RISD Architecture: Urban Design
RISD Architecture 15'
Mapping Boston
Without utilizing all of our sensory capacity, one cannot effectively
explore and analyze a system. Each sense, unique to its own, allows for
us to experience a moment of clarity. While exploring Boston’s Seaford
area, we allowed ourselves to become harmonious with our senses and
allowed them to guide and impact our experience. Being attentive to
smell, sight, sound, and touch provided us with the ability to truly be
attentive to the surrounding area.
Convergence
Through connecting plains, we can connect people.
Connecting people, integrates systems. Integrating
the public into a public space creates convergence.
Overlapping groups of people allows for an increased interaction at a site.
It can become a public space, traversed by the local people.
At the same time, it can shelter its residents with privacy.
Sunlight allows for these interactions to take place.
Optimizing this space by public use, short term use, and longer term
stays, creates a unique system for interaction and connection.
Continuity
Catch & Release
The act of capturing is paired with that of emitting. It helps to create
a self-sustaining system that can be utilized on an extensive scale.
By creating a building that responds to the sun’s patch, one can
effectively harness its product. Emitting it, strategically through
a system of angled vents, allows for efficient plant growth.
Rainfall can be captured, filtered, stored, and utilized to nourish these
plants, as well as satisfy the residing peoples. This sustainability creates
a threshold between residents, as well as an optimal public space.
Storefront
Line of sight creates a juxtaposition between revealing and concealing. Through pattern and symetry I was able to create a space that combated the density of the city, allowing visibility from multiple viewpoints.