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2020GSAPP哥伦比亚大学ARCHITECTURE ADVANCED VI设计全播报,142组作品1000+张图纸等你来围观

 一格海外设计课 2020-08-17

2020年受疫情的影响,哈佛、耶鲁、UCL等海外名校纷纷发布了线上毕设/设计展,以展示学术研究成果。本次GSAPP哥伦比亚大学建筑设计ARCHITECTURE ADVANCED VI方向展出了共计142组的作品。

Architecture Advanced  Studio VI下的十七个方向

一格将对本次Columbia哥伦比亚GSAPP建筑设计展进行全面报道,帮助国内同学更好更快地了解海外一手设计成果。以下为建筑方向142组设计成果全播报,扫码可以领取完整142组1000张高清设计大礼包。

扫码获取高清设计合集图纸


点击了解2020哈佛大学74组MArch建筑毕设展播
点击了解2020哈佛大学31组景观城规毕设展播
点击了解2020耶鲁大学82组建筑设计毕设播报


1
HAVANA MICRO X
Olga Aleksakova and Julia Burdova, with Esteban de Backer

This studio Havana Micro X: Modernist City Planning Model in a Post-Modern World proposes urban hybrids to question inherited cultural, economic, environmental, and technological assumptions. Modern precedents assist participants in re-interpreting historical efforts and ideologies and, hopefully, proposing an alternative urban discussion capable of addressing contemporary issues. Students examine four tissue samples of Havana modernist fabric and study their development under the current conditions of a weakened state. The result is an urban proposal for the selected areas and a zoomed-in examination of a single hybrid building.

Students: Anna Creatura, Berkhan Eminsoy, Rebecca Greenberg, Shengyang He, Sirenia Kim, So Jin Kim, Frank Mandell, Kate McNamara


01
Berkhan Eminsoy and Sirenia Kim



02
Sirenia Kim



03
Berkhan Eminsoy



04
Anna Creatura and Rebecca Greenberg



05
Anna Creatura



06
Rebecca Greenberg



07
So Jin Kim and Shengyang He



08
Shengyang He



09
So Jin Kim



10
Frank Mandell and Kate McNamara



2
EVERYTHING MUST SCALE 3
Michael Bell

The studio Everything Must Scale 3: Architecture and the Teacher-less School follows a series that have looked at architectural building types increasingly being challenged if not made obsolete. This edition explores what will become of schools as education is increasingly automated, achieved without the same type or number of on-site teachers and in the realms of software and media as education becomes less place-specific and can occur almost anywhere. The studio addresses issues of architecture and scalar realms of economy, energy, and the forms of power or authority that shape the built world. This includes examinations of how the expanded presence of automation, renewable energy, new forms of mobility meet older forms of settlement, architecture, and place.
TA: Sunghoon Lee

Students: Leon Esmaeel, Ge Guo, Hyeokyoung Lee, Adam Susaneck, Jiacheng Wang, Qi Yang
 
11
Ge Guo



12
Adam Susaneck



13
Jiacheng Wang



14
Qi Yang



15
Hyeokyoung Lee



16
Leon Esmaeel



3
FOREST-TO-CITY
David Benjamin

This studio addresses the massive global construction and rapid urbanization that will occur in the same ten years in which it is critical to drastically cut carbon emissions. We explore a new type of design. We simultaneously design materials, typologies, prototype buildings, forests, and supply chains. We explore architecture as an open system. We explore the use of engineered wood in buildings and the idea of mass timber as a system. We take a critical look at the farm-to-table movement—as well as at some of the past models of architecture as a system—and we develop new kinds of open systems for architecture.TA: Alexander Odom

Students: William Anderson, Jack Blythe, Zeid Ghawi, Eduardo Meneses, Arvin Mirzakhanian, James Piacentini, Luo Qingkai, Peter Stoll, Yankun Yang, Shangyu Tian4

17

James Piacentini


18
Eduardo Meneses



19
Luo Qingkai



20
William Anderson



21
Peter Stoll



22
Arvin Mirzakhanian



23
Yankun Yang



24
Jack Blythe



25
Zeid Ghawi



26
Shangyu Tian

4
COPULA HALL
Stephen Cassell and Annie Barrett

China Miéville’s novel The City & The City serves as the site, program, and universe of the studio. Beginning with close and rigorous reading, analysis, deconstruction, and re‐composition of the text through analytic drawings/models, each student enters and re‐constructs the implied geographies, styles, and site conditions on their terms and in their visual language. The studio progresses from this projective cartography into the iterative exploration and design of a 3D formal language that enables the novels’ inhabitants to negotiate two opposing and intertwined cities.
TA: Vanessa Arriagada

