Architecture Portfolio | Justin Agustin

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A compilation of works from my undergraduate architectural studies at UC Berkeley & internship at Perkin+Will.

Transcript of Architecture Portfolio | Justin Agustin

justinAGUSTINARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO

*Wursre Hall | Berkeley, California - Concrete Facade

University of California, Berkeley | College of Environmental DesignB.A. Architeture | 2013

415 A STREET | DALY CITY CA 94014

[ 650 ] 534.4975

CARGOCOLLECTIVE.COM/JUSTINAGUSTINISSUU.COM/JUSTINAGUSTIN

ADDRESS

JUSTIN BUSTOS AGUSTIN

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JUSTINBAGUSTIN@GMAIL.COMJBAGUSTIN@BERKELEY.EDU

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02 | 03

*Campbell Hall | UC Berkeley - Construction Site Visit

0620384652

table ofCONTENTSUrban Activity Center : recreation, excercise, & community activty.

Boom Town : contemporary urban housing complex for Emeryville, CA.

House of Healing : exploration in the rituals of healing.

Petribu Quizanga : a new sustainable city.

Sunset Blvd : an urban design plan for Hollywood’s redevelopement project.

04 | 05

Spring 2012

A translucent space for recreation, exercise, & community activity

SOMA | San Francisco, CA[ ]

URBAN ACTIVITY CENTER

06 | 07

One history that can be constructed for San Francisco is that it has been a process characterized by the aggregate effect of intense moments of change, inevitably short lived, but lasting in impact. It has not been a smooth line of progress, but a wave with intense peaks and valleys. Once a hub of manufac-turing, warehousing, maritime and service industries, the area has transformed into a new hub of media culture, the digital domain, biotechnology and artistic production. Historically underbuilt relative to other parts of the city, SOMA has recently added more market rate housing than any other area of the city, particularly in the format of live-work lofts.

[ prelude | background ]

*Night shot Render

08 | 09

The semester-long project involves the design of an Urban Activity Center. The building is a hybrid of multiple and varied programs, which are more traditionally treated as separate and unrelated. The productive merger and interaction of these programs is an essential polemic of the project – serving as a driver for its design.

The premise of the Urban Activity Center is somewhat intentionally open-ended, and embodies the ideal that urban life provides a continually shifting set of needs. The program is a combination of recreation center / athletic facility / community center / parking garage / classroom / park. These uses tend to occur in the gap that exists somewhere between ‘home’ and ‘city’, and begin to potentially operate at the middle scale of ‘neighborhood’ or ‘district’.

The intent is to engage this culturally rich, architecturally messy and socially complicated part of the city. SOMA’s development has been characterized more by social service agencies and nightclubs than by museums and highrises. But our particular interest runs in parallel to the burgeoning affordable housing market - developing a new project type that is conceived of as a hybridized urban amenity, which supports, extends and enriches the lives of the affordable housing residents who surround the Urban Activity Center..

* Exterior Perspective Render - Vray & Photoshop

-Final ProjectFundamentals of Architectural Design | Professor Veronica De La RosaUrban Activity Center

10 | 11

ATHLETIC

COMMUNITY

STAFF OFFICECLASSROOMS

MULTI-PURPOSE ROOM

LOUNGECAFEBATHROOM

PUBLIC LOBBYBASKETBALL COURT

LOCKER ROOMS

ENTRANCE

ROOF TOP GARDEN

WEIGHT ROOMTRACKLOCKERS EXERCISE ROOMS

LAP POOLLOBBY

BASKETBALL COURTMAIN ENTERANCE

OUTDOOR EXERCISE GARDEN

*Programmatic Diagram - organization of activities by floor*Massing Scheme - based on daylighting and formal strategies*Final Model - acrylic, museum board, and chipboard 12 | 13

SECOND FLOORBASEMENT

GROUND FLOOR THIRD FLOOR

0 10 20 50 1005

* Exterior Perspective Render - Vray & Photoshop

FOURTH FLOOR

FIFTH FLOOR

_weight and excercise equipment areas_indoor track_flexible activities areas

_indoor excercise space_staff offices_locker rooms_bathrooms

_swimming pool_classrooms_multi-use rooms

_secondary entrance_snack bar_lounge

_lobby_main entrances_bike & zip car parking_public bathrooms_outdoor activity areas

