Categories
Architecture

When does an Architect draw?

When I take vacation I try to draw every day. When I traveled abroad in 2002 I carried only a camera, journal and sketch book all day. In every day life and at my job it is a treat when I get to draw.

But what it is about drawing? Is it similar to my kinesthetic learning preference? I will not design creatively if I am producing in cad. In a production type job, where time is money and delivering in a quick fashion is what the client prefers, when can I allow myself the luxury of using a pen and paper? I cannot choose colors on a computer either. I cannot get a feel of a place or figure out a detail without jotting down a three-dimensional problem. It is like solving math equations in your head. It is just easier to write it down.

The computer is a drafting tool helpful for repetitive and square foot programming. But in a recent project, once I devised a plan that worked for the client, I printed it out, overlayed it with trace and began to imagine living in the space. Looking down the street, helped by the ability to walk anywhere in the world with Google street view, judging where the sun would be and how people could be served off of the street helped fit the design to its place. Then, once the day dreaming phases with my pencil were over, I relayed the design into the computer for the first run of  documents.

Voila, the computer is used as the production tool, and I push drawing into this fast paced world of architecture.

Categories
About Me

Ten Minute Blog Challenge

Who’s up for the Ten minute Blog challenge?

My girlfriend and I for starters! You have ten minutes to upload an image and describe something about it, then, you post. The point? To get our your thoughts, even if it is only between two people, and feel a sense of accomplishment in completing the task!

Where did we get this idea?  For one, The Happiness Project.  Two, my girlfriend and I live in two different climates, on different continents, but we still have a strong friendship and inspirational goals between the two of us. So, this is a great way to keep track of one another, as if we lived just across the hall from one another. I am going to challenge myself with a goal of posting five times a week!  Why don’t you also check out my friends’ blog, Pencil In Hand to see what she is proposing!

What we intend to write about relates to what we share as motivation between the two of us when we call and write to each other. Also check out Gretchen Rubin’s Happiness Project to see how her project influenced this challenge!

Ah,…12 minutes.. done!

Categories
Architecture Building Sustainably

A Green Interior in the Woods

What green initiatives are directed at Interiors? Positive indoor air quality, durable materials, local materials and production, upcycled products, and the aesthetically pleasing arrangement of these items to encourage a healthy lifestyle. A plan that responds directly to each site is important for the Interior Design as it relates to natural light, comfort, distinctively framed views, and overall wellness of the inhabitant with the land and surrounding community.

While being in the daydreaming stages of a proposed new job, I developed a presentation and directed the above new statement to the beginning of my cause; and that was to develop a design for the interior of a home that met with the strict rules of a Net Zero Home. The project goes on without me but is still alive in my thoughts. I am encompassed with the ideas that floated in and out of my mind as new clients, programs and experiences tend to, so, I decided to share them in writing.  The setting for the new home is within a forest community. The site has a tall canopy of existing trees through which natural paths have formed. A grown-over right-of-way allows easy access to the nature of the site.

I have a philosophy of what a house is for.  That is to eat, clean, sleep, work and play. In this project and others, I want to promote this in a sustainable, healthy, growing way. I pulled together inspirational images from my files.  These images have a lot of character, they show the importance of texture varieties and together assemble a pallet that is right for each place.
I began to think of natural materials in relation to specific functions of a home and how these materials may change in relation to where the house resides. The materials should speak with the site, pull together and define places so that the inhabitants are aware of themselves and their activities.

Light and view became a common theme as I critiqued what drew me to each image. Therefore, Light and View developed into a category.


The limits of light and view shape spaces, they define a material arrangement around the opportunities of each room. A space may be open to allow light deep within the room, making the function of the room more versatile. Designs to incorporate natural light have high windows, and a specific percentage of floor area dedicated to translucent material.

Mirrors and light shelves are used to bounce the light through the interior. Natural light is important for work. Specific to a project in the mountains and woods would be particular attention to framing the views from inside and not forgetting the opportunity to frame a view of the interior from a path in the forest.

Lighting fixtures may be used to light spaces of course, but also may define spaces as well depending on their arrangement and size. Unique alteration of traditional things are playful such as the crystal chandelier in a modern shape.

Another focus on the images became the apparent ability of the place, the site, the home, to sustain oneself. Light and stone materials merged into this category together.  Stone became the focus of sustaining comfort.