Students: Sara Almutlaq, Stone Cheng, Jinish Gadhiya, Aayushi Joshi, Jingyuan Li, Jack Lynch, Massimiliano Malago, Tola Oniyangi, Rohan Parekh, Morgan Parrish, Yixuan Shi, Ericka Song

27
Ericka Song



28
Massimiliano Malago



29
Rohan Parekh



30
Jinish Pravin Gadhiya



31
Tola Oniyangi



32
Sara Almutlaq



33
Jingyuan Li



34
Jack Lynch and Morgan Parrish



35
Stone Cheng



36
Yixuan Shi



37
Aayushi Joshi



5
URBAN-SCALED ARCHITECTURAL SPECULATION IN TOKYO
Sarah Dunn

The studio engages and explores the formal and programmatic possibilities of invented large-scale architecture in the city. In a back-and-forth process with key historic projects, the studio develops a series of design-based scenarios that leverage specific qualities of the city and seeks to mine these scenarios for their formal possibilities. With the addition of infrastructure, the studio posits that architecture can be both/and—it can be both about growth and about the environment—through the manipulation of form and the tactical deployment of social and ecological systems.TA: George Louras

Students: Tarun Abraham, Dalton Baker, Stephanie Bigelow, Ben Gillis, Xiaoxuan Hu, Ningxin Huang, Timothee Mercier, Chang Pan, Lena Pfeiffer, Randall Scovill, Shiyin Zeng, Xinglu Zhu


38
Lena Pfeiffer



39
Ben Gillis



40
Chan Pan



41
Dalton Baker



42
Randall Scovill



43
Shiyin Zeng



44
Tarun Abraham



45
Xiaoxuan Hu and Xinglu Zhu



46
Ningxin Huang



47
Timothee Mercier



48

Stephanie Bigelow


6
THE SPACE OF WATER
Mario Gooden


The studio is informed by the history of radical thinking about architecture in the 20th century yet looks beyond to the Afro-Imaginary to present an experimental curriculum deploying techniques culled from the visual arts as well as design theories of geography, infrastructure, engineering, and architecture to initiate dialogues about geography and spatiality in an era of global crisis due to human-induced climate change. More specifically, the studio investigated the cultural topographies of water informed by the line from colonialism to climate change in consideration of forced-migration, resource extraction, environmental degradation, and water scarcity.The studio investigates filmic techniques of narrative, fragment, and structure as analytical and generative tools to speculate towards the design of architectural interventions upon either the land or the sea.

Students: Hajir Al Khusaibi, Sultan Alfaisal, Benjamin Gomez Arango, Jolene Jussif, Brandon Kapel, Ugur Tan, Ye Xiong


49
Sultan Alfaisal



50
Jolene Jussif



51
Ye Xiong



52
Ugur Tan



53

Benjamin Gomez Arango

54
Hajir Al Khusaibi



55

Hajir Al Khusaibi




7
INFRASTRUCTURAL GEOGRAPHY
Juan Herreros

What is the role of architecture in an environment that needs to invest a lot of energy to get a significant transformation? Where are the limits of scale, amount of architecture and Technification of the territory? What are the pertinent typologies, construction systems, and preservation protocols? The studio Infrastructural Geography: Water, Leisure, and Every Policies imagines a new generation of low-impact clean industry nurseries, research centers, pedagogical institutions, and residential complexes that bring new ways of living to re-equip this geography in an endeavor to redefine its character. This studio wants to design and build a new “rural-urban culture” that takes advantage of dualities such as isolation-connection, natural-artificial, hybridization-specificity, individual-collective, sophisticated-elementary technologies, density-porosity…to create new forms of living, working, leisure and socialization.