_multi-use court _flexible stage located @ short end of court_courtside seating_locker rooms _bathrooms

05

04

03

02

01

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Ground Floor Plan

Second Floor Plan

Third Floor Plan

Fourth Floor Plan

Fifth Floor Plan

Basement

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SECTION ASCALE: 1’ = 3/16”

* Final Section Drawings - Sections portray visual and spatial relationships of staggered levels and activities* Site plan - located on the corner of 8th st & Mission St

SECTION B SECTION C

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MISSION STREET

EIGHTH STREET

A

C

B

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* Interior View - View from the lobby looking at swimming pool and excercise floors above* Exterior Perspective - View of main entrance on along 8th Street* Interior View - View from the third floor look at the pool

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*Final Facade Model - acrylic, pulp, and wood.

[ ] Fall 2012Emeryville | Urban Design Housing Project

BOOM TOWN

20 | 21

*Final Site Model - acrylic, cork, museum board, and wood.

The studio proposes new, contemporary housing for Emeryville, CA - complementing similar scales and densities of housing to the north of the city. Emeryville is a small city located between Berkeley and Oakland. Incorporated in 1896, the city represents an excellent case study in urban transformation. Its lineage as a city includes remnants of post-industrialization and, within the last decade, an emerging hub of shopping, entertainment, modern housing developments, and hi-tech companies.

The “housing project” is conceived as semester-long research emphasizing the self-conscious relationship between analysis and design. The studio posits housing as a fundamental catalyst for urban innovation. Given the intricacies of formal logics and typological determinants, housing represents an excellent opportunity for research and design within the complexities of contemporary living conditions.

Emeryville’s version of public space is deeply conflicted and adaptive, shot-through with opportunism, entrepreneurship, frivolity, and entertainment. This north/south Amtrak corridor provides regional and national transportation amenities. Unfortunately, the railway corridor “splits” Emeryville in to east/west halves. The result is vibrant shopping and entertainment centers (west side) are disconnected from the bulk of new housing complexes (east side).

-Final ProjectArchitecure & Urban Design Studio | Professor Darrell FieldsEmeryville | Boom Town

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The study area represents a critical threshold between now compart-mentalized areas of the city. Due to the north/south Amtrak corridor, Bay Street is a nearby, yet inaccessible, commercial amenity to the site’s western boundary. To the east is Horton Street, a relatively small-scaled light industrial corridor. The study area is within a short walk of Emeryville’s civic center that includes city administration buildings, Pixar Studios, and a range of businesses and start-ups. In addition, the site sits within an overlay of connected public parks linking northern and southern districts of the city.

Site

*Site Analysis - hand drawn diagram exploring static & dynamic qualities of greenspaces and circulation oppurtunities.

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0

10

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50

100

200

400

The studio proposes new, contemporary housing for Emeryville, CA - complementing similar scales and densities of housing to the north of the city. Emeryville is a small city located between Berkeley and Oakland. Incorporated in 1896, the city represents an excellent case study in urban transformation. Its lineage as a city includes remnants of post-industrialization and, within the last decade, an emerging hub of shopping, entertainment, modern housing developments, and hi-tech companies.

The “housing project” is conceived as semester-long research emphasizing the self-conscious relationship between analysis and design. The studio posits housing as a fundamental catalyst for urban innovation. Given the intricacies of formal logics and typological determinants, housing represents an excellent opportunity for research and design within the complexities of contemporary living conditions.

Emeryville’s version of public space is deeply conflicted and adaptive, shot-through with opportunism, entrepreneurship, frivolity, and entertainment. This north/south Amtrak corridor provides regional and national transportation amenities. Unfortunately, the railway corridor “splits” Emeryville in to east/west halves. The result is vibrant shopping and entertainment centers (west side) are disconnected from the bulk of new housing complexes (east side).

The centralized park (connecting both halves of Emeryville) is surrounded by living spaces derived from my research of skip-stop and

row house typologies / precedents. The double perimeter urban typology allows for coversations of varied relation between residential &

park space. The residences and users of the park become spectators as well as security for a ‘backyard’ that belongs to all.

