Transverse Section
April 27, 2009
Basic Structure Complete
April 22, 2009
Here is a quick animation of a completion stage I am at. I finished the main structural elements and now I am starting the modeling on the covering elements on the exterior and interior. The structure was difficult to devise because the geometry seemed simple but it was much harder to make it blend well when real beams were put in place. Some of the structure will be visible as is, and some will be covered with glass, kalwall, stained glass, etc. Refer to the concept drawing for design intent. I will probably be updating this post with still shots as well so be sure to check back.
Here are a few quick renders of the structure. There are some inconsistencies to correct, and you might notice that longitudinal sides are a little different. This was to see how different approaches worked, and which looked better.
Structural and Material Development
April 14, 2009
Previously I had devised a geometry defined by a skin and believed that this skin could be supported by a concrete structural framing system that I had crafted into an interesting pattern based on my original drawing (see approaches Board of Final Exam Posters). I had said that this skin would be an ubiquitous kalwall covering that could insulate but still let a translucent light in for the interior. First problem, the skin needed its own structural system to support the kalwall and I did not know how that would work. Having a structural system for the kalwall not based on the original concrete structure I had planned made the original structure obsolete and nothing more than ornament (and a massively expensive one at that). It is not to say that these concrete frames could not work, but as they were, they were not carrying their weight in the design. So I went back to the drawing board with a different approach.
I would no longer worry about making a skin per se as a separate element of the structure, instead I would focus on finishing the concrete structure (with some steal elements), making the original stand and how to connect the separate trusses together so as to form an interesting frame, keeping an eye out for empty places between structural elements in this frame that needed to be closed off but also those areas that could lend their forms for interesting skin materials. Maybe it could be kalwall but maybe it could be a good position for a stained glass window, an opaque wall, different colored glass, or even something radical. The important factor in deciding these materials and their locations would be their contribution to spiritual affect of the entire building. But before I could start drawing and thinking on an aesthetic level, I needed to know the facts of the structure I had and if reality would get in the way of my plans.
First stage: Structural analysis of current frame and geometry.
I realized that I needed to create more framing elements around the geometry that I had called a skin. In a way, I thought of this practically as the way houses with pitched roofs are framed and the geometry it creates; pyramids, triangles, intersecting angled places, etc. There is a peak and and valleys in a pitched roof, in the peak there is a ridge beam to connect and support the rafters that form the planes of the roof. At the valleys, there is normally a structural wall carrying the load from the rafters down to the foundation. My project relates to this principle but on a much grander scale. The triangular pitches I have formed are very similar to the valleys and peaks one would see in residential construction. The structural elements would be steel in mine but similar in that they must take on a similar frame. Next I analysed the frame I had already designed to see if there were any major problems it had for the plane in which it was to carry forces (that was another problem with the previous model is that I did not know how or where to connect the frames together to keep them from failing laterally).
The results:
The shear, moment, and axial load forces were where I expected them, but I was a little surprised by where the deflection would occur and to what degree. The top level bowed in very badly. Something to take into account in designing additions to the frame. The loading also made me realize that I will need to make some very strong/wide foundation piers where the inner columns meet the soft College Station soil. Also to realize that they may need to be thicker.
Second Stage: Create a section and material concept with the new data.
As I was drawing I was trying to solve structural problems but I was mostly concerned with keeping the original feeling of the building, refining it to a tighter detail. In the end there is much more interconnected and pragmatic framing, but this opened up wonderful opportunities to create 50 foot high stained or painted glass murals, or play with the borders of the actual framing with visual framing in the form of opaque glass or translucent Kalwall. Most importantly, it has allowed me to create deeper intricacies in the building to that can expand upon this spiritual aesthetic I have developed.
Third Stage: Redevelop a 3d model with the new framing and start to add materials to see if it can work as I have drawn the concept.
This stage is still a work in progress and I have given some screenshots of where I am in the model.
Final Exam Posters
April 14, 2009
January Poster Presentation
April 14, 2009
Viz-A-GOGO Ad Project
April 14, 2009
Here is the final magazine/comic book cover I made for our Viz-a-gogo advertising project. Credit must be due though to Chris Griffin for the great profile image of Captain Awesome.
Also, I made the Viz Force Five blog, which has a few extras about Captain awesome and his team. Check it out.
InfoGraphics
March 31, 2009
Here is a blog that highlights some infographic examples found from the web.
Book Cover
March 25, 2009
For this assignment we were tasked with designing a book cover for the novel, “Einstein’s Dream’s.” We had to read it and then make an appopriate cover. I felt the book had less to do with Einstein and physics than it did with an exploration into nihilism by the author, Alan Lightman. I understood the book but felt it had no meaning, which might be what was intended in the first place.
This ‘vibe’ that the book was emanating was the inspiration for my cover piece. The theme that came to my mind was a person walking on a disconnected path into a void.
In order to express this idea of void, I felt that an image of outerspace would be suitable. I looked for an image of a nebula on NASA’s website that also had a nice color gradient in it in order to pull the viewer from the front to the back of the cover.
Weather Icons
March 25, 2009

- Weather Icons
These Icons include six different weather conditions; sunny, partly cloudy, snow, rain, and lightning. I really liked the original sunny icon I had but many of the responses for it said that it looked like a star at night instead of the sun. I kept that sun for the partly cloudy icon though.
Study Abroad Blog
February 3, 2009
I created a simple blog for the study abroad office during the summer of 2007. The blog was an effort to get more students interested in studying abroad. The theory was that students who were on a trip could post pictures and write a journal about their particular experience. It was marginally successul and there were many issues with keeping people’s privacy intact or preventing innapropriate posts, it could have needed a full time manager to really make it look sharp and keep its pages updated.
