TA: Jesse McCormickStudents: Joud Al Shdaifat, YixuanCheng, Allison Fricke, Frederico Gualberto Castello Branco, Guillermo Hevia, Alex Hudtwalcker Rey, Ian Lee, Xiaoxuan Li, Michael Mc Dowell, Farah Monib, Zihan Yu, Mengzhe Zhang

56
Guillermo Hevia and Alex Hudtwalcker Rey




57
Frederico Gualberto Castello Branco



58
Joud Al Shdaifat, Allison Fricke, and Ian Lee




59
Yixuan Cheng and Michael Mc Dowell



60
Xiaoxuan Li



61
Zihan Yu and Mengzhe Zhang



62
Farah Monib



8
FACTORY
Mimi Hoang

Students design an urban factory complex that creates collective spatial structures for the manufacturing of artifacts and the shaping of exchanges. The work requires critical engagement with the many historical, social, economic, and technological contexts influencing the design of factories; the studio asks students to re-frame these conditions as innovative spatial formats for manufacture in their architecture. The site is the Bush Terminal; the studio reconsiders this entire complex and envisions a future for it as a center for new industries. The studio considers how each project connects to or informs others in the studio as the semester unfolds—ie. an exquisite corpse, collage, or as part of a master plan—to define the unifying and anomalous criteria of each project in relation to the whole.TA: Eugénie Bliah

Students: Feibai An, Joyce Chen, Karen Choi, Xueqi Hu, Junwei Li, Brenda Lim, Wenya Liu, Chun-Chang Tsai, Qingying Wang, Rui Wang, Tianyu Wang, Jingyuan Zhang
 
63
Chun-Chang Tsai and Jingyuan Zhang



64
Karen Choi and Brenda Lim



65
Feibai An and Xueqi Hu



66

Wenya Liu and Tianyu Wang

67

Qingying Wang and Rui Wang

68
Joyce Chen and Junwei Li



9
ARCHITECTONICS OF MUSIC
Steven Holl, Dimitra Tsachrelia, and Martin Kropac

The studio makes a typological analysis of 12 different halls presented by student teams. Based on a musical fragment from a composer (Dvořák, Pärt, Saariaho, Feldman, Ravel, Cage) the students build a model in 20”x20” cube of space focusing on interior geometry with acoustic potential for midterm. Driven by their composition and language experiments each team then designs a 1200 seat concert hall sited in Prague.

Students: Siying Chen, Peizhe Fang, Yining He, Yuxin Hu, Lihan Jin, Maini Ke, Jose Vintimilla Granda, Linxiaoyi Wan, Wei Wang, Ziyue Wang, Jingjing Wu, Shuchang Zhou


69
Yining He and Yuxin Hu



70
Lihan Jin and Maini Ke



71
Ziyue Wang and Jingjing Wu



72
Siying Chen and Shuchang Zhou



73
Peizhe Fang and Wei Wang



74
Jose Vintimilla Granda and Linxiaoyi Wan


10
MAKERGRAPH
Ada Tolla and Giuseppe Lignano

The Makergraph Studio is a personal, actual, material, and physical investigation of how materials become things, how things make places, and how places shape people. Operations like forging, molding, weaving and stitching are metaphors for how we invent and discover ourselves as people. By paying attention to how you make things, you will understand more about how you make yourself—as a designer, and maybe even as a person.TA: Zia Reza

Students: Anam Ahmed, Shaolin Feng, Ambra Gadda, Shanti Gollapudi, Dylan Goldweit-Denton, Jacob Gulinson, Yulin Peng, Christian Pineda, Sofia Rivera Saldana, Aseel Sahab, Christopher Spyrakos, Mingyang Yu


75
Jacob Gulinson



76
Christian Pineda




77
Yulin Peng



78
Shanti Gollapudi



79
Mingyang Aki Yu



80
Ambra Gadda



81
Sofia Rivera Saldana



82
Shaolin Feng



83
Dylan Goldweit-Denton



84
Christopher Spyrakos



85
Aseel Sahab



86
Anam Ahmed


11
THE STREET
Jing Liu

In late Modern city planning, street design was almost entirely driven by traffic planning parameters with moderate consideration for vegetation. Today, from the homeless population in LA’s Skid Row and London’s tunnels, to the surveillance system deployed via street cams in Beijing and Hong Kong, from Google’s much-contested Sidewalk Lab pilot in Toronto to the pink pussyhats and the yellow vests, the street in the new millennium is nothing short of the new frontier of cultural expression, public discourse, and technological transformation. Thus in the streets around the world, along with the apparent as well as latent fault lines of social fabrics and technological apparatuses, profound fractures can be seen everywhere. This studio researches the new players in the street, rediscovers past experimentations that might still offer relevance, and studies possible new typologies that might be constitutive of contemporary discourse.
TA: Kevin Lamyuktseung