Ground Floor Plan

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*Analytical Drawings - of partitions, circulation, and greenspace

Partition

Circulation Greenspace

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0 10 20 50 1005

Skip-Stop Units A & B

*Typical Partition - top floor

*Typical Partition - main floor

Row House Units

*Typical Partition - main floor

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Street Facade

0 10 20 50 1005

32 | 33

*East Facade - photograph of model

SECOND FLOOR

FIRST FLOOR

*Typical Floor Plans | scale 1’ = 1/32”*East Facade - photograph of model

Row House Units

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FIRST FLOOR

SECOND FLOOR

THIRD FLOOR

FIRST FLOOR

SECOND FLOOR

THIRD FLOOR

*Typical Floor Plans | scale 1’ = 1/32”

Skip-Stop Unit A

Skip-Stop Unit B

*Aerial Perspactive - photograph of model | skip-stop units highlighted 36 | 37

Fall 2011

An exploration in the rituals of healing - to engage in spaces that replenish, refresh, & recover.

Cabo San Lucas | Mexico[ ]

HOUSE OF HEALING

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This project is an exploration of the rituals of healing. Each space of ritual (replenish, refresh, recover) is connected by a folding plane the wraps and engages with the planes of the concrete structure. Through a method of single-plane folded plug-ins, the parasitic structure acts as a link to connect various ritual spaces to create a unifying body.

The sequence of changing colors, from green to purple, as you circulate through these spaces of ritual symbolize the mental and physical stages of changes and degrees of healing.

C

A B

*Final Model - Concrete cast & spray painted museum board*Site Plan - Rendered via Modo*Sketch - erosion of headlands

-Final ProjectFundamentals of Architectural Design | Professor Alvaro BonfiglioHouse of Healing

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RELAX

REPLENISH

REFRESH

RECOVER

The diagram and sections show a vertical sequence of spaces as stages of transition from active state to a state of resting and healing - the process of winding down, and rising to wake and renew.

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*Final Model - Concrete cast & spray painted museum board

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[ ] Summer 2013Brazil | Concept Master Plan

PETRIBU QUIZANGA

*Photograph - credits to P+W UD team 46 | 47

Equivalent to the size of the city of San Francis-co, the main goal of the master plan is to manage the land in order to create value. The project has tremendous flexibility to create value whether the land is used for agriculture, real estate, and resources. Supported by new regional infrastructure, Quizanga will grow into Recife’s new western district, where inclusive and sustainable lifestyles and economies co-exist where the hills of the Atlantic Forest meet the Capibaribe River.

The primary objectives of the project are to: [1] preserve natural resources to create an inter-connected system of open space and recreational opportunities, [2] balance industrial, urban and natural environments to create a new sustainable city based on quality of life, and [3] introduce industry and commerce to the community to provide viable employment opportunities for residents.

Team: Justin AgustinLuca GiaramidaroGaren Srapyan

-ongoing projectUrban Design Internship | Perkins + Will | SFOPetribu Quizanga

During my time at Perkins + Will, I primarily worked on the illustrative

master plans for three possibly design options - which we also

used for the base on the initial aerial renders.

Illustrative Plan

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*Aerial Perspective Render - Illustrator | Vray | Photoshop

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[ ] Summer 2013Los Angeles | Urban Design Plan

SUNSET BOULEVARD

Some cities that have grown outward for decades are now looking within to see where significant new infill development might better use transportation and land resources and result in a sustainable lifestyle

and city. One of those cities is Los Angeles where we have led seven suchTransit Oriented Development infill studies over the last decade.

We are currently working with the Community Redevelopment Agency of the City of Los Angeles on an urban design plan for Sunset Boulevard and

Civic Center in the Hollywood Redevelopment Project Area. Hollywood, the famed center of the motion picture industry, has evolved from

an outlying residential community into a dense urban center. Sunset Boulevard is a key commercial

spine running through Hollywood, with a rich mix of low- and high-rise buildings.

The new urban design plan envisions significantly increased density while promoting context-sensitive,

sustainable planning that benefits neighborhoods, promotes preservation and open space,

establishes neighborhood identity, and embodies the community's

vision for the area.

*Illustrative Plan - Google Sketchup | Photoshop

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*Illustrative Plan - Google Sketchup | Photoshop

My primary role in the project was to revise the project's visual graphics for a AIA Awards submission.

Illustrative Plan

The new urban design plan envisions significantly increased density while promoting context-sensitive,

sustainable planning that benefits neighborhoods, promotes preservation and open space,

establishes neighborhood identity, and embodies the community's

vision for the area.

54 | 55