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portfolio landscape and urban design peter james salamon

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portfolio landscape and urban design

peter james salamon

My fascination with cities has always been a guiding

factor in life. From a young age, I came to realize that

being involved with the creation of such monumental

places was what I wanted to do. I feel I have taken a

different path to design than most. Although always

creative, art was ironically was a weak point. Through

school and other endeavors, I have gained an appre-

ciation for design and a passion for digital representa-

tion. With a background in landscape architecture

and urban design, I am excited to contribute to a more

sustainable urban future.

LanguagesEnglishSpanish

ProgramsMS WordExcelPowerpointGIS

Adobe CS6PhotoshopIllustratorIndesignLightroom

ArchitectureRhino 3ds MaxAutoCADRevitSketchup

SCASLA+DBIA Technology officer (2010-2012)Responsible for operations involving shop equipment, electronic communications, and production

LAbash: Miami, Florida Ohio State representative (2012)Attended lectures, charretes, and presentations with landscape students and professionals

OCASLA AwardHonorable Mention Aetna Community Garden (2012)Maintained and troubleshot machines, oversaw lab activity,

2nd Place Knowlton School of Architecture 24-hour competition (2012)Competed against 30 other teams for redesign of campus corridor

Batey Rehab Project Volunteer Dominican Republic (2013)Built homes, conducted site analysis, partake in daily village life

Savannah College of Art and DesignMaster of Urban Design (2013-2015 expected)

The Ohio State University Bachelor of Science, Landscape Architecture (2008-2012)Minor, City and Regional Planning

Landscape Architects NetworkWriter (2012-present) Writer, content contributor and product designer for online publication centered on landscape architecture. Wrote articles dealing with urban issues, art, sports venues, presentations etc.

Oakland Nursery+Design Installation intern (Summer 2012) Worked under designers and foremen on a design-build construction crew in Columbus, Ohio. Scope of worked ranged from small residential to commercial and government projects.

Knowlton School of Architecture Laser cutting lab assistant (2009-2012)Assisted students with models, Gained extensive knowledge of Universal and Epilog Laser cutters

Peter James Salamon [email protected] (440)-289-5987

Factors Walk 1-6

Upper 9th Ward 7-14

Weinland Park 15-22

Whittier Peninsula 23-26

Dublin Village Center 27-30

City Market 31-34

Gallery of Scholars 35-38

Mashville 39-46

factors walk

1 brief

[ 1 ]

Located between the River Street shops and the bluff on

which the city sits, Factors Walk is an important piece of

Savannah history. Formerly a market for cotton “factors” to

sell their product, it is now used for parking, along with a

few rogue cafes and businesses, such as a pedicab service.

This was an urban analysis project, with the goal being

to dissect the different levels and features of this half mile

cobblestone walk.

SAVANNAH, GEORGIA SCAD Autumn 2013 | Urban Design Studio 1 | Professor Ryan Madson

[ 2 ]

[ 3 ] factors walk

parking

Bay Street Level

Upper Walk

Lower Walk

stairsprivatepublic

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 4 ]

[ 5 ] factors walk

Historical Warehouse

Typical Present Condition

Atypical Present Condition

Atypical Present Condition

Atypical Present Condition

[ 6 ]1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Diagrams top to bottom:Upper/Lower WalkWall LocationVegetationPedestrian Circulation/Vehicular Ramps

upper 9th ward

2 brief

[ 7 ]

This New Orleans case study began with a site visit to the

Upper Ninth Ward. This neighborhood, mostly located in a

lower ground “bowl” of the city, has not received the same

attention as the lower part of the ward. The main obstacle

for future development is rising sea levels in tandem with

high rates of soil subsidence. “Portraits” were created

to determine positive and negative qualities of different

site aspects, and composited together to inform design

decisions. Our concept was based on limitations of space,

how to adopt new limits for future livability in New Orleans.

upper 9th ward

[ 8 ]

new orleans , louisiana SCAD Autumn 2013 | Urban Design Studio 2 | Professor LaRaine Papa Montgomery

Portrait Analysis

High/Low Building Density Food Access Transportation CompositeSoil Quality

+ -

[ 9 ] upper 9th ward

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 10 ]

[ 11 ] upper 9th ward

[ 12 ]1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

[ 13 ] upper 9th ward

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 14 ]

[ 15 ]

3 brief

Featured here are three post-industrial sites, Timken Steel,

Clark Grave Vaults and Columbus Coated fabrics. The CCF

site to the north is currently being redeveloped as housing,

so conceptually it had to mesh with the older housing stock.

