Post on 08-Mar-2016
description
Ross GallowaySelected Works 2011
ross.h.galloway@gmail.comUniversity of Texas at Austin
M.Arch I Candidate301.335.2644
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CAF Museum
The Re-Burbia
Glover Park House
Marfa Live/Work Art Gallery
Migrant Worker/Thinker
Academic Work
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28
22
16
6
Microsoft Mid-Atlantic
Reston Heights East
425 Eye St.
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46
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Professional Work
Sketchbook: Italy
Hand Renderings
Process Work
Digital Renderings
Drawings/Sketches 58
64
60
68
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Academic WorkUniversity of Texas M.Arch Program
University of Maryland BS.Arch Program
Academic WorkUniversity of Texas M.Arch Program
University of Maryland BS.Arch Program
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CAF Air Museumwith Travis AveryFall 2010Critic - Vincent Snyder
The task of this studio was to design a museum for the Commemorative Air Force, an organization dedicated to the restoring, preserving, and, most importantly, flying of World War II aircraft. Included in their collection is the last remaining flyable B-29 bomber named Fifi.
Initial studies quickly revealed that there is a conflict between the scale needed to service, operate and fly the different aircraft in the collection (with wingspans up to 140 feet) and the need to view and experience the aircraft as a museum-goer. In order to mediate between these scales and drawing on existing airplane sheds on the site, we conceived of the museum as a large covered shed where all museum functions exist within the thickness of the roof.
By hoisting the planes up into the roof, the functional conflicts between viewing, servicing, and flying the planes
are separated, allowing all of them to be performed simultaneously with equal efficiency. The airplanes are viewed in their “natural state”: off the ground. The viewing catwalks meander sectionally and allow visitors to the museum to see the planes from all angles, above and below, creating a more intimate relationship between viewer and subject.
A series of industrial cranes and tracks allow airplanes to be positioned as needed. Fifi, the B-29 hangs at the prow of the building and can be extended out over the catwalk to allow entry to its bomb bay and cockpit.
Other program elements included are a grandstand to view air-shows, auditorium, restaurant, and offices for the museum. Important public spaces such as the auditorium and conference rooms are suspended from the superstructure similarly to how the airplanes are. Conditioned spaces are loaded toward the front of the museum, minimizing heating and cooling requirements.
The structure consists of a 2-directional steel truss system that has a free span length of 160 feet and supports a 120 foot cantilever. It touches the ground on 4 trussed steel legs.
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structural diagram
catwalks
airplanes
program spaces
vertical circulation
ground floor
museum level
upper catwalks
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transverse section
longitudinal section
longitudinal section
transverse section
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travis avery | ross galloway
austin air museumlocation| date| 09.20.2010
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ENLARGED SECTION
travis avery | ross galloway
austin air museumlocation| date| 09.20.2010
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ENLARGED SECTION
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DETAIL 3 3" = 1'-0"
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TWISTING ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
MEMBRANE FLASHING
FORMED METAL COPING
COUNTERFLASHING
CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
GRAVEL BALLAST AND WATERPROOFING LAYER OVER RIGID INSULATION
ON COMPOSITE CONCRETE DECKING
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
TOP CHORD OF SUPERTRUSS
METAL ANGLESUPPORTING STUD WALL
TWISTING ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
PERFORATED WOOD WALL PANELS ON Z-CLIPS
INSECT SCREEN
PERFORATED WOOD CEILINGPANELS WITH TRANSLUCENT
SAILCLOTH BACKING
WATER DIVERTER
C CHANNEL HEADER
ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
SUPERTRUSS BEYOND
ALUMINUM SILL
PERFORATED WOOD WALL PANELS ON Z-CLIPS
ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
ALTERNATING GLAZING VISION"FLUSHGLAZE" AND "VISIONVENT"
