"Cut and Fold…don't glue" -Professor Casbarian. "Whoops..." -Entire Class
Architectural process is something one develops in school. It is not necessarily inherent, easy, or coherent, but something more experimented, discovered and refined. School is the time for this procedure of experimentation, discovery and refinement. This studio decided to examine the outcome of buildings that began with a very specific process. Cutting and folding paper, with minimal gluing to develop abstract spatial concepts.
After much discussion, I chose the "strip" concept, literally cutting the shape of the site into individualized strips. This concept gave me freedom to cut the site in various directions, sizes, and heights, depending on program. It also raised a lot of architectural questions and problems that led to its final outcome.
Transforming this idea into diagram was simple, once the program was given. The project was an Urban Winery, which differs from a regular winery in that it has program that can be categorized, such as a public entry, wine making, administrational, and more. By assigning these categories into strips, it gives each strip the ability to have an internal circulation, and a clear definition of programatic categories.
More architectural problems answered: Circulation
With any structure, there are many layers of circulation. In a winery, there is also a circulation of wine, also known as the wine making process. The strips created essentially internal circulation within each strip, and the categorization of each strip furthered this concept. To breath this, lesions were created in the strips, that allowed for crossover between strips. These allowed for things like tours to move through all of the strips freely.
With any spatial experiment/excersize, the conceptual architectural implications are found after the fact. The categorical stripping of the site created a series of seemingly separate structures, woven together with a similar architectural language. I call this the "urban block" condition. Each piece of the block had an internal circulation, and a seemingly inclusive system.
These concepts and more were tested when the spaces began to become real in the plans, sections and renderings seen in the next post.