jason knight undergraduate portfolio

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SCAD Undergradate Portfolio

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J A S O N

D A V I D

K N I G H T

“We don’t just make architecture, we create it.” Architecture is about integrating basic geometry, simplistic details and unique ideas to create magnificent structures that touch the inner emotions. Subtle and sometimes complex details can make even the simplest architecture stand out. Although everybody is different, I believe architecture is a way to bring people together and enjoy the space they inhabit. In my eyes, form plus function equals good design. A structure can be aesthetically pleasing, but not perform well. It is only when form and function work together that good design and creative ideas come to life in a building. My approach toward architecture starts with close consideration of the site and how the building should be subtly placed into the site as if it was already there. I am very experimental with different types of media to express my creative ideas. When looking at architecture, I think about how it was constructed, the materials used and how the building was matched to the site. I like looking at architecture as a whole then getting into the details and zooming back out and then repeating the process.

My contribution to the architecture world would be making simple yet interesting and thought provoking architecture that everyone can relate to and appreciate in some form or fashion. I would like to enhance the idea that simple, yet modest details can create an interesting structure that is very pleasing to the eye yet practical in how it is used. We don’t just make architecture, we create it.

Jason Knight jknigh26@student.scad.edu

678.982.7911

Courses

Fund

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Fund

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II

Fund

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Stud

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Kof

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Com

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ente

r

Stud

io II

Farm

ers

and

Arti

sans

Mar

ket

Stud

io II

I

Rob

ot W

orks

hop

Stud

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The

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Misc

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3824 52 68 80

Fundamentals I

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I

Fundamentals IDSGN 223Professor DudzikFall 2010

Objective: A sequence of studio exercises leads to the development of the foundation of basic architectural design, and the understanding of spatial relationships. The course allows students to see abstract entities and bring them into a functioning space using the design concepts learned. Throughout the course, students’ progress from designing one space to then designing multiple spaces.

6

Throughout this course I thought about the delineation between spaces and how they where formed and connected with one another. I tried to establish a hierarchy of spaces with all of the models. I also considered creating open and closed spaces and creating voids within them. My design concept for this project was to create large bands that reach across the building and carry you throughout the spaces.

8

10

Fundamentals IIFu

ndam

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Fundamentals IIDSGN 224Professor SingeisenWinter 2011

Objective: This course introduces physical environments into the design process. It continues to build upon the concepts of visual space and design concepts, learned in Fundamentals I. The exercises in this course grow in difficulty as the student takes into consideration form and space functions, and their relationships with each other. An example of this would be the program given to the students that had to be followed to exact specifications.

12

This project was building a museum around a relic boat display that was found buried in the ground. This building is placed on a slope to give the feeling of going downhill to interact with the relic. Viewers can walk back upstairs to view additional art pieces and information about the boat.

14

North Elevation

South Elevation

16

Fundamentals III

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Fundamentals IIIDSGN 225Professor DietzSpring 2011

Objective: This course introduced the concept of movement and how humans use the space that has been designed. Some things that were taken into consideration while taking this studio are the dynamics of configurations, motility, light, and view. These were considered within the space at various scales to determine what would function best in each space.

18

When designing this building I was thinking about the movement that a ballerina makes when doing a arabesque. This movement helped me come up with a building form that I could manipulative into a building. Keeping with the urban edge of Savannah I decided to place my building on the corner of the lot.

Arabesque

In the dance studio and transit station, my design allowed for maximum natural light in the large spaces for the quality of human comfort. I placed opaque glass and perforated metal on the outside to shade the dance studio. Not only does it shade the studio, but people on the street level can see the movement of silhouettes through the window as if they were viewing a dance performance.

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0 15 40 75

Studio I

Studio IARCH 301Professor BachaFall 2011

Objective: Studio I focuses on how human factors affect architectural design. Some aspects are human behavior, and human aspiration. These factors are used in solving simple architectural problems.