ROOFLIGHTS ON METAL STUD CURB
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
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WOOD FLOORBOARDS ON1" X 1.5" WOOD JOISTS
ON CONCRETE DECKING
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ALUMINUM SKIN ONWOOD PURLINS
GALVANIZED STEEL ANGLERAILING PICKETS WITH
S.S. CABLE HORIZONTALS
TWISTING ALUMINIUM SKIN ONP.T. WOOD PURLINS
WATER DIVERTER
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
STEEL ANGLE TOSUPPORT EXTERIOR WALL
ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHED TO 1/2" PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS WITH RIGID INSULATION
2 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL
1 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL
C CHANNEL
MEMBRANE FLASHING
FORMED METAL COPING
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CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
GRAVEL BALLAST AND WATERPROOFING LAYER OVER RIGID INSULATION
ON COMPOSITE CONCRETE DECKING
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
ANCHOR PLATE
STEEL ANGLE KICKER
WATER DIVERTER
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HEADER
SUSPENDED GYP. BOARD CEILING ON HAT CHANNELS
TOP CHORD OF TRUSS
STEEL MULLION
ALUMINUM FLASHING
SEALANT AND BACKER ROD
WOOD BLOCKING
CARPET ON PAD
ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
STEEL ANGLE TOSUPPORT EXTERIOR WALL
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9 3" = 1'-0"
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8 3" = 1'-0"
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7 3" = 1'-0"
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6 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL 3 3" = 1'-0"
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4 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL
5 3" = 1'-0"
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TWISTING ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
MEMBRANE FLASHING
FORMED METAL COPING
COUNTERFLASHING
CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
GRAVEL BALLAST AND WATERPROOFING LAYER OVER RIGID INSULATION
ON COMPOSITE CONCRETE DECKING
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
TOP CHORD OF SUPERTRUSS
METAL ANGLESUPPORTING STUD WALL
TWISTING ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
PERFORATED WOOD WALL PANELS ON Z-CLIPS
INSECT SCREEN
PERFORATED WOOD CEILINGPANELS WITH TRANSLUCENT
SAILCLOTH BACKING
WATER DIVERTER
C CHANNEL HEADER
ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
SUPERTRUSS BEYOND
ALUMINUM SILL
PERFORATED WOOD WALL PANELS ON Z-CLIPS
ALUMINIUM SKIN ON TRIANGULAR METAL STRUTS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
ALTERNATING GLAZING VISION"FLUSHGLAZE" AND "VISIONVENT"
ROOFLIGHTS ON METAL STUD CURB
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
W12
WOOD FLOORBOARDS ON1" X 1.5" WOOD JOISTS
ON CONCRETE DECKING
W12
STEEL ANGLE
ALUMINUM SKIN ONWOOD PURLINS
GALVANIZED STEEL ANGLERAILING PICKETS WITH
S.S. CABLE HORIZONTALS
TWISTING ALUMINIUM SKIN ONP.T. WOOD PURLINS
WATER DIVERTER
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHEDTO 1/2" BLACK PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS
STEEL ANGLE TOSUPPORT EXTERIOR WALL
ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
WATERPROOFING MEMBRANEATTACHED TO 1/2" PLYWOOD
SHEATHING ON 6" METAL STUDS WITH RIGID INSULATION
2 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL
1 3" = 1'-0"
DETAIL
C CHANNEL
MEMBRANE FLASHING
FORMED METAL COPING
COUNTERFLASHING
CANT STRIP ANDP.T. WOOD BLOCKING
GRAVEL BALLAST AND WATERPROOFING LAYER OVER RIGID INSULATION
ON COMPOSITE CONCRETE DECKING
SHEAR STUD WELDED TO BEAM
ANCHOR PLATE
STEEL ANGLE KICKER
WATER DIVERTER
STEEL MULLION
HEADER
SUSPENDED GYP. BOARD CEILING ON HAT CHANNELS
TOP CHORD OF TRUSS
STEEL MULLION
ALUMINUM FLASHING
SEALANT AND BACKER ROD
WOOD BLOCKING
CARPET ON PAD
ALUMINUM SKIN ON P.TWOOD PURLINS
STEEL ANGLE TOSUPPORT EXTERIOR WALL
WATER DIVERTER
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detail 1
detail 2
The Re-BurbiaSpring 2010Critic -Larry Doll
Inspired by the notion that the carbon footprint of an average Manhattanite is far lower than that of most rural and suburban residents and that Manhattanites on average use the same amount of gasoline as the average american from the 1920s, this project is a study of how to increase the density of downtown Austin to higher levels while holding on to certain aspects of American life that have become ubiquitous since the proliferation of the suburban model of urbanism.
