Friday, February 14, 2014

Visual Arts School for SKETCH



"...School space should open material connections 'between what [the student] does to his environment and what it does to him,' so that 'his acts and the things about him acquire meaning . . . [and he] learns to understand both himself and the world of men and things”

"Otherwise, the school’s walls simply enclose the student’s world, constricting and thinning (rather than 'expanding' and 'thickening') the sphere of experience to the point of near-irrelevance."

 - NEIL GISLASON
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto, Canada
In reference to  John Dewey’s writing on educative spaces


In reference to John Dewey's notion of educative spaces, our learning  spaces should be made more flexible in order to support dynamic educative processes. Dewey refers to an environment, the world of experience, as a constantly growing entity, that "grows larger and, so to speak, thicker”

As an architect, how can we design educative spaces that understands this growth and flexibility? If an educative building shares a reciprocal relationship with its occupant, it will understand its needs and allow an individual's growth to transpire. 

So...

How can spaces become adaptive to the individual needs and desires for a student? How can we design for an increase/decrease of stimulus levels for spaces that are conducive for inspiration, collaboration, work and/or relaxation in an educational environment?

With the foregoing in mind, I decided to design a school for the arts, where stimulus levels are vital for focus, inspiration and interaction amongst emerging artists. 

Typology: Visual Arts School for SKETCH on Queen Street West

What is SKETCH? (Project-based initiative working with 'street-involved' small groups of youth in visual arts)






Currently, this group of individuals are moving to Shaw and Queen in a former warehouse facility. After taking a look at their floor plans, it became apparent that the spaces were not flexible and defined by traditional classroom standards. I felt it was necessary to experiment with a space for young artists that is more flexible in nature and reflects the individuality of each artist.  

The site chosen remains within the Art & Design District on Queen Street. It is located on the corner of Queen and Fennings St. where currently resides an abandoned repair shop and parking lot. Its conveniently located across from Paul Garfinkle Parkette. 





The following  are my refined architectural strategies and tactics for Project #2. (With the same architectural position as shown in P1)


Strategy 1: The Empathetic Building
The building must be designed as a living organism, one that adapts to its users and enhances their spatial experience and wellbeing through empathy.

How is this relevant in this educational context?

Architecture can foster an educational environment that empathizes with the user's psychological needs including adaptability for inspiration, focus and collaboration.

How?

Tactic# 1: The building will change shape in correspondence to the inhabitant’s current physiological and psychological state, with the intention of stimulating the senses and inducing a healthier mind and body.

Tactic# 2: The building will vary in material tactility in correspondence to the inhabitant’s current physiological and psychological state, with the intention of stimulating the senses and inducing a healthier mind and body.

Tactic# 3: The building will vary in light intensity in correspondence to the inhabitant’s current physiological and psychological state, with the intention of stimulating the senses and inducing a healthier mind and body.

All three tactics act in a symbiotic relationship with the intention of enhancing the user's spatial experience and wellbeing through empathy on both a macro and micro level.

Strategy 2: The Utilitarian Building

The building must be ever-changing in program and adapt to the user's functional needs, as
opposed to being predefined by a single application.

How is this relevant in this educational context?

The artists' space must be adaptive in nature reflecting their idiosyncrasies and individual needs.

How?

Tactic #1: The building will re-configure into appropriate environments for the sculptor, painter and fashion artisan.

Tactic #2: The building will re-configure itself to provide environments for individual work, collaborative work, exhibition, relaxation and socializing.

Sculptor requires:
- More Sq Ft the better
- Multiple Surfaces
- Easy entry & exiting
- Natural lighting is essential (overhead)
- Natural ventilation
- Access to sinks

Painter requires:
- Natural lighting is essential (overhead)
- Multiple Surfaces
- Space to hang reference images
- Space for easel & storage

Fashion Artisan requires:
- Storage Space
- Space to hang reference images
- Large table for sewing or crafting
- A table for sketching

All Artists Require at Times
- A space for relaxation
- A space that is conducive to collaboration and socializing
- A space for focus
- Access to the outdoors
- High Ceilings

Strategy #3 - The Neuroplastic Building

The building will learn from the inhabitant and evolve accordingly over periods of time; eliciting
the user's stimulus through building variations and thus establishing dishabituation.

How?

Tactic #1
The building would be comprised of neuromorphic control systems that would be able to learn
from the occupant and evolve in real-time.

(At this point, I will showcase how the building could reconfigure for different artist studio set-ups over time. I will define probable "what if" scenarios)



Stay tuned for visualization! 

1 comment:

  1. Not bad at this point in time but please be mindful of a few tropes that many architectural theses that deal with education fall into: a) Montessori/Dewey/Hertzberger precedents on learning environments, and b) preoccupations with programming. With the former, try looking beyond what has been documented regarding education that is older than 40 years old. Things have changed since then especially with the onset of virtualized/online learning environments, student entitlement, and access to networked learning (i.e. MOOCs). These factors have had dramatic changed not only education environments in general but made for huge paradigm shifts in the way that typology manifests itself (just think about how telecommuting changed the office environment). There have been some sources such as those found in the JAE and certainly more contemporary educational literature. Though you are not to become an expert on current trends in education, you should be able to negotiate these parameters in light of your own thesis strategies and tactics. Which brings me to the second point pertaining to the programmatic issues. I wish to warn you about the how your tactics are coming across. Though you outline programmatic components, there is not a clear sense of how you are going to negotiate a combination of the characteristics you outline. It is far more important to outline how your architectural resolution is uniquely catering to your strategic/tactical ideals - otherwise you run the risk of just allotting programming boxes to make a sensibly organized plan. Though that might be good, it is not the key objective of the exercise.

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