References

Sally Smith

Position or Job Title

A short bio with personal history, key achievements, or an interesting fact.

Email me: mail@example.com

Sally Smith

Position or Job Title

A short bio with personal history, key achievements, or an interesting fact.

Email me: mail@example.com

Sally Smith

Position or Job Title

A short bio with personal history, key achievements, or an interesting fact.

Email me: mail@example.com

Sally Smith

Position or Job Title

A short bio with personal history, key achievements, or an interesting fact.

Email me: mail@example.com

A Sense of Home

house

A Sense of Home, is a House as a research entity for my Bini Oculus Institute, a Binocular Vision Research Centre where data and new information forms its architecture.

It currently houses a female PHD student, specialising in Disability Studies, she is also a strong activist for the young blind on social media.

The architecture is built around the senses other than sight.

Sitting in between two existing homes, it has a discrete presence. Its long and narrow footprint creates a linear floor plan and avoids maze like planning. This makes it easier for the user to navigate and memorise the space.

All rooms are open to the inner courtyard, in order for my client to enjoy the senses of the outdoor in a safe and private way.

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I researched architect Charles Moore and Richard Olivier’s house for a blind client who’s brief was to “design a house whose impact would be more than merly visual, that would embrace a broader range of sensual experience.” Through his detailed description of the house, I incorporated some key elements such as a water feature for sound quality and the attraction of birds. The journey during the climb of a long ramp and the importance of a hand rail and its role of leading a path. This ramp wraps around the entire home, it is a large feature similar to Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye, to break up the length of the ramp, I designed for a split level office space looking down at the courtyard and up to her bedroom.

Light is an important aspect of the building. The occupier like most blind people does not see darkness but is sensitive to the glow of light, its intensity and warmth. The windows, skylights and courtyard aren’t to capture a view, but to capture natural light. Giving a sense of time, and a connection to the outside world, like the weather for example.

There are changes in texture on the floor, this informs the occupier she has entered a different space, it also affects the sound of her foot steps and the feel under her feet.

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The sentence “A Sense of Home” is used on the entrance facade of the house.

Where the void in the brick represents each dot in a braille sentence. I chose a warm toned brown reclaimed brick in order for the new build to blend with its surrounding. Molten glass brick is inlayed within the braille brick creating a smooth surface at body level for the occupier to feel and lead her to the front door. This feature allows light and some movement to peer through, again creating a discrete and private sense of connection to her surrounding context.

Oculus Mash Up

Working as a duo, this project produced an oculus_monument to commemorate the past, present and future ideas embedded in my studio investigations, and to establish a locus for viewing North Adelaide.

Using architectonic elements and approaches from my Bini Oculus Research Institute, I designed a single physical insertion for North Adelaide, a fixed ‘acupuncture’ in the manner of obelisks, monuments and civic columns and sets up a significant presence and urban magnet.
The design was a thoughtful and refined ’mash-up’ of the architectural substance of our combined schemes, mine being about Binocular Vision, Illusions and Perception, my partners project focused on an Open and Liberating LGBTQI Centre.

This architectonically driven exercise forced us to examine, essentialise and edit our languages and principles into a new condensed form – an oculus through which to
view our urban and architectural ideas.

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BINI OCULUS: Research Institute

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Bini Oculus, is a cross dimensional research centre investigating the human’s binocular vision in order to improve health and wellbeing, and leading further development in “seeing” what is beyond our planet.

With collaborative thinking about dimensionality, bio medical engineers, gaming designers, optometrists, photographers or psychologists work together in understanding how we view the world in dimensions and how this investigated vision can aid certain visual impediments and further space research.

Currently the centre offers space for an overseas company Vivid Vision, working to improve visual impediments by designing and treating patients with an at home, or in clinic interactive binocular vision virtual reality headset.

It also houses local space agency members from the SASIC South Australian Space Industry Centre. Designing and programming roaming robots used on our planet and out of space, 3D scanning its surrounding, gathering data and creating three-dimensional maps.

Japanese guest artist Yayoi Kusama, residing with two members from Vivid Vision, in the original Allen Campbell building internally turned minimal and calculated as part of the Bini Oculus Building. Kusama work is inspired by her lack of feeling in control throughout her life made, either consciously or subconsciously, where her infinite mirror rooms control how others perceive time and space when entering her exhibits.

The buildings core follows the form of a space filling curve called the Hilbert Curve. This curve is an infinite form bounded by a square. The curve is used in the programming of three-dimensional mapping robots, just as the ones found in the centre. Its infinite space filling aspect works like pixels, recording imagery and forming space.

The panelling on the exterior is inspired by artist MC Escher’s optical cubes, made up of black, white and grey faces. Playing with mirror, effects of infinity is scattered throughout the building.

Site Analysis

Sketch Design

Design Process and Research

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Moodboard

 

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Construction Studio: Student Tower

Architectural Design Studio 8 Documentation was organized to allow us to develop a series of skills relevant to the design and part documentation of a large scale urban building, conducted in a team/office environment.

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The Nth Degree is an exploration into how we can maximise
ventilation and access to natural light in small living situations.
LLD believes that the future of city living and accommodation is
a more user controlled experience, especially given the context
of student accommodation and a business hotel. These are two
places where people have left their everyday home to come and
improve their life to some extent, and to work toward their future.
Many students often complain of not being able to breathe
properly in both the physical sense and in an emotional sense,
and LLD has aimed to create a living and studying situation in
which they can breathe again.

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Existing Building

Full set of drawings (89 pages): Halifax + Symonds Drawing Set