Designed into the project are a number of features that are often cited as reasons that families move to the suburbs. These are:The availability of good schoolsSafe communitiesPrivate exterior spacesInternal privacy
Given the constraints of the site, these demands are met sectionally. Half of the first 3 levels of the building are occupied by a new elementary school. It is programatically separated from the residences by wrapping it around one of two interior courtyards and allowing access only via public square. The two courtyards work to foster safe communities by creating defensible semi-private spaces that serve as forecourts to the residential project and play areas for the school. Furthermore, the residential portion of the project is subdivided with vertical public spaces that serve as both circulation and communal space. Private exterior spaces are incorporated into most unit types, taking advantage of the sectional opportunities of double story units. Double story units also provide internal privacy and the separation of public and private.
The suburban features of the project do not trump its uban nature. A public plaza, created by lifting and cantilevering part of the building, speaks to Republic Park across the street and mediates between the school, residences, and the street. The street is activated by retail spaces that face the square, and dialogue is created between the school and the community by allowing glimpses into the gym and main circulation spaces from the street.
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Vertical “street” residential circulation zones break larger communities into smaller vertical neighborhoods
Randomized zinc panel curtain wall allows for extreme variability of solid and void where maintaining a consistent language
Steel and concrete truss support the cantilever over the public square
traditional concrete column and slab structural system is used everywhere else
Elementary school serves children of families living in the building as well as other families returning from the suburbs to downtown
Public square mediates between the street and school as well as between the street and residences
Seperate courtyards are provided for the school and residences
Retail faces Republic Square, hiding parking nestled behind and under it.
Layering
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plaza and courtyard panorama
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unit studies
unit cluster a
unit cluster b
unit cluster b
unit cluster aupper floor
unit cluster alower floor
2222
Glover Park HouseFall 2008Personal Project
I have a certain fascination with the townhouse typology that exist in many of the older cores of America’s eastern cities. In a society where everything new that we create comes with a built-in obsolescence, these houses have stood for centuries, often weathering abuse and neglect.
As a design exercise, I searched the neighborhood I was living in for a suitable site to design a speculative townhouse that could incorporate many of the inherently sustainable and functional elements of the type while updating it to a contemporary design language.
site amenities
building site
groceries and pharmacies
restaurants and bars
bus routes and stops
Solar gain is minimal as the broad face of the house faces north. The energy effi ciency of house is kept high by maintaining a high degree of solid area on the skin and using Zinc panels and a Prodema panel rain screen system. These materials, while possibly having a higher embodied energy due to fabrication and transportation requirements than more local “green” materials, are extremely durable and will not need to be replaced and thrown out. Ideally, this house will weather as well, or better than its older neighbors.
East Elevation North Elevation
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The fl oor plans draw on the basic rowhouse layout type but eschew typical partition walls for an open fl oor plan in order to increase the perceived size of the house. On the fi rst level, sliding and pivoting glass doors allow ventilation and open the house up to the outside. Natural light, let in from a skylight above the stairs, penetrates through the house and fi lters down into the basement. Upstairs, bedrooms have 2 sets of windows to maximize airfl ows and daylighting, and the stairwell skylight is operable to allow heat produced throughout the house to escape as it rises.
2nd fl oor
1st fl oor
basement
green roof
zinc panels
prodema rain screen
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view toward living room
view toward dining room
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This project is a live/work art gallery in Marfa, Texas, in which a portion of the proceeds of sold art go toward grants and micro-loans for local residents. Its aim is to create a direct connection between the economic stimulation of Marfa’s art scene and the native residents of Marfa.
Residents would apply for loans or grants, and those chosen would get to choose, or commission, a work by one of the 2 resident artists who live and work on the site. The funds for the loan would be a portion of the revenue generated by the sale of the art.
The program only occupies a portion of the site, in line with an existing concrete ruin. The rest of the site could be sold or developed and leased to raise funds for the gallery. The program is split into 2 parts, the public gallery space and the private residence and work spaces. They are separated by a public yard and event space, and the existing concrete
structure, which could serve as either a work space or exterior display space.