The Timken site to the east is a blank slate, and becomes

the economic driver, including business incubation and

commercial. The CGV site had a long, narrow building

that we proposed saving and gutting to become a farmer’s

market and beacon for sustainable practices. Timken and

and CGV are connected by a linear park that traverses the

top of the parking garage “ramp.”

weinland park

columbus, ohio OSU Winter 2012 | Landscape studio 8 | Professor Jake Boswell

[ 16 ]

N. 4th St

N. 4th St

E. 5th Ave

E. 5th Ave Cleveland Ave.

[ 17 ] weinland park

Program Storm water Vehicular Pedestrian

N. 4th St

N. 4th St

E. 5th Ave

E. 5th Ave Cleveland Ave.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 18 ]

[ 19 ] weinland park

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 20 ]

A gutted industrial building becomes a hub for local food vendors, as well as a model for sustainable storm water practices.

[ 21 ] weinland park

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 22 ]

whittier peninsula

4 brief

Whittier Peninsula is an underdeveloped park space along

the Scioto River. Current tenants include an impound lot and

a nature center. The focus was to enhance the experience

around the nature center and remove the lot, while providing

better overall connectivity to the city. The concept of this

hand-drawn plan was urban health, so athletics and a local

food plaza are featured.

[ 23 ]

columbus, ohio OSU Winter 2010 | Landscape Studio 6 | Professor Lawrence Walquistwhittier peninsula

[ 24 ]

whittier peninsula[ 25 ]

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 26 ]

dublin village center

5 brief

This studio worked in conjunction with developers to

forumulate concepts for a tired strip mall that had been

on the decline for the last decade. Improved visibility,

walkability, and proper branding were all driving factors in

forming this master plan as a small group. To the right is a

model for the entire site placed into its context, as well as

my individually detailed portion of the plan that was focused

on entertainment.

[ 27 ]

dublin, ohio OSU Spring 2011| Landscape Studio 6 | Professor Jesus Laradublin village center

[ 28 ]

[ 29 ] dublin village center

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 30 ]

Phase 1 Phase 2 Phase 3

city market

6 brief

This pedestrian-only street is both a tourist destination and

a local hangout. The restaurant, bars, and art galleries

provide for a vibrant plaza that works despite its poor

layout and crumbling infratructure. The purpose here

was to design a space that reflected the quality of existing

attractions, and related more to the context than the current

scattershot pattern of planter boxes, all while integrating

water collection in central gardens.

[ 31 ]

savannah, georgia SCAD Autumn 2013 | Urban Design Studio 1 | Professor Ryan Madsoncity market

[ 32 ]

[ 33 ] city market

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 34 ]

gallery of scholars

7 brief

This group effort earned second place among twenty entries

in the annual 24-hour competition at the Knowlton School

of Architecture. The project area is a bland, but heavily-

travelled corridor of campus that passes the business,

architecture, and engineering schools before ending at the

oval; campus’s main quad. A goal of the competition was

to open up the dreary engineering buildings to the outside.

We accomplished this by creating walk-in glass gallery

spaces on the ground floor. Other aspects of the design

were creating usable lawn space and a vendor court on the

bottom floor of the parking garage.