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24

This project focused on designing multiple buildings from a church and assembly hall to classroom and living quarters. The challenge of this studio was to create a design which maximized the use of the natural environment in Ethiopia. Specifically, the design required the use of natural light and ventilation since MEP and sources of electricity did not exist in Kofele. The construction method and materials were much different than in other parts of the world. The design required use of local materials like bamboo and rammed earth to build our structures.

Title: Kofele School and Community Center

Location: Kofele, Ethiopia

26

1. Restrooms2. Church3. Classrooms4. Assembly5. Kitchen6. Living Quarters7. Laundry/ Restrooms

28

The idea behind this project was using both expansion and contraction concepts. My design expands out to the community around it and uses education to contract into a smaller community like atmosphere. The way I thought about this was having the expanding being very open and public and the contracting being more compressed and private. Another part of my concept was trying to use the native weaving technique in all of my buildings. The weaving design would be replicated, but varied from public to private buildings based on the amount of light and size of the weaving.

Expanding Contracting

30

Classrooms

Assembly

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Church

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Classrooms

Summer

Winter

Spring

Assembly

Church Living Quarters

“In my view, no space without natural light is worthy of human occupation.” -John Saladino

36

Studio II

Studio IIARCH 302Professor ClementsWinter 2012

Objective: Studio II focuses on how a building’s physical environment influences its design. Students learn to conduct site analysis and use that knowledge to make design decisions. Emphasis is placed on being able to create design solutions and fulfill the requirements of a program. Issues with building sites and environments are also addressed.

Stud

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38

This project was to create an Artisans and Farmers market in the city of Savannah, GA on the site of Trustees Garden. We were given certain requirements for the project, including considering the circulation of the site and connecting it to the new Savannah Squares. Another requirement was that both markets had to be enclosed structures which could be closed to the public during non-operating hours.

Title: Farmers and Artisans Market

Location: Savannah, Georgia

40

Left: A series of watercolor sketches to try and figure out the circulation and building placementAbove: Final Site planRight: Final Watercolor scheme showing all the context around it

My idea for the site was about creating and maintaining the Savannah Square by adding a threshold into the site. To do this I elongated the square into a rectangle which made it have more of a linear feel and continue into new Savannah.

42

Emerging (Past) Extending (Future) Connecting (Present)

My concept was about connections to and through the site and trying to find a commonality between the old and new found on the site. So with this idea a created elements that represented that idea. This idea included wide flanges that came emerging up from the ground bringing up the past and the roof and floor elements would cantilever into the future of Savannah. Then metal ties would be applied to represent a connection to the land and present.

Left: Different material elements from the site that I wanted to include in my skin. Middle: The building skin was laid on a grid system with different elements from the site like brick.Right: Since there was some brick left over on the site I decided to use it as aggregate for the concrete to give it a reddish tint.

Herb House

Fort Wayne

Building Skin

Wood louvers

Concrete

Crushed brick on site

Kehoe Iron Works

Charles H. Morris Center

Material Evolution

44

Here you can see the building skin and panels as a whole. The grid is almost reminiscent of the brick styles on the site. You can also see the different elemental materials from the wooden louvers, glass and concrete with crushed brick aggregate. Some panels are also able to flip sideways to let breezes pass through the building on hot days.

46

This section model shows the interior of the Artisans Market and a business office space underneath. I used the north facing sawtooth roof style to get the most natural diffused light into the space. Since I used this roof style I thought it was ideal to place PV panels on the roof to take advantage of the sun.

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Studio IIIARCH 303Professor ElnahasSpring 2012

Objective: Studio III focuses on structural systems and how they work together as a whole. Some structures that are looked at are long-span structures, and short-span structures. Students will design projects that look at different forms of structural issues such as tectonic issues and issues related to stress on the building. Other topics learned are structural systems and tectonic language used in architecture.

Studio III

Stud

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R

obot

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This project was designing a Robot Workshop in Brooklyn, New York in the Clinton Hill District. The project included studios, offices, workshops, lecture room, and gallery. The difficult aspect about designing this type of structure is considering the neighboring context and ensuring it blends in nicely with the urban environment without taking anything away.