The concrete structure defines a number of parameters for the buildings on the site including their maximum width as well as height. Taller elements on the site draw from the proportions of the existing tower; The gallery skylights are solid iterations of it, while the second floor of the residence is an extruded version of it. Appropriate ceiling heights are maintained by excavating into the site. This move, along with the exterior walls, serves to define and ground the project as it exists in a somewhat nondescript and flat landscape.
Materials used are simple. Stucco, concrete, and cor-ten steel. A cor-ten steel wrapper announces the public entry to the gallery space. The gallery space then opens into a rear yard that can be used for a variety of events. The cor-ten steel language of the entry reappears to create and wrap the bar and service area. There is an opportunity to project video or images onto the back wall of the gallery. Past the existing structure is the artists’ residence. It is separated into working and living spaces, both in plan and section, with a sunken private courtyard providing light to the sunken living spaces.
Marfa Live/Work Art GalleryFall 2009Critic- Russell Krepart
existing site condition
Site
Route 90
Route 17
site analysis
concept diagram
Presidio County CourthouseHotel
Dining
Art/Judd
Civic
site
El Paisano Hotel
Judd Workshops
Chamberlain Building
The BlockDonald Judd’s House
Thunderbird Restaurant
Thunderbird Hotel
Dairy Queen
Marfa National Bank
Pizza Foundation
Cochineal Restaurant
Carmen’s Cafe
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studioprivate court
kitchen mech/elecbar
event/display spaceoutdoor work space
o�ce
gallery
studioprivate court
kitchen mech/elecbar
event/display spaceoutdoor work space
o�ce
gallery
section C
C
second fl oor plan
studioprivate court
kitchen mech/elecbar
event/display spaceoutdoor work space
o�ce
gallery
studioprivate court
kitchen mech/elecbar
event/display spaceoutdoor work space
o�ce
gallery
Section B
section A
fi rst fl oor plan
A
B
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gallery space
gallery entrance
artist residence/workshop
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Migrant Worker/ThinkerFall 2009Critic- Russell Krepart
conceptual rendering
Located a on a rural site, a few miles northwest of Fort Davis, Texas, on Limpia Canyon Cattle Ranch, this project consists of housing for up to 4 migrant workers or 2 migrant families during calving season at the ranch. When migrant workers are not needed on the ranch, the buildings function as a retreat for “migrant thinkers.”
The site is defi ned by a large number of cottonwood trees, which were originally spread across the area by early American workers/settlers travelling west to secure a brighter future and fulfi ll America’s “manifest destiny”. Cottonwoods are often grouped in circular patterns that originate from where seeds fell to the ground from settler’s wagon circles.
conceptual site model
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design studies
kit of parts diagram
The organization of the camp directly references the protective nature of these tree and wagon circles. Buildings are clustered around a central yard and the integrity of the circle is created by a combination of building and cottonwood.
The buildings themselves are simple concrete boxes that sit off the ground on a wooden deck that both creates social spaces and keeps out critters. This decking serves as a second, man-made site topography, where furniture and spatial barriers are formed through augmentation of the surface.
axonometric
fl oor plan
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view of fi re pit
view of dining space and caretaker residence
conceptual model
The decking and buildings are sliced by vertical planes, which break up massing, separate building function, and provide privacy where required.
The camp is designed to be used similarly by both the migrant worker and the migrant thinkers.
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Professional WorkSmithGroup
Professional WorkSmithGroup
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Microsoft Mid-Atlantic HeadquartersSmithGroup - 2009IIDA Mid-Atlantic 2010 Silver Award Winner
pantry/lounge space under construction
conference room under construction
SmithGroup won the commission to complete the interior design and build out of Microsoft’s new 120,000 sf Mid-Atlantic Headquarters just outside of Washington DC. The project schedule was very aggressive in order to correspond with the expiring lease that Microsoft held for their current space.
I joined the team in January of 2009, near the end of the design development stage of the project, and worked on
the project through its substantial completion in July of 2009. I worked on all parts of the project, from design, construction documents, millwork design, finish selection, construction administration, contractor and client meetings, consultant coordination, and quality control and punchlisting. Near the beginning of construction, almost half of the project team was laid off, including the project architect. Working with the project manager and design principle, I picked up many of the responsibilities left vacant by the personnel losses.