There are beautiful radiant floors with unique concrete stains made to look like majestic stone. Concrete holds heat well, and if they are installed to orient toward direct sun in the winter time, the chill of the cold is offset by warm feet. The sparse, open nature of some of these stoned places were very restful to me. I realized what materials should be in the sleeping rooms by studying these restful relaxing spaces. Linen and wood played a large role in these rooms. The colors were varied, light and dark, cool and warm. I found out that I had a soft spot for white attic bedrooms. These looked like they belonged at a beach more than a mountain forest though.

A lot of images I pulled began to fit into a playful and fun category.  Along with being efficient for the function they served the bathrooms were colorful, thrown off-balance and surprising with the introduction of purple sinks and oversized mirrors. The background tiles matched colorful memories of my own youth and inner desires of comfort and glee.  Imagine writing on these chalk board walls, organizing in glass shelves and feeling a breeze by an invisible fan.

Melissa Warner is a designer I admire. She uses forgotten furniture and blends color with function and repurposed house-hold times to create a place that is invigorating as well as inviting.

A project in the forest, a lodge, a vacation home for guests in the mountains assumes that you use earthy products in versatile spaces. In this home that appears to be made of wooden framed views, one can study how wood spans and the introduction of high windows, helps to arrange a continuity of rooms scattered in a West Virginia site. The house forms its own community, giving visitors and the hosts a vacation together.

Another take on timber framing is this room set to the south side of this house that is used for heat storage. A trombe wall is set up behind the glass, and is the vertical transgression through the house.

Another interesting design concept is a ‘stack house.’ This is a house that uses the passive strategy of natural ventilation. An open stairwell with open treads can do this simply in any two or more story home.

Architects can use the program of a home to come up with a completely different design tailored to the use of a client. This is seen in the barn structure extension of wood supports as it is used for a cover that is still careful to incorporate natural light from above. This focused design effort leads into the categories of intricate, deep and made-for-the-place.

Spaces that fit in and respond to a site take more time as the incorporation of a new use is fit into an existing place.  Take for instance this parquet floor, stained and painted areas are used to define a grouping. Simple treatments of an overhead bulkhead give interest and depth to areas that may otherwise go unnoticed. Curved windows, courtyards with large table settings and built-in bookshelves make use of what a room has to offer in its’ arrangement.

Two entire buildings that respond to the site are Alvarao Leite Siza Viera’s Casa Tolo project and Legorreta & Legorreta’s Hotel La Purificadora in Puebla, Mexico.
With Siza Viera’s house, the stair house, reacts to a sloping site.  The transgression through a cemented step in the forest is imitated in floating treads to the interior. The definition between room to room is made naturally by following the grade.  You keep stepping down and down into the next room.


At Hotel La Purificadora, natural stone spaces from a 16th century building are brought to life with the modern use materials of glass, purple cushioned furniture and cantilevered metal balconies.

Reclaimed wood is used to encase columns, a space left between the top of these and the second floor makes the second story seem weightless.  Other rooms are divided by deep shelves, an organized grid that serves the purpose to separate and contain.

In these two projects, aesthetics and the acute realization of place make the effect of space better than if materials were assigned to only fulfill the program and build the job.

What about spaces for entertaining? I found the ones I most preferred to have many different materials in some instances with off kilter patterns and mixed up uses, and some to have flat, simple wood floors with an overfilled, simple lined chair. The quality of light was important in all of these cases. A soft light preferred.

Last but not least of course is returning to nature and going back outside. The land supports the house. The house should allow a positive impact on this place where one did not exist.  The site allows visitors to enter and entertains their first impression.

Before I began this analysis I had a predisposed desire to assign materials to spaces.  What made sense was the following guideline:

o    Stone – How Can we sustain ourselves every day?
o    Light – Eat and heat, Natural light, glass allows view
o    Wood – Sleep
o    Metal – Clean
o    Wood & Metal – Work
o    Wool & Silk – Play
o    Plaster – Surface and definition of space

This could only be carried out with sustainable, local, well made, durable, healthy products. So went my research into certain systems and a product checklist particular for this project.  I used the outline below:

Systems and Products Checklist

o    Flooring
o    Trim
o    Wall Coverings, Finishes, & Interior Partitions / Bulkheads (including the use of 4 x 8 sheets of sustainable goods that could replace gwb.)
o    Casework
o    Work Surfaces
o    Doors, Frames and Hardware
o    Ceiling
o    Furniture & Artwork
o    Plumbing Equipment & Energy Star Appliances with Smart Metering
o    Fabric, Curtains & Shades
o    Lighting Fixtures / Solar Tube
o    Caulk & Material Finishes (waxes, paints)
o    Windows
o    Linens, Dishware, Toiletries, Cleansers, & other Household necessities

So, for now, I can draw, learn more about sustainable products that are local, and look forward to the next opportunity where I may be able to apply materials to a real place!

