sara evans jones. academic works
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SARA EVANS JONES. ACADEMIC WORKS
01 02 03
CONTENTS OF ACADEMIC WORKS
FOOD CITY SCENARIO. FAYETTEVILLE 2030
ELEVATED SYSTEMS. THE CORPORATE HIGH LINE
ARTS FACILITY. LITTLE ROCK CREATIVE CORRIDOR
VERTICAL CEMETERIES. CHICAGO MAUSOLEUM
WOOD STRUCTURES. CONTOUR CANTILEVER
TRAVEL SKETCHES. PAINTINGS
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FOOD CITY SCENARIO. FAYETTEVILLE 2030
UNIVSERSITY OF ARKANSAS COMMUNITY DESIGN CENTER. SPRING 2013STEVE LUONI. JEFF HUBER
By 2030, it is expected that Fayetteville will grow from its current 70,000 people to an estimated 130,000. In an ef-fort to devise a solution for this the UA Community Design Center has developed multiple scenario planning ideas, including the food-city scenario which would be developed along an already proposed “food” boulevard. This project explores the food-city scenario through urban-agriculture precedents in which a city can sustain itself through its own, local food production as oppsed to imports. This scheme takes on a real site in Fayetteville, Arkansas which is currently home to multiple, disparate single family home developments with no business market or a communal place that can help anchor these developments and bring them together. In an effort to connect these communities this project proposes two anchors along the boulevard and on either side of an existing reparian. These anchors become local market centers for local foods as well as armatures for a new, denser housing that provides more opportunity for community and agricultural growth.
05JONES
URBAN-AGRICULTURE PRECEDENTS:PRE-INDUSTRIALIZED CITIES
Frankfurt, Germany
Initial sketches analyz-ing both urban, agri-cultural, and historic fabrics of the cities.
Urban-agriculture precedent studies analyzing patterns and organizatons of the two fabrics at the scale of the city.
Dublin, Ireland
07JONES
URBAN-AGRICULTURE PRECEDENTS:19TH AND 20TH CENTURY NEW NEIGHBORHOODS
Zrahia, Israel
Blangstedgard, Denmark
Second precedent study analyzing the agriculture compo-nents at a smaller and more complex scale of a neighborhood designed or developed specifically for agricul-ture puropses
NEIGHBORHOOD FORMATION:SEVEN HOUSING TYPOLOGIES STUDY
After developming an under-standing of urban and agriculture fabrics working together at both the scale of the city and neigh-borhood, this next study exlpores the design development of seven housing typologies common throughout Fayetteville. Using all seven, this neighborhood-scheme studies how they all work to-gether as well as create moment of urban space as well as spatial relationships with each other to creat a neighborhood formation.
Iterative develop-ment of neighbor-hood formation.
09JONES
Final iteration of seven typology neighborhood formation.
PROPOSED FOOD BOULEVARD
SITE FOR 30-UNIT POCKET HOUSING AND MAIN “ANCHORING” COMMU-NITY SQUARE
AN
CHO
R SITES FOR PRO
POSED
30-BLOCK U
RBAN
-AG N
EIGH
BORH
OO
DFAYETTEVILLE CURRENT SITE at the Northwest corner of Fayetteville:SCATTERED SINGLE-FAMILY HOUSING DEVELOPMENTS
11JONES
Precedent studies of existing, “anchoring”squares and urban-ag develop-ments with experimental application to the scattered development site in Fayetteville.
30-BLOCK URBAN-AG DEVELOPMENT AND PROPOSAL:TWO ANCHORS AS CENTERS FOR DISCONNECTED DEVELOPMENTS
SPATIAL DEVELOPMENT OF MAIN SQUARE AND INITIAL 30 UNITS:INTEGRATION OF AGRICULTURE IDEAS AND RELATION TO UNIT MASSING
The above sketch is of the old town square in Prague. This is used as the base precedent for the development of this schemes “anchoring” square and 30 unit development.
Left: current conditions of the site for the anchoring square and 30 units.Right:Iterative design study model of the square and 30 units.