Students: Haeri Choi, Hyung Rok Do, Yanxi Fu, Dexter Gao, Wendy Yunting Guan, Byungryoung Lee, Changbin Lee, Zhibin Li, Dylan Mo, Jae Kyun Park, Euna Song, Zifan Zhang


87
Alex Zhibin Li



88
Hyung Rok Do



89
Hyung Rok Do



90
Byungryoung Lee



91
Dylan Mo




92
Euna Song



93

Yanxi Fu

94

Zifan Zhang

95
Jae Kyun Park



96
Haeri Choi




97
Changbin Lee



98
Dexter Gao




12
KITCHENLESS STORIES
Anna Puigjaner

This studio looks at the contemporary reality of the city of Lima as a radical trial-and-error urban and architectural experiment. Studying the current community kitchens as a starting point for architectural speculation, the studio researches and understands how these urban infrastructures operate to imagine possible futures for the city of Lima. As a response, the students speculate and design a contemporary domestic landscape where homes rather than being isolated entities are part of a complex whole of shared infrastructures. The students understand the home not simply as an isolated space but as a part of a wider system where the boundaries between public and private, urban and domestic spheres are blurred, but also understand the kitchen as a tool able to redefine preset social, political and economical systems.TA: Juan Pablo Uribe Morales

Students: Blithe Archbald, Adina Bauman, Mercedes Castrelo-Huntley, Luiza Furia, Julia Gielen, Andrew Keung, Azul Klix, Ibrahim Kombarji, Kabir Sahni, Emily Tobin, Jamie Vinikoor, Luna Yue Zuo


99
Julia Gielen and Emily Tobin



100
Adina Bauman  and Luiza Furia




101
Adina Bauman and Luiza Furia



102
Azul Klix and Ibrahim Kombarji



103
Jamie Vinikoor and Luna Yue Zuo



104
Blithe Archbald and Mercedes 


13
AMAZONIA AFTER FITZCARRALDO
Pedro Rivera

In 1982, Werner Herzog went to Amazonia to shoot Fitzcarraldo. The character decides to make a shortcut and transport his ship up a muddy hill to avoid water streams. The scene illustrates the clash between the time of the river and western civilization. Five hundred years after the first European expeditions, the forest, its populations, and cultures are still understood as enemies to be defeated and exploited. In this context, what does it mean to design for Amazonia? In the studio, students investigated networks and systems at a local and global scale and proposed alternative development scenarios through buildings, infrastructures and public spaces.TA: Khoi Nguyen

Students: Gauri Bahuguna, Hongyi Chen, Matteo Cordera, Marc Francl, Hector Garcia, Ghaidaa Gutub, Bassam Kaddoura, Lucy Navarro, Matthew Ninivaggi, Julia Pyszkowski, Maxime St. Pierre Ostrander, Xinyi Zhang


105
Lucy Navarro and Gauri Bahuguna



106
Ghaidaa Gutub and Bassam Kaddoura



107
Marc Francl and Julia Pyszkowski



108
Matteo Cordera and Matthew Ninivaggi




109
Hector Garcia and Maxime St. Pierre Ostrander





110
Hongyi Chen and Xinyi Zhang


14
MIXED-USE, STAIRCASES, SOCIAL…
Hilary Sample

This studio investigates the qualities of “large scale public spaces contrasting with the small private-scale patterns required within.” Given a generic structural grid and nondescript facade, that signals an architecture that is adaptable in the future. This studio researches, examines, and designs a new paradigm for social spaces within a proposed mixed-use program. Staircases, passageways, and associated vertical circulation elements can be rethought as interconnected social collective circulation space(s) instead of discrete, or residual spaces. This studio explores the intersection of the social, technological, and cultural practices within the discipline of architecture. The final design problem is a set of connected, collective circulation spaces, stairs, elevators, escalators, ramps, landings, handrails, walls, etc… that propose a paradigm for reimagining the interior life of a building.TA: Paul Ruppert

