ballet, a established cultural institution in Fort Worth, has found a new home along the expandion of Trinty River Bypass Canal and the historic North Main Street in a revitalized commerical neighborhood. This new cultural hub connects Downtown and the Stockyards and pays homage to Fort Worths history with both famous and infamous periods including origins tied to the KKK.

    PROPOSED PASSENGER

    RAIL STATION

    PROPOSED SHOWERS AND

    STORAGE LOCKERFOR RIVER ACTIVITES

    OUTDOOR

    STAGE

    BOAT LAUNCH

    PARKING GARAGE

    UPTOWNFOOD TRUCK/BUS

    PARKING

    HISTORIC MARINEDISTRICT

    NORTH MAIN STREET

    NORTH COMM

    ERCE STREET

    NORTH CALHOUN STREET

    NORT

    HEAS

    T 10T

    H ST

    REET

    TRINITY RIVER

    TRIN

    ITY

    RIV

    ER B

    YPAS

    S CH

    ANN

    EL

    NORTHSIDE THEATEROF BALLET AND DANCE

    Site Map

    0 50 100 150 200

  • The historic building was built in 1924 and rebuilt in 1925 after the auditorium was firebombed and burned to the ground. The building continued to be used by the Ku Klux Klan until 1930 when the Leonard Brothers used the building as a warehouse and a boxing arena. The building was sold to the Ellis Pecan Co Bulding in 1945 which operated in the building until 1999 after which the building was left abandoned. Each owner saw a new use and new imfamy added to the buildings history. The expansion of the Trinty River now places this monument on the river front where the buildings use from the exterior is just as important as its interior use. An outdoor stage, shower area and boat dock offer public use and access.

  • PRACTICE/TEACHING STAGESTOR STOR

    INT.ROOM

    WAITINGROOM

    STOR

    BALLETMASTER

    LOCKERROOM-F

    LOCKERROOM-M

    OTBSOLOISTS DRESSING ROOMS

    OTB

    OTB

    OTB

    BARSPACE

    UPPER LOBBY

    EX

    HA

    UST

    AIR

    SH

    AFT

    RE

    TUR

    NA

    IR SH

    AFT

    0 15 30 60 90 120

  • The historic building over its life has been stripped of the original use and fixtures of a 4000 seat auditorium. Instead of restoring the auditorium to its original condition, a rehabilitation scheme that respects the ruin of the past and provides a contrasting backdrop for the new addition of a 2500 seat theater and ballet school. The public areas honor the blending of past and present as the dance studio looks to the future of the program. The Texas Ballet Theater has found an illustrious and infamous building to call its new home, an appropriate return to the buildings original purpose.

  • Cinco de Mayo Redevelopment5 de Mayo, San Andrs Cholula 72810 PUE

    The new development of downtown Cholula San Andres south of the large city of Puebla in Southern Mexico seeks to take advantage of this quiet village suburb nestled mere minutes from a large university, an important religious and archaeological site and an inspiring view of two ancient volcanoes linked romantically by local legend. The project seeks to attract the student population south.

    F

    F

    4 PONIENTE 4 ORIENTE

    6 PONIENTE 6 ORIENTE

    5 de

    MAY

    O

    BRKROOMLAUD.

    LOBBY20 X 19 VISITING

    FACULTY APT18 X 32

    VISITING FACULTY APT

    176 X 32

    OFFICE

    LOBBY

    OPEN AIR RETAIL

    OPEN AIR RETAIL

    RETAIL156 X 32

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RETAIL32 X 32

    RETAIL156 X 44

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RESIDENT COURTYARD386 X 32

    32 X 156

    OFF. OFF.