Title: Robot Workshop

Location: Brooklyn, New York

54

My design intent is about the use of torque and force that we as humans apply to the robot to make them work. Not only do we make them but we program and interact with them. Robots today are being seen as social technology as we are interacting with more robots every year. Humans are connecting to robots physically and also by communicating with them. I designed my building around an open collaboration plan to make it more fun and have an interactive learning environment.

Cube Insert Core Apply Vertical Torque Respect Buildings

56

2nd Floor

3rd Floor 4th Floor

58

The above section drawing was experimental where I was playing around with the idea of how much light would be received into the spaces. I used brown paper, graphite and a white color pencil to achieve this.

60

Primary

Secondary

Connection DetailStructure System

The circulation core in my building helps improve the flow of air and provides increased daylighting. I also put a double skin facade on the backside of my building to protect against heat and to let natural air through without the use of opening windows.

Double Glazing(operable window)

Air Space

Concrete w/ Rebar

Single Pane GlassPerforrated Metal

Vents

VegetationSoil

DrainageInsulation

Membrane ProtectionRoof Membrane

Circulation

Ventilation and Daylight

62

64

This North elevation shows how the building was “torqued”. As you can see each level is different based on the movement of the building.

66

Studio IV

Studio IVARCH 404Professor PayneFall 2012

Objective: Studio IV focuses on the problems that arise when developing new architecture in a highly dense area that has different social and cultural characters. This studio concentrates on creating solutions that are highly developed and meaningful to the issues in the urban environment. Students will conduct analyses in order to understand the site, building, and the tradition of buildings within the city. Multi-story architecture and vertical circulation systems are introduced and solutions to issues that arise with each are discussed.

Stud

io IV

The

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68

The key focus of this project was to take a broad view of architecture intended to design future housing for the year 2049 in Finland. When I think of housing, I visualize different aspects of a community. I believe in the future, people will be more in touch with their surroundings than they are today. The year is 2049 and people are being more open and social with each other. A new sense of community has emerged. All age groups will be living together from the young to the old. People will take pride in their city and the way they live. It will have multiple eco solutions and sustainable elements.

Title: Lahti Community Housing

Location: Lahti, Finland

70

My concept revolves around the idea of integration of the different kinds of people from the young to the old living together. I expressed this with the buildings form also, by combing the existing buildings and inserting new ones into them. Also I wanted to establish some sort of community as a whole where everyone communicates with each other even if they are in their rooms.

0 100 150 275

These sketches show the early development process. I was thinking about the basic and overall shape of the building or buildings. I was trying to determine how many buildings I wanted and if they were going to be all the same shape and size.

72

Early watercolor rendering showing the different materials of the building from the wood to the concrete. You can see the old building intersecting into the new one. I decided to refurbish an existing warehouse on my site and convert it to housing and re-coating the facade with wood slats.

74

The idea behind this window concept revolved around the idea of private and public space based on which way they were facing. I started out by protruding spaces outward but then I felt that they had a very limited view outside. So I divided the spaces into to areas based on which way they were facing. The semi-public area is larger and facing towards a park while the semi-private view is smaller and facing the community and residential areas.

A. Intergration and Infill B. Make Path C. Apply Vertical Circualtion

Another part of my concept was about keeping as much green space as I could. I noticed there were a lot of trees going through my site so I wanted to recreate that feeling of them still being there without taking them away. I made most of my design decisions through this thought process of working around the trees and the green space.

Semi-Private Semi-Public

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Old vs New Trees

Existing TreesNew Trees

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Miscellaneous

80Misc

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Design Build

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84

This was a garden shed that our Studio 1 class designed and built together for Second Harvest in Savannah. This was a project in understanding human scale and proportions. It gave us a good idea of what materials they would be using in Ethiopia like rammed earth. We made rammed earth benches and pavers. The siding on the shed is actually reused wooden pallets from nearby buildings.

My contribution to the project consisted of making rammed earth pavers and bench, laying down the foundation, and cutting wood. Overall the project turned out really well and I learned a lot from the projects and small details that you don’t see in the classroom.