[ 35 ]

savannah, georgia OSU Winter 2010 | Landscape Studio 8 | Professor Lawrence Walquistgallery of scholars

[ 36 ]

CIRCULATION | THE BASICS4 PEDESTRIAN LANES DOWN TO 2HARDSCAPE PUSHED TO THE EDGESFRAMING GREEN PUBLIC SPACEINTERACTION WITH BUILDINGS/AMENITIES

VEGETATION | URBAN FLOW

Enlarge bosque and transition to organic form

Collonade interplanted with sculptural pieces

Marching forms of zelkova

PLAZA SPACE | GALLERY HOP

Walking Taco Hub

Dreese Coffee Bar walk-up window

Woodruff pick-up and drop-off

CONNECTION | ACADEMICS

ARCHITECTURE

BUSINESS

ENGINEERING

VEGETATION | URBAN FLOW

Engineering Galleries

urban forest

vendors

vendors

With a clean circulation pattern, spaces for leisure and vegetation are maximized without sacrifi cing accessibility. The parking garage becomes a haven for vendors, and the engineering buildings receive a facelift with walk-in glass gallery spaces to showcase student work.

engineering galleries

walkway sloped lawn main lawngravel leisure garden

walkwayvendors

garage

cafe

CIRCULATION | THE BASICS4 PEDESTRIAN LANES DOWN TO 2HARDSCAPE PUSHED TO THE EDGESFRAMING GREEN PUBLIC SPACEINTERACTION WITH BUILDINGS/AMENITIES

VEGETATION | URBAN FLOW

Enlarge bosque and transition to organic form

Collonade interplanted with sculptural pieces

Marching forms of zelkova

PLAZA SPACE | GALLERY HOP

Walking Taco Hub

Dreese Coffee Bar walk-up window

Woodruff pick-up and drop-off

CONNECTION | ACADEMICS

ARCHITECTURE

BUSINESS

ENGINEERING

VEGETATION | URBAN FLOW

Engineering Galleries

urban forest

vendors

vendors

With a clean circulation pattern, spaces for leisure and vegetation are maximized without sacrifi cing accessibility. The parking garage becomes a haven for vendors, and the engineering buildings receive a facelift with walk-in glass gallery spaces to showcase student work.

engineering galleries

walkway sloped lawn main lawngravel leisure garden

walkwayvendors

garage

cafe

[ 37 ] gallery of schoalrs

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 38 ]

mashville

8 brief

This entry for the Two Worlds Ecological Competition

sought to predict economic and ecological futures for mid-

zixe American cities. A brownfield site along Nashville River

was selected, as it contained many challenges of urban

infrastructure, contaminaiton, and vulnerability to flooding

and sea level rise. Flexible space indoor and outdoors

was paramount, withlive/work typlogies accompanying

an environmentally focused program. Future systems of

delivery and transport were imagined as a spine for various

forms of connectivity.

[ 39 ]

savannah, georgia SCAD Spring 2014| Urban Design Studio 3| Professor Fernando Munillamashville

[ 40 ]

[ 41 ] mashville

Building Hierarchy Storm waterVegetationPedestrianVehicular/Bikeways

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 [ 42 ]

highway/pedestrian plaza

Hub

live/work residential

THERAPY

HOTEL/TEMPORARY OFFICE

HOTEL/TEMPORARY OFFICE

HOTEL/TEMPORARY OFFICE

WEDDINGS

NUTRITION CENTER

SCHOOL FUNCTIONS

[ 43 ] mashville

Energy Facility

Energy Harnessing

Wave Energy TechnologyGeothermalheat/cool

Energy

Staged wetlandsrecycle greywater

Storm Water Collection + Reuse

Cottage

Hub

Home New Cottage UnmannedFactory Assembly line

Hub+Arterial Delivery

Order placed Hub ships item Item received viaevacuated transport

wetland wetlandbikeway connection

live/work residentialflexible hardscape

WORKFLEX L I V E

LIVE

ENERGY

WALK

WALK

[ 44 ]

Energy Harnessing

HomeFuture Home Office

Upper Floors

Live ShopsWork Workshop

Ground Floor

New costsUnmanned

+ =$+

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

[ 45 ] mashville

[ 46 ]1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Opposite:

Zero Depth Pools

Below

1) Wetland and Circulation berms

2) Flexible landscapes

[email protected] (440)-289-5987 www.linkedin.com/in/peterjamessalamon

GA 31401