portfolio lite
TRANSCRIPT
Hanock City Masterplan
Hanok City Illustrative Planmedium: sketchup, kerkythea, photoshopJonathan Moore + Erin Guido
Top feft: Hanok City Pedestrian Mall Winter Rendermedium: sketchup, kerkythea, photoshop
Right: Hanok City Pedestrian Mall Section Rendermedium: sketchup, photoshop
key - axon
ResidentialCommercialHigh SchoolGreen RoofRooftop Open SpaceGround Level Public SpaceDeveloperMandated DedicationNegotiated Public SpaceUnder ConstructionUnderground Parking
Above: Block Level Phasing and Programming Diagrammedium: sketchup, illustrator, photoshopUP 631 PHYSICAL PLANNING + URBAN DESIGN
CAPSTONEfinal publication phase; pedestrian mall highlightsite location: yongsan-gu, seoul, south korea
100,000 people living in working per square-kilometer; provisions for a rapidly aging population; no greater than 50% residential land use
These were the contest rules for the Vertical Cities Asia 2012 International Design Competition.
Our studio’s plan uses an arching park system to connect the site with the future Yongsan Park to the site’s east and the Han River to the sout and west. At the site’s center, the park intersects with Yongsan station, one of Seoul’s busiest transit and commercial hubs.
Additional transit systems and a highly-calculated provision of services also help make this a sustainable nexus of live/work/play opportunities for all ages.
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Lower Town Revitalization
playground
learning poolridge field
tree stand
pond gardens
DINESHOP
WO
RK
Lower Town Riverfront Blocks and Parkmedium: sketchup Above: Lower Town Park Plan
medium: sketchup, hand sketch, photoshopJonathan Moore + Michelle Lam
Right: Lower Town Park Squaremedium: Illustrator, photoshopJonathan Moore + Michelle Lam
Top Right: Lower Town New Streetscapemedium: illustrator, photoshopJonathan Moore + Michelle Lam
UP 518 PHYSICAL PLANNING WORKSHOPfinal projectsite location: lower town, ann arbor, michigan
Ann Arbor is known for being a bustling college town with a vibrant downtown scene. Lower Town however is one area that continually vexes developers and planners alike and remains a under-utilized part of the city’s urban fabric.
As part of a semester-long investigation of the area we split into teams to explore design solutions for smaller parts of Lower Town. Another student and myself focused on part of the riverfront that runs through the area. Curently much of the space is occupied by an uninspiring park, storage facility and parking lot for a power company.
We sought to reinvigorate the area with a mixed-use residential development and an interactive learning-park. As Lower Town is also known for an abudance of drab student housing, this would seek to attract more families and working professionals to the area, which is in close proximity to the University of Michigan Health System and local Amtrak station.
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Chevron Thailand Aviation BaseDYNAMIC ENGINEERING CONSULTANTSfront-end engineering design report for additional workssite location: nakorn sri thammarat, thailand
As part of the Aviation Consolidation Project, Chevron requested the design of additional facilities to better support its operations. The additions included interior work, such as: new officies, a rennovation of the counter check-in facilities, new hangar workshops; and new external facilities such as: a covered walkway, shaded van parking, a new waiting lounge, a new ramp office, and a shaded smoking area.
In addition to writing and revising written portions of the report, I worked with DEC engineers and Fenn architects (DEC partners) to draft 3d models in Sketchup from 2d plans. Specifically, I modeled the hangar workshops, waiting lounge, shaded van parking, ramp office, shaded smoking area and edited portions of the facade.
Top left: Hangar Workshop Perspectivemedium: sketchup, photoscape
Right: Additional Work Modelsmedium: sketchup, autocad
Above: Ramp Office Perspectivemedium: sketchup, photoscape
Chevron Aviation Base medium: sketchup, autocadJonathan Moore + Fenn Designers
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Waterfront CottagePERSONAL DESIGN PROJECTfuture getaway housesite location: to be imagined...
Growing up along the Maine and Massachusetts coasts and visiting their many lakes I have long desired to one day design and build my own small waterfront home. This desire was further stoked while landscaping during undergrad summers.
While this effort is modest and decidedly amateur, I feel I still capture the essential elements I want in a future design: a yin-yang layout with intimate and open room and light configurations, a library with a water view and ample deck space. I used dimensions from Sarah Susanka’s The Not So Big House as a starting point and chose lots of wood and stone materials to give it an old and naturalistic feel.
Waterfront Cottage Rear Perspectivemedium: sketchup, photoshop
Top Left: Cottage Interiormedium: sketchup, photoshop
Right: Kitchen/ Library Sectionmedium: sketchup, photoshop
Above: Front Elevationmedium: sketchup
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