Professor Bacha Studio I Fall 2011

Students:Andrew Horn Rachel PepinRachel Taylor Timothy BaldingAlex Ross Phil HodernyDonita del Rosario Mattew FriedmeyerNathan Cartwright Eric MeckleyJordan Kasperson Jason Knight

Lecture Courses

86

COPYRIGHT &REPRODUCTION OF

DRAWINGS

1. This Drawing is the property ofSavannah College of Art and DesignReproduction or re-use in whole or inpart without written permission isforbidden. It is not to be used on anyother project and is to be returned uponrequest.

2. Scales as stated hereon are valid onthe original drawings only and areherby changed in proportion to thedifference in size between the print andthe original drawing.

3. Do not scale dimensions from prints.Plans and details are not always toscale. Use dimensions given orconsult the Designer for furtherclarification.

P.O. Box 3146Savannah, Georgia

31402

S-102FLOOR FRAMING PLAN

SAVANNAH, GA

HOUSE "X"

SAVANNAHCOLLEGE

of ART and DESIGN

1

A

B

C

D

E

PROJECT NO.: A_06

CAD DWG FILE: Knight_A06.dwg

DRAWN BY: JK

CHECKED BY:

MARK DATE DESCRIPTION

ARCH 241CONT. TECH. 1PROF. BACHASPRING 2011

SHEET TITLE

SHEET 2 OF 8

F

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

A

B

C

D

E

F

FLOOR FRAMING PLANSCALE: 1/8"=1'-0"A1

KEY NOTES:

1

2

3

RIM JOISTS 2x6

INSIDE FACE OF FOUNDATION WALL BELOW

4

5

DOUBLE END JOISTS (2) 2x6

SOUTHER PINE#1 2x6 @ 24" O.C.

STEEL BEAM

A1S-302

Construction Technology- Framing Plan

COPYRIGHT &REPRODUCTION OF

DRAWINGS

1. This Drawing is the property ofSavannah College of Art and DesignReproduction or re-use in whole or inpart without written permission isforbidden. It is not to be used on anyother project and is to be returned uponrequest.

2. Scales as stated hereon are valid onthe original drawings only and areherby changed in proportion to thedifference in size between the print andthe original drawing.

3. Do not scale dimensions from prints.Plans and details are not always toscale. Use dimensions given orconsult the Designer for furtherclarification.

P.O. Box 3146Savannah, Georgia

31402

S-201WALL FRAMING ELEVATION

SAVANNAH, GA

HOUSE "X"

SAVANNAHCOLLEGE

of ART and DESIGN

1

A

B

C

D

E

PROJECT NO.: A_07

CAD DWG FILE: Knight_A07.dwg

DRAWN BY: JK

CHECKED BY:

MARK DATE DESCRIPTION

ARCH 241CONT. TECH. 1PROF. BACHASPRING 2011

SHEET TITLE

SHEET 3 OF 82 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

A

B

C

D

E

F

WALL FRAMING ELEVATIONSCALE: 1/4"=1'-0"A1

S-302

S-302

S-302

D1

D4A6

DOOR SECTIONSCALE: 1-1/2"=1'-0"D5

INTERSECTING WALLSCALE: 1-1/2"=1'-0"D3

CORNER WALLSCALE: 1-1/2"=1'-0"D1

KEY NOTES:

1

2

3

CORNER WALL

INTERSECTING WALL

4

5

(2) 2x12 W/ 3 JACKS

(2) 2x6 W/ 2 JACKS and 1/2" PLYWOOD SPACER

6

DOUBLE TOP PLATE (2) 2x4

2x4 SOLE PLATE

Construction Technology- Wall Framing Elevation

88

COPYRIGHT &REPRODUCTION OF

DRAWINGS

1. This Drawing is the property ofSavannah College of Art and DesignReproduction or re-use in whole or inpart without written permission isforbidden. It is not to be used on anyother project and is to be returned uponrequest.

2. Scales as stated hereon are valid onthe original drawings only and areherby changed in proportion to thedifference in size between the print andthe original drawing.