13JONES
Further design development of overall “anchoring” square with 30-unit, food for-est development.
ARCHITECTURAL AND AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT OF 30-UNIT POCKET HOUSING:EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN ROW HOUSING, AGRICULTURE, AND PUBLIC SPACE
Above and left: Fold-out elevation of 30-units representing the continuing design-development of the 30 units. This elevation focuses on the architec-tural tectonics of the facade and its relation to the urban environment. The 30 units are comprised of row-housing that are designed in a two-unit grouping that allows for an interstitial space between the public food forest and path, the more intimate carving between the two unit entrances, and the privacy of each home.
15JONES
FOOD FOREST CATALOG AND FINAL DEVELOPMENT:PERMACULTURE FRUIT AND NUT TREE GUILDS
Diagram of a typical fruit/nut plant guild per single tree. In order for a food forest to be successful, these type of plant guilds must be present. After a few years of intense maintenence and care, food forests become selfsustaining with minimal care.
Fruit and nut trees
Plum tree Hazelnut tree Peach tree Apple tree Black Walnut tree Cherry tree Pear tree
Yarrow
Fennel
Chives
Clover
CloverComfrey
Yarrow
Dill
Comfrey
Comfrey
Dynamic Accumulator mulch plant
Nitrogen fixer
Grass suppressor
Insect attractor
Nutrient accumulator
17JONES
The 30 units are comprised of row-housing that are designed in a two-unit grouping that allows for an interstitial space between the public food for-est and path, the more intimate carving between the two unit entrances, and the privacy of each home. The row-houses which face auto traffic are raised up according to the speed.
Row-houses along the boulevard’s high speed traffic are raised on five feet stoops.
Row-houses along this one-way street are raised on a step-up to allow for separa-tion from automobile traffic.
MASTER PLAN OF FOOD FOREST NEIGHBORHOOD AND AERIAL VIEW
Final master plan. Beginning with the development of the first anchor and 30-unit, food forest pocket, this plan shows how the food forest pocket housing get repeated as development and population grow.
Continuation of existing trail to allow for pedestrian connection and recreation along the riparian and existing, forested landscape.
19JONES
Above: Aerial view overlooking the main anchor which intersects the proposed food boulevard.Left: Aerial image of final model of the 30-unit food forest urban-ag housing prototype.
FINAL RENDERINGS AND MODELS
19JONES
Above Left: view from curved row-house unit looking out over food forest and other units.Above: view from the food bou-levard looking toward 30 housing units.
Various views of the final model looking into the food-forest pocket housing.
ELEVATED SYSTEMS. THE CORPORATE HIGH LINE
JOHN G. WILLIAMS VISITING PROFESSOR STUDIO. FALL 2012VINCENT JAMES. JENNIFER YOOS
This research-based studio explored the ideas of elevated systems and their current nature in existing cities today. The High Line in New York is a new type of elevated system. As an elevated park it creates a new, green pedes-trian parkway that runs along the west side of Manhattan and against the iron grid. Currently, there is no direct connection of building culture with High Line culture. This proposal takes the existing language of the High Line pathway and extends it into interstitial zones creating multi-ple interfaces between the built culture and the High Line culture. In addition, a new program is added to the culture surrounding the High Line in order to allow for a larger variety and mix-ture of both tourists, artists, and New Yorkers alike to interact daily within this area.
21JONES
PRECEDENT STUDY OF EXISTING ELEVATED SYSTEMS IN MUMBAI:DEMOGRAPHICS WHICH DETERMINE PLACEMENT AND NECESSITY FOR ELEVATED SYSTEMS
Analytical diagrams of the demographics which negotiate where current elevated walking systems are built throughout the Greater Mumbai region. The main factore pertained to terrain limitations and existing railway other major modes of transportation.
23JONES
Five major elevated systems which respond to the most highly populated regions of Mumbai. Above, Clockwise: Bandra; Ghat-kopar; Andheri; Wadala; Thane; Dahisar.