I was charged with the design of a number of millwork pieces for the space. The largest of these was a bar/hub piece that would serve as a focal point in the lounge spaces on each floor. Different colored backlit glasses were used as identifying elements for each floor.
photos courtesy of Max Mackenzie
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bar/hub detail
bar/hub
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Reston Heights EastSmithGroup2007-2008
Reston Heights is a one million sq. ft. mixed use office and retail development in Reston, Virginia. The biggest complications of the project were the developer’s desires to create architecture that works at 2 scales. The scale of the highway needed to be addressed along the north of the site, which backed up to the Dulles Toll Road, a major artery serving Dulles International Airport. On the interior of the site, the project needed to address the human scale and create a destination for retail.
To further constrain the site, suburban parking counts required parking for over 3000 cars. We overcame this problem by utilizing the slope of the site and continuing the ground datum from the west over the service road and onto the green roofs of the retail component.
The office building design reflects both the desire to maximize rentable space and market desirability while trying to create an iconic architecture highly visible to the “river of cars” flowing directly by it. Color became the team’s tool for creating a striking architecture without playing significantly with the building footprint. Different colored glasses and treatments of shadow boxes differentiates the three office towers, but at the end of the conceptual design phase, the appearance of them remained up in the air.
site plan rendered by Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects
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retail elevation
One of the main tasks that I was charged with was developing an architecture for the retail component of the project. An environmental theme incorporating geological ideas drawn from the landscape design by Nelson Byrd Woltz, and a desire to transition to a sleeker corporate architecture above, created the juxtaposed use of wood, stone gabion wall, and metal panels.
pavilion studies
early massing model
retail elevation
full retail elevation
office drop-off and retail
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425 Eye St.SmithGroup2008-2009
425 Eye Street is an existing office building about two blocks from the Convention Center in Washington DC. The client chose SmithGroup to renovate the building, update finishes and mechanical systems, and re-skin the south and east facades.
This was the first project in the Workplace Studio to be completed entirely in Revit. I worked on or assisted with most aspects of the project in one capacity or another. These include conceptual sketching, Revit Model management, bathroom finish selection (the layouts were, for the most part, existing) modelling in Revit, redlines, detailing, elevator cab design, and miscellaneous rendering. I was the main contact on the team for managing and troubleshooting the Revit model
I was one of 4 people working on this project. I joined the project team at the beginning of the implementation of Revit. A preliminary schematic design had been completed in 2006. Many features of the original schematic package were changed when the project was revisited.
before
after - professional rendering
elevator cab refi nishing studies
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1ST FLOOR46' - 6"
CONC. PAVERS ON SETTING BED
NEW SLAB ON GRADE
3-5/8" METAL STUD W/5/8" GWB W/ INS-1
NEW CONC. SLABOVER INS-5
EXIST. CONC. SLAB AND FOUNDATION WALL
MP-1
1' - 8 1/2" 1' - 3 1/2"
BOND BEAM. SEE STRUC.
REBAR. SEE STRUC.
CMU
PROTECTION BOARD
EXISTING CONC. CURB TO BE REMOVED
1' - 3"
2"
COMPACTEDGRADE
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MP-1 JOINT BEYOND
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curtain wall at grade detail
1ST FLOOR46' - 6"
CONC. PAVERS ON SETTING BED
NEW SLAB ON GRADE
3-5/8" METAL STUD W/5/8" GWB W/ INS-1
NEW CONC. SLABOVER INS-5
EXIST. CONC. SLAB AND FOUNDATION WALL
MP-1
1' - 8 1/2" 1' - 3 1/2"
BOND BEAM. SEE STRUC.
REBAR. SEE STRUC.
CMU
PROTECTION BOARD
EXISTING CONC. CURB TO BE REMOVED
1' - 3"
2"
COMPACTEDGRADE
S
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PREFORMED ALUM. SILL
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MP-1 BEYOND
MP-1 JOINT BEYOND
11'
- 0"
1' - 6" 1' - 6"
3' -
0"10
"5"
MP-1
5/8" GWB ON 3-5/8"MTL STUDS W/ SEMI-RIGIDFOIL FACED INSULATION.
