James Imperial - ARCH 1142
Monday, 11 June 2012
MONTAGE IT! Renders
The daytime scene depicts a forest and complete interaction
between the building and the actual environment itself. The glass walls of the
structure have been purposely removed in order to have complete interaction
with the nature. To further highlight this necessary factor of my concept, I
have photoshopped the wilderness interacting with the building e.g. shrubbery
growing within it, animals surrounding it etc. The night time shows a mountain like terrain, away from
society and in its lonesome. I created fog like sceneries to compliment this
seclusion and also included several lighting features to change the feel of the
building itself. A car is also is shown to allow a visual size ratio of the
building. The interior scene demonstrates a simple outlook from the inside of the building (the office room), into a conceptual space-like exterior environment.
MONTAGE IT! - Model
This
montage model was based around an idea of intersecting cubic and rectangles to
form a creative containment completely open to its environment. I wanted a
barrier-less structure that would integrate entirely within its environment.
This particular model kept me up for days, despite starting
straight after receiving the task. The intricacies of the building
differentiated the models from the competition e.g. the stonework of the
basement, the window awnings and furnishings etc.
The main struggle of the Fisher House was repetitive mistake
of inaccurate measurement. This was mainly because I had aimed to be so
incredibly precise with my measurements that I would not be happy with my
finished cuttings. This was a rookie mistake as I soon discovered ways around inaccurate
joints and cuttings e.g. wall coverings.
MODEL IT! - Fisher House Site Plan
This by far was the easiest Model It! task. I had used .5mm box cardboard to signify each layer within the site plan. The process was rather tedious but ultimately I had finished this task within 1-2 days. The final touches to be made on the model were rather simple as it just required a covering of the sides to cover up any blemishes or uneven layers; which I had used balsa for.
MODEL IT! - Barcelona Pavillion
The Barcelona pavilion was a fairly simple model to build.
With the 2 week time frame given to complete it I’d much rather have been
working on the final Fisher House Model which needed 2 weeks to complete. My
particular Barcelona model revolved around only 3 thicknesses of balsa wood,
and aluminium foil to act as the poles. The process took around 4 days to build
with no real rush to complete it. To signify the watery areas of the model I
finely sliced vertical lines down a sheet of basla.
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