    MAIL

    RETAIL156 X 32

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RETAIL156 X 346

    RETAIL32 X 32

    RETAIL156 X 44

    SECURITY156 X 156

    RETAIL156 X 54

    RETAIL156 X 48

    RETAIL156 X 48

    RETAIL156 X 48

    RETAIL20 X 48

    OFFICE536 X 156

    CAFE32 X 156

    GYM54 X 51

    0 16 32 64 96 160 224ft

    0 4 8 16 24 40 56m

    Site Map

  • F42 X 124

    F

    86 X 55

    69 X 156

    F

    15 6 X 1410

    15 6 X 53

    76 X 91076 X 910

    F

    15 6 X 156

    56 X 62

    5 X 88410 X 79

    42 X 124

    223 sqr ft

    464 sqr ft

    454 sqr ft

    0 .5 1 1.5 2 3 4 6m

    0 2 4 8 12 20ft

    The student apartments arranged in asingle unit and two double units; one single level and the other double level.

  • Chatman Hill Historic CenterChatman Hill Neighborhood, Lubbock, TX, 79404

    The Chatman Hill Neighborhood in Lubbock has an interesting history in comparison to the rest of the city. This neighborhood is historically black from its first residents arriving in the area in 1917 with the first church established the following year. Segregated to that area by a proposed city ordinance and public feeling, the black community of Lubbock thrived here for a few decades until the late

    0 25 50 100 200 300 ft

    Historic BuildingsReligious BuildingsExisting Buildings

    Residential LotsVacant LotsReligious Property Multi-Family PropertyCommerical PropertyPublic Green Space

  • Wildflower Garden Wildflower Garden

    HerbGarden

    Commmunity Gardens 10 x 20 ft Lots

    Commmunity Gardens 10 x 20 ft Lots

    Garden Shed Garden Shed

    Basketball and Four Square Courts

    Permeable Pavers w

    ith Gravel

    Permeable Pavers w

    ith Gravel

    Comm

    unity Studios

    Comm

    unity Workshops

    Market Pavillion

    Job Services

    Ella Iles Community Center

    Ghost StructureSculpture Park

    Chatman HillClinic

    Chatman Hill Museum of Black Culture

    StorytellersArea

    Memory Park

    Wheatley O

    pen Air Library

    Visiting ArtistGallery

    J.A. Chatman Home

    Jolyne Bed &Breakfast

    Pocket Park

    Mt. GileadBaptist ChurchCarver Early

    Learning Center

    Pocket Park

    26th Street

    23rd Street

    Cedar Avenue

    Date Avenue

    Elm Avenue

    Fir Avenue

    Eldery Rental Housing - 10 units

    Single Parent Units

    Single Parent UnitsSingle Parent U

    nits

    Murals Along the Exterior W

    alls

    Bus Stop

    Bus Stop

    Bus Stop

    Historic BuildingsReligious BuildingsExisting ResidentialCommerical BuildingsPrivate YardsPlayround

    GrassBuffalo Grass

    0 25 50 100 200 300 ft

    MulchWater Storage

    1950s. The passage of the Urban Renewal Act in 1957 was the beginning of the end for the neighborhood. The renewal board in Lubbock took advantage to the new law to remove blighted areas of the city; Chatman Hill was the first of the new experimental city planning efforts. The neighborhood lost over 90% of its buildings. Over 350 homes alone were demolishedin the neighborhood alone. Besides the hospital and the churches, only ten or so buildings survived the revitalization efforts. The history lost to the future.

  • 0 10 20 30 50 70 ft Chatman Hill Museumof Black Culture

    The historic center of the neighborhood holds a collection of the buildings with the most historic integrity. Dr. Chatmans Hospital, Nurses Home and house sit across from the Iles Elementary School. The residents of the area are older and represent the living history of the neighborhood. The inclusion of new construction in the plan allow the residents to have a hand in the future of their neighborhood. A museum honoring the history and culture of the neighborhood sits mirrored across from the hospital and new commerical buildings support the residents capability to be self-sufficient as they were long before the renewal board.

  • 0 5 10 20 60 70 ft

    Open Air Library

  • Than

    k yo

    u fo

    r yo

    ur in

    tere

    st in

    my

    wor

    k. I

    t has

    bee

    n a

    plea

    sure

    to p

    rodu

    ce.