HIGH LINE SITE ANALYTIC STUDIES:STUDIO-WIDE ANALYSIS OF HIGH LINE AND ITS CURRENT CONDITIONS
MEAT DISTRICT MARKETRESTAURANT/OFFICE SPACE
HOTEL ANDRESTAURANT
INDUSTRIAL WAREHOUSE
COMMERCIAL/OFFICE
AUTOMOBILE REPAIR 14TH STREET PARK
RESTAURANT/OFFICE SPACE
COMMERCIAL/OFFICE SPACE PARKING LOT WAREHOUSE PARKING VACANT LOT
RELIGIOUSCENTER
RESIDENTIAL/OFFICE SPACE
INDUSTRIAL WAREHOUSE
TRANSPORTATION/UTILITY WAREHOUSE
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
MULTI-FAMILYRESIDENTIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
OFFICE/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL INDUSTRIAL PARKING
COMMERCIALOFFICE
MULTI-FAMILYRESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIALOFFICE VACANT LOT
GA
NSEVO
ORT STREET
WEST 12TH
STREET
WEST 13TH
STREET
WEST 14TH
STREET
WEST 15TH
STREET
WEST 16TH
STREET
WEST 17TH
STREET
WEST 18TH
STREET
WEST 19TH
STREET
WEST 20TH
STREET
WEST 21TH
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WEST 22TH
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WEST 23TH
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WEST 24TH
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WEST 25TH
STREET
WEST 26TH
STREET
WEST 27TH
STREET
WEST 28TH
STREET
WEST 30TH
STREET
WEST 29TH
STREET
WEST SECTION. HIGH LINE.
BUILDINGS AR VERY CLOSE YET FACADE FACES AWAY FROM HIGHLINE WHERE THE WALKWAY IS ELEVATED.
BUILDINGS WRAP AROUND H IGHLINE BUT THE FACADES FACE AWAY.
BUILDINGS TERRACA AND FACE HIGHLINE BUT ARE PHYSICALLY DISCONNECTED
BUILDINGS ARE FARTHER AWAY FROM HIGHLINE BUT STILL FACE AWAY
BUILDINGS ARE FARTHER AWAY FROM HIGHLINE AND FACE THE HIGHLINE.
BUILDINGS FACE THE HIGHLINE AND HANG OVER BUT ARE STILL PHYSICALLY DISCONNECTED.
25JONES
MEAT DISTRICT MARKETRESTAURANT/OFFICE SPACE
HOTEL ANDRESTAURANT
INDUSTRIAL WAREHOUSE
COMMERCIAL/OFFICE
AUTOMOBILE REPAIR 14TH STREET PARK
RESTAURANT/OFFICE SPACE
COMMERCIAL/OFFICE SPACE PARKING LOT WAREHOUSE PARKING VACANT LOT
RELIGIOUSCENTER
RESIDENTIAL/OFFICE SPACE
INDUSTRIAL WAREHOUSE
TRANSPORTATION/UTILITY WAREHOUSE
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
MULTI-FAMILYRESIDENTIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
OFFICE/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL INDUSTRIAL PARKING
COMMERCIALOFFICE
MULTI-FAMILYRESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIALOFFICE VACANT LOT
GA
NSEVO
ORT STREET
WEST 12TH
STREET
WEST 13TH
STREET
WEST 14TH
STREET
WEST 15TH
STREET
WEST 16TH
STREET
WEST 17TH
STREET
WEST 18TH
STREET
WEST 19TH
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WEST 20TH
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WEST 21TH
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WEST 22TH
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WEST 23TH
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WEST 24TH
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WEST 25TH
STREET
WEST 26TH
STREET
WEST 27TH
STREET
WEST 28TH
STREET
WEST 30TH
STREET
WEST 29TH
STREET
WEST SECTION. HIGH LINE.
Left: Series of diagrams representing the re-lationships between current buildings along to the high line. These represent buildings from both pre-highline park and post/cur-rent buildings.Below: Complete section through buildings adjacent to the west side of the high line. This gives proportional heights of buildings as well as the programs which currently inhabit the west edge of the high line.Right: Complete plan drawing of the high line with given views to both the east and west sides.