Categories
About Me

La La Land

 

I am floating on air, remembering the moments, on cloud nine.

Or, perhaps I am lost in a field with my husband.

We were married the second weekend of June.

 

Joe Krehlik with   Forever A Masterpiece in St. Clairsville captured the day, the seconds, the big laughs and happy tears. He and his wife took my husband and I around The Farm, the reception spot, at dusk to capture these pastoral views.  If you want to view them all on his website let me know.

Our friends took pictures too.  My great friend and college roommate took these. Julie Doerr took one of my favorites of my little cousin and I.

Beginning the week prior, our friends threw us a deck party with wedding bells and all. Our very talented friends put together a newly wed game, etched wine glasses with our initials, made a three-tier checkerboard cake, and entertained a comfortable setting around a fire pit for drinks and conversation.

 

 

We even had our own party mascot.

The weekend before our wedding we hosted our friends who drove from Louisiana, fit everything they owned, including their Kerbey, into a Prius and moved to Erie Pa for work and proximity to us!

 

We began to receive gifts from friends around town, we found a large composter on our porch that must have been dropped off in the middle of the night, artists painted plates depicting our home, letters and cards came by mail, and we began to be overwhelmed in the best way as friends and family shared in their excitement over the celebration we were about to engage in.

A color palette and a girlfriend book were opened from a friend who could not make it for the weekend, due to the fact that she had a little baby girl the Thursday before!  The orange bound book is a timeline of my friends, beginning with my mother, growing up in Louisiana, moving to Pittsburgh, spending time with my roommates at Virginia Tech, moving to Houston and ending with my favorite picture of engagement atop of Mt. Saint Helens last June.

We had a lovely time the week after too, sitting on our front porch writing about the past weekend, still being surprised by boxes in the mail,  opening everything in our living room~

         

  

But nothing compares to the days surrounding our weekend wedding. So, here we go!

The girls, meaning my sister, mom and mother in law to be, went to get our nails done Friday morning.  Here is my sister, Starbucks in hand as usual, in the pedicure chair.  We had lunch at Panera, and I must have been more nervous that morning; my usual hungry every-three-hours self had gone away, but was back by Saturday morning!  Friends from out of town came by our house all day Friday, visiting from Raleigh, DC, Chicago and Chile!

That evening at St. Mary’s Church we had rehearsal with our priest.  This was the first wedding he would be presiding over, everything seemed calm and easy.

We had dinner at the patio of Later Alligator in Wheeling WV.  This dinner spot specializes in crepes but served us fresh fish and potatoes for our special social event.  We sat beneath the red umbrellas, introduced guests, had homemade soaps with Bride & Groom sitting at our place setting, ate salads, croissants, and nutella deserts, mingled as the sun set and the patio candles lit our merriment.  We had an idyllic evening before my fiance and I had to say goodnight.  I went home with my family, enjoying the company of my God parents, grandma, brother sister and parents before I went to sleep.

Thunderstorms were predicted, the skies poured before we said our vows at St. Mary’s Church and the clouds opened up just as we stepped into the 1916 Cole car to arrive at The Farm.

      

  

        

 

There are so many things to remember. Some of my favorite stories are the ones I am hearing from friends and family.  Everyday there is a new story. What other day in your life have 150 of your closest friends and family helped to notice every second of your happiness?

 

 

 

Categories
Community Food & Exercise

The Wheeling Ogden

34th Annual Ogden Newspapers 20K Classic

Race this morning!

I will be going head to head with and against my brother! I thought it was a friendly race until the other week when he emailed me to say that he’d stay with me for the first four miles before kicking it in!  While he did just complete the Pittsburgh Half Marathon, I have at least run this HUGE Hill called 29th Street Hill. I mapped it out for him below so he could know what he was up against.

Two years ago the Ogden Relay Race was introduced. Instead of training for the full 20K, two people could run the race, and swap a baton in the middle.