3. Do not scale dimensions from prints.Plans and details are not always toscale. Use dimensions given orconsult the Designer for furtherclarification.

P.O. Box 3146Savannah, Georgia

31402

S-303WALL SECTION

SAVANNAH, GA

HOUSE "X"

SAVANNAHCOLLEGE

of ART and DESIGN

1

A

B

C

D

E

PROJECT NO.: A_08

CAD DWG FILE: Knight_A06.dwg

DRAWN BY: JK

CHECKED BY:

MARK DATE DESCRIPTION

ARCH 241CONT. TECH. 1PROF. BACHASPRING 2011

SHEET TITLE

SHEET 6 OF 8

F

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

A

B

C

D

E

F

WALL SECTIONSCALE: 1-1/2"=1'-0"A2

KEY NOTES:

1

2

3

1/2" OSB. SHEATHING

BATT INSULATION

4

5 2x8 FASCIA BOARD W/ FINISH FASCIA BOARD

2x6 Rafters @ 16" O.C.

1" AIR GAP

6

7

8

9

10

2x6 LOOKOUT

PLYWOOD SOFFIT W/ CONTINUOUS VENT

2x4 DOUBLE TOP PLATE

2x6 CEILING JOISTS @ 16" O.C.

1/2" OSB. SHEATHING WITH SIDING

11

12

13

14

15

16

2x4 STUD WALL WITH R-13 BATT INSULATION

2x4 SOLE PLATE

2x10 RIM JOIST

2x6 SILL PLATE W/ 1/2" ANCHOR BOLT

CONCRETE FOUNDATION WALL

2x10 FLOOR JOISTS W/ 3/4" T&G OSB.PLY. SUBFLOOR

17 DRIP MOUNT

7

8

Construction Technology- Wall Section

COPYRIGHT &REPRODUCTION OF

DRAWINGS

1. This Drawing is the property ofSavannah College of Art and DesignReproduction or re-use in whole or inpart without written permission isforbidden. It is not to be used on anyother project and is to be returned uponrequest.

2. Scales as stated hereon are valid onthe original drawings only and areherby changed in proportion to thedifference in size between the print andthe original drawing.

3. Do not scale dimensions from prints.Plans and details are not always toscale. Use dimensions given orconsult the Designer for furtherclarification.

P.O. Box 3146Savannah, Georgia

31402

S-304WALL SECTION

SAVANNAH, GA

HOUSE "X"

SAVANNAHCOLLEGE

of ART and DESIGN

1

A

B

C

D

E

PROJECT NO.: A_08

CAD DWG FILE: Knight_A06.dwg

DRAWN BY: JK

CHECKED BY:

MARK DATE DESCRIPTION

ARCH 241CONT. TECH. 1PROF. BACHASPRING 2011

SHEET TITLE

SHEET 7 OF 8

F

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

A

B

C

D

E

F

WALL SECTIONSCALE: 3/4"=1'-0"A1

KEY NOTES:1

2

3

1" AIR GAP W/ 1/2" OSB

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

CONCRETE FOOTER

8" CMU

1/2" OSB. SHEATHING WITH SIDING

11

12

2x4 STUD WALL WITH R-13 BATT INSULATION

2x4 SOLE PLATE W/ ANCHOR BOLT

2x8 FASCIA BOARD W/ FINISH FASCIA BOARD

2x6 (2) END JOISTS

DRAINAGE MATT

2x6 FLOOR JOISTS W/ 3/4" T&G OSB. PLY.SUBFLOOR2x4 SILL PLATE

2x4(2) DOUBLE TOP PLATE

Construction Technology- Wall Section

90

Structures

Environmental Control

92

Personal Projects

94

Made out of poplar wood. 2012.Shelving unit.

96

Made out of poplar wood. 2012. Bench

98

LeavesGraphite8.5”x 11”

2009

BikeGraphite8.5”x 11”

2009

American FlagPastel

17”x 15”2008

“Nighthawk” by Edward HopperCharcoal18”x 24”2009

100

KJason KnightJ

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