INITIAL SITE DEVELOPMENT:FORMAL TYPOLOGY STUDY USING PARAMETERS OF GIVEN SITE
SITE 02: CORNERVJAA STUDIOHIGHLINE PROJECT UARK FJSOA 2012
PRIMARY PROJECT SITE
ADDITIONAL INTERVENTION ZONE
SITE 02: CORNERVJAA STUDIOHIGHLINE PROJECT UARK FJSOA 2012
PRIMARY PROJECT SITE
ADDITIONAL INTERVENTION ZONE
Left: Initial site at West 26th Street.Below: Photographs of current condi-tion at 26th Street.Right: Formal typology, iterative study within this site. This study was based on different ways to extend the High Line, physically and culturally, past its current limits and into the piano nobile of the built environment creating an interface between these two. Of the three, the three tower-extension was the most successfull at creating this cohesive interface.
27JONES
Cantilever Typology
Continuous vertical corridor
Continuous vertical corridor
URBAN THESIS DEVELOPMENT:TRANSFORMING THE HIGH LINE INTO A CONNECTIVE TISSUE BETWEEN RESIDENTS, TOURISTS, THE ARTS AND BUSINESS
Left: Building diagram of future relation-ship between building and High Line. This will initially begin with the prototype at 26th Street and multiply in three other proposed areas. These four stand as an armature for future development of el-evated systems and connecting them with building interfaces.Below: Four prototypes with High Line interface.
2: 23rd Street1: 20th Street
29JONES
4: 27th Street and 28th Street3: 26th Street
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2
3
4
PROTOTYPE DEVELOPMENT:FORMAL MASSING STUDIES OF HIGH LINE CORPORATE PROTOTYPE
Massing study exploring the architectural development of the corporate High Line. This was challenged by defining a formal logic of massing that could then be counter-bal-anced with the incorporation of the High Line infrastruc-ture into the architectural development of the building’s infrastructure.
33JONES
PROTOTYPE DEVELOPMENT:CORPORATE HEADQUARTERS HOLISTIC ORGANIZATION CATALOG
Diagram illustrating the formal organization of the four crucial departments that make up a corporate structure. This model brings all four under one roof allowing for multiple interac-tion, not only within each department but within all depart-ments. In addition, the public/business interface becomes a new component of this corporate model allowing the interac-tion between the corporate business world and people.
31JONES
RESEARCH SPACE
GENERAL OFFICE SPACE
CONFERENCE/MEETING SPACE
TRAINING/INTERVIEW SPACE
RESTAURANT/CAFE SPACE
RETAIL SPACE
RECEPTION DESK/LOBBY
BREAK/OFFICE LEISURE SPACE
EXHIBITION/CONFERENCE SPACE
AUDITORIUM SPACE
CORRIDOR CIRCULATION
PUBLIC WALKWAYS/OPEN SPACE
OFFICE WORKER SPACE
PUBLIC SPACES
OFFICE LEISURE/CONGREGATIONAL SPACES
CIRCULATION
DINING HALL/LEISURE/OFFICELEVELS 8&12
TYPICAL OFFICE SPACE LEVELS 9-11&13-15
TECHNICAL SERVICES SPACELEVELS 6-7
CORRESPONDENCE/ARCHIVAL SPACELEVEL 4-5
PUBLIC/CORPORATE INTERFACEHIGH LINE
RETAIL/AUDITORIUM/EXIBITION SPACEGROUND
PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE/CONFERENCE CENTERLEVEL 2
RESEARCH SPACE
GENERAL OFFICE SPACE
CONFERENCE/MEETING SPACE
TRAINING/INTERVIEW SPACE
RESTAURANT/CAFE SPACE
RETAIL SPACE
RECEPTION DESK/LOBBY
BREAK/OFFICE LEISURE SPACE
EXHIBITION/CONFERENCE SPACE
AUDITORIUM SPACE
CORRIDOR CIRCULATION
PUBLIC WALKWAYS/OPEN SPACE
OFFICE WORKER SPACE
PUBLIC SPACES