Students: Matthew Acer, Chutiporn Buranasiri, Qiazi Chen, Yanan Cheng, Bokang Du, Luyi Huang, Hanseul Jang, Miles Mao, Guangwei Ren, CJ Wang, Lu Xu, Han Zhang


111
CJ Wang




112
Guangwei Ren



113
Han Zhang




114
Hanseul Jang



115
Lu Xu




116
Yanan Cheng and Luyi Huang



117

Matthew Acer



118
Miles Mao



119
Chutiporn Buranasiri



120
Qiazi Chen



121
Bokang Du


15
SOMETHING OF VALUE
Galia Solomonoff

The studio’s mission is to design Something of Value. The students design for an assumed “client,” who is in charge of the “X” company, comparable to Related or SL Green in the US, that is headquartered in London. The “X” company owns millions of square feet of real estate around the world, the majority of which is commercial office space. With commercial office space currently shifting towards sharing types, the client wishes to experiment with new hybrids that combine work, art, commerce, and education, but not residential use. The project is to design a building(s) as a “gift”, Something of Value, for the city of London, which would give the “X” company additional development rights in return, with the exact program to be defined by each student or team.TA: Udit Goel

Students: Munise Aksoy, Qianfan Guo, Gin Jin, Yoonwon Kang, Niki Kourti, Haoming Li, Xutian Liu, Oscar Mayorga Caballero, Alexandros Prince-Wright, Xin Qin, Helena Ramos Musetti Pestana, Christine Shi


121
Munise Aksoy and Gin Jin



122
Helena Ramos Musetti Pestana



123
Xin Qin and Haoming Li



124
Qianfan Guo and Christine Shi




125
Yoonwon Kang



126
Oscar Mayorga Caballero



127
Xutian Liu



128
Alexandros Prince-Wright



129
Niki Kourti



16
OPEN WORK
Enrique Walker

This studio addresses three open-ended buildings in Japan, namely: Masato Otaka’s Sakaide Artificial Ground, Sachio Otani’s Kawaramachi Housing Project, and Kenzo Tange’s Dentsu Headquarters Building. The studio brief is simple. Each student joins a team, is assigned to a building, and is asked to double its surface. Do you endorse openness, and observe, refine, or redefine the original script? Do you argue against it, and monumentalize? What is at stake is to design in conversation with, and take a position on, a building and the arguments it advanced, and to tackle a longstanding question within the field, again, half a century later.

Students: Haitong Chen, Qifeng Gao, Xinning Hua, Isaac Kim, Yu Kon Kim, Kyu Chan Kwak, Sanggyu Shin, Helena Urdaneta Palencia, Yanni Wang, Yechi Zhang, Chenyan Zhou, Tim Zhou


130
Haitong Chen, Qifeng Gao, Xinning Hua, and Yechi Zhang



131
Yu Kon Kim, Kyu Chan Kwak, Helena Urdaneta Palencia, Chenyan Zhou



132

Isaac Kim, Sanggyu Shin, Yanni Wang, Tim Zhou

17
CULTURAL AGENTS ORANGE (VIETNAM)
Mark Wasiuta

With the Vietnam war and its legacies as persistent reference, in light of Vietnam’s new antagonisms with China and other neighbors, and with the intertwining of culture and environment at stake, this studio worked through the architecture and cultural agency of concentrations. Through concentration the studio analyzed and reconceived cultural institutions, archives, and processes that assemble artifacts, objects, and bodies. It also studied Agent Orange, carpet bombing, and other elements of the chemical war that so drastically altered the Vietnamese environment and that continue to communicate their histories and effects. Hence, for this studio, concentration served as a marker of environmental contamination and alteration, cultural institutions, political histories, and their architectural and spatial manifestations.
TA: Jarrett Ley

Students: Sneha Aiyer, Grace Alli, Sritoma Bhattacharjee, Seid Burka, Gabriel Chan, Shailee Kothari, Maria Macchi, Rafaela Olivares, Manuela Siffert Porto, Nika Teper, Uthra Varghese, Kachun Alex Wong

133
Maria Macchi



134
Nika Teper



135
Kachun Alex Wong




136
Gabriel Chan



137
Grace Alli



138
Shailee Kothari and Uthra Varghese



139
Sritoma Bhattacharjee



140
Rafaela Olivares



141
Sneha Aiyer




142
Manuela Siffert Porto




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