My brother will be running the relay race with my friend against my fiance and I, who will be running the relay as well.

The race transforms Wheeling’s quiet river city into a huge race weekend. There are so many healthy happy people hanging out, talking and stretching where I typically take lunch on a quiet lawn.

Categories
Uncategorized

Running with 16,000 People over Bridges and Rivers

At the Pittsburgh Marathon!    

My family went up the night before to carbo-load with my brother at Bravo’s.    

       

 It is his first Half Marathon and he has been training to run this for about three months, so we had to be there. Round two of two glasses of water later, he was ready for a coffee break then  bed!    

         

We began the morning before six, waking up with a downtown-hotel-full of runners. There were so many people, we waded through the crowds before finding my brother.  He did some chatting, then we all watched on and took pictures by standing on the railings to get the full effect idea of what its like to run beside so many people! (click this photo to see it better!)  

The count down began, and they were off… 10 minutes later my brother started across the start line!   

     

We couldn’t tell where he was at all, so my sister and I ran to the 16th street bridge and grabbed a rail to sit on and wait for him to go by at the 3-4 mile mark. We waited about half of an hour and spotted him.   

        

By this time everyone was drenched, us included. He looked great, barely winded at all! We ran with him for a few seconds to grab a shot and then ran on to cut him off at the 7 mile mark, (He ran about a 10 minute mile pace for the duration of the race!)    

and… we got there just in time!  He spotted us first, and by this time our parents were long gone. We figured we’d all have the same goal of finding my brother at the finish line so we weren’t too worried!     

       

   

From that point my sister and I dashed to the finish line and waited under the water-fall-off-of the dry people’s umbrellas to see if we could spot him.  We were freezing by this point but were glad to have at least run 1-2 miles through out the day while trying to see him at different points.     

Then, just after the first Marathon runners came in, he was there!  Red in the face, but by the time we caught him under the Convention Center he was completely recovered and so happy.  Everyone that ran the race received a medal!    

 

     

Chip Time : 2:12:05     

Clock Time: 2:22:12  (Meaning a full 10 minutes to cross the starting point!)
     

Placed 185th in his Division, he’s a 20- 24 year old Male!     

Placed 1,733 for Men     

Placed 3,334 overall!            That’s the top quarter!

  Brother   Pittsburgh PA USA Men 20-24     2:12:05 2:22:12 3334 1733 185

        

Of course then, we all went out to The Library and he celebrated with the darkest beer on the menu!   

Go Brother!!!

Categories
About Me Architecture

Girl Friend Motivated Inspiration !?

Last night I opened up the latest House Beautiful to find a great young designer, Melissa Warner of Massucco Warner Miller , and her brilliant california apartment.

  

This ceramic garden stool she used in her living room looks like something I could break a piece off of and wear as a broach.

It is from of San Francisco.

 Then, I learned she is 30 and owns her own Interior Design and Decoration studio with her two best friends! Melissa describes in the magazine article how she enjoys choosing pieces for a room –FIRST,  the mirrored banquet, the high back chair with three-dimensional welting, the vintage sofa, the metal coffee table, the tulip lamps for the bedroom…  There are unlimited colors of paint, so why begin there? I enjoyed her inventiveness, her glass-topped tables and more. I suggest you check out the magazine.

And, while searching for the article online I stumbled upon two Boston best friends who host a site between themselves called Bellevue and Rose… oh girlfriends!

And, speaking of girlfriends I’ve had so many friends lately bring me up. First, I received a wonderful painting from my dear friend in Texas. She collaborated with her just-turned-two-year-old boy.

Can you see it up there on the wall by my desk?

My great friend in Chile has been painting and giving me mid-morning advice on my way to work about life, love, and bicycling. She told me that last Friday it was sprinkling in Santiago and she wandered around her city in the crisp evening rain. Wish I could be there too!

Finally, my best friend and her husband are moving close to me and my fiance! I am helping her to find a job so we can enjoy being healthy and active in an Ohio summer!

So, in honor of girlfriends and being forever inspired by them I wore a red floral print skirt and my walking urban boots to work today!

 

Categories
Uncategorized

…and from the Young We are Inspired!