SEAL ALL AIR BARRIERPENETRATIONS
FRAMING AS REQUIREDTO SUPPORT METAL PANEL
1' -
0"
AIR/WATER BARRIER
WW-1
ALUM. SILLEXTENSION BELOW
S
E.O. CMUWALL BELOW
5/8" GWB ON2 1/2" METAL STUDS
S
ROOF125' - 6"
2' -
6"
2' -
4 1/
2"4
1/2"
2' -
10 1
/2"
S
5"
3' -
6"
WRAP SHEETMEMBRANE FLASHINGUNDER ALUM. COPING
SLOPE
MTL PANEL COPING
LAP 2" MIN.
CONT. CLEAT
SHEATHING
STL. CHANNEL. SEE STRUC.
MEMBRANE FLASHING
CANT
PT WD BLOCKING
ROOFING OVER TAPEREDINSULATION
INS-3
INS-1
T.O. PARAPET
1' - 9"
3' - 1 1/4"
ALUM. CURTAINWALLSYSTEM
6" METAL STUDS W/ 1/2"EXTERIOR SHEATING ON
BOTH SIDES
ALUM. INFILL PANEL - PTD
ALUM. INFILL PANEL - PTD
EXIST. CONC.SLAB
L SUPPORT ANDKICKERSSEE STRUC.
PREFORMED ALUM.BLIND POCKET
STL. ANGLESEE STRUC.
ALUM.CLOSURE PANEL BYWINDOW SUPPLIER
column cladding detail
curtain wall detail
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Drawings,Sketches,
etc.
Drawings,Sketches,
etc.
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Sketchbook: Italy
These sketches and studies were completed in Florence, Rome, Vicenza, Venice, and Como on a 6 week trip during the summer of 2006. Emphasis was placed on the use of sketching to better understand and diagram the experiences of spaces and buildings.
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Process Sketches
windmill sketches for prongorn tracking center - 2009academicbelow and right
sketches for a mixed-use apartment building in Baltimore - 2006academicopposite page
migrant worker/thinker sketches - 2009academicbottom right
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Hand Rendering
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66
ipods
Digital Rendering
apartment building
sunlit room
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conceptual buildinghybrid render and line
curr
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umvi
tae
Work ExperienceSmithGroup | Washington, DC | Aug. 2007 - Aug. 2009Intern Architect
Worked collaboratively on 3 projects with design teams of 4 to 5
Assisted in the conceptual design of a 1 million square foot office and retail development, the renovation and reskinning of an existing office building, and the IIDA award winning interior design and fit out of 4 floors of a high end office building.
Participated in all aspects of the design process: conceptual modelling and sketching construction documentation rendering client, consultant, and contractor meetings construction administration
Spearheaded the implimentation of Autodesk Revit software within SmithGroup’s workplace studio
The University of Texas | School of Architecture| Austin, Texas | Jan. 2010 - PresentVisual Communications | Teaching Assistant | Jan. 2010 - Present
Assist in teaching 1st year architecture students the basics of drawing techniques, rendering, and drafting
IO central | Austin, Texas | Jan. 2009 - Dec 2010Staff Member
Taught introductory Revit coursesProvided technical support and troubleshooting assistance for studentsMaintained digital technologies such as laser cutters and 3d printersAssisted in the general upkeep of the computer lab
Ross Gallowayross.h.galloway@gmail.com302 W 38th St.Apt. 110Austin, TX 78705301.335.2644
Education2009 - PresentUniversity of Texas - AustinMaster of Architecture | May 20123.85 GPA
2003-2007University of Maryland - College ParkBachelor of Science of Architecture | May 2007Graduated Summa Cum Laude Award for Academic Achievement at the Baccalaureate Level
AwardsSelected Works 2010 chosen as a blurb.com Editor’s pick portfolioUTSOA Vertical Studio Design Excellence NomineeIIDA Mid Atlantic 2010 Silver Award for Microsoft Mid-Atlantic Headquarters (SmithGroup) 1st place award- National Building Museum Inter-School Student Design Competition CharretteRecipient of the University of Maryland School of Architecture Faculty Scholarship
SkillsHand -
Digital -
Languages - Fluent in Spanish
sketching | physical modelling | rendering [graphite. colored pencil. marker. watercolor]
Revit | Autocad | Sketchup | Rhino | Photoshop Illustrator | Indesign | 3dsmax | Kerkythea
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