I had the opportunity to discover Architecture again from the eyes of a young man. He recently turned 14 and knows how he wants to spend his higher education.  Having met him once to talk over coffee and cappuccino I knew his developed interest in the heavy and detailed parts of architecture as it related to Roman architecture.  At that meeting, with my fiance’s help we laid out work of our own and presented the wonderful world of drawing as it is imperative to creativity, architecture and landscape architecture. Next, the boy wanted to come into my firm and see working as an architect first hand.

I had prepared to go through a set of drawings in-office of a project that had been completed within the last year, show renderings and initial sketches of schemes so that we may compare what was proposed to what was built. I showed him CAD and Sketchup, commanding the computer to draw rectangles and doors, and pop out windows in planes of three-dimensional models.  We traveled and photographed a site in which we are proposing a new building fit in with the existing architecture. We visited Elmhurst the project drawings we had reviewed earlier. After touring the old mansion and the addition we took some time out in the sun to draw. We drew for about half of an hour and he proclaimed that he hadn’t realized how long it took to draw.

We talked about Starchitects and I went home to search through my europe photos to send to him a few of the Names-to-Know in architecture. I thought I would share here some of those photos after realizing how many different architects contributed to my development and awe in becoming apart of this profession.

 

How to keep on drawing: My fiance and I spend Art Saturdays together in an attempt to find, learn and draw together, and to work through our thoughts on design. It’s also a way to spend quality time with one another, or to include something else I’ve recently learned about, it is one of our Love Languages.   I’ve also enjoyed my good friends charcoal sketches I’ve found in her blog Pencil In Hand.

Categories
Environmental

Her Story of Stuff

‘The less possessions you have, the less things possess you.’

I read this in an unusual  place over the weekend and felt proud to find this in mainstream media.  A while back, after initiating with a few friends a BuildGreen Group for the Ohio Valley and after becoming involved in the Environmental Book Club at Oglebay Institute’s Schrader Environmental Center I was directed to watch Annie Leonard’s  The Story of Stuff.

Cute animated cartoons describe how much energy waste, pollution and trash it takes to make, ship, distribute, and sell common products you and I buy every day.

The marketing industry for selling things (anything!)  is psychologically in tune with how to consume people with shopping.

Keep your trash and recycles in grouped piles for two weeks to know what you use. Plastics with plastics, paper with paper, etc. While my recycling bin fills up in a few days, I maybe take one waste can full of trash a week.  You may find inspiration in this exercise to control your purchasing habits (meaning less money spent) and condense your trash at the same time.

      

Since traveling in college and my experience at only having a few changes of clothes that would last three and a half months I have often wondered to what extent could I live with less and less stuff.  I am critical at what comes into my home, because I know at a future date I will have to deal with it en masse, along side every other days accumulations.

 Have you seen The Colbert Report? Stephen Colbert, a comedian who believes that Central Park should have a stream in the shape of his last name inital, who loves being an American, who loves the different flavors we can spray on a corn chip, is hilarious. I stream his show and watch it off of my computer.  A few weeks ago he hosted Annie Leonard.  Sample his sarcasm and watch it here: Annie Leonard on Colbert

Oh, and one more thing.  I found this today and like the sounds of it!  100 Thing Challenge

Categories
About Me Poetry

Slow Snow

A week ago we were hit with another snow storm.  20″ in a few days, and more on and off this week. First Friday will again be postponed to March.

The snow has been humbling, has made me slow, has made me more thoughtful, appreciate and concentrate on what I am doing. Being slow makes me conscious.

Our landscape is beautiful, our house set in a new landscape that is now at the clearing edge of a forest. The white forest looks like a land of baby’s breath, the hills are quieter, close, one color over the grave bumps and freshly tilled earth.

Neighbors are jolly, hellos are carried over the white landscape so easily, more pronounced and articulate, nothing to compete. We help one another and meet new people who live so close, we aren’t in a panic just a little stuck.

The snow falls in my favor, rolling out from my high and open windows like a sled pouring from the first story, covering the brick and sills meant to protect me from the ground and sky, now all blended into one white blanket. The sky has piled up, begins swirling in the middle of the street when I walk it is like someone walking beside me. I can see the wind and think it is still snowing, the diamonds crackling in the air, catching the moon on a clear night.

My neighbor’s freeze-dried flowers, the sandy snow covering a hilled layer of ice up to the top where you can peer over main street and most of the county from the vantage. The courthouse like a mountain on top of a mountain.

Driving is even more fun, driving through tunnels of snow as I make my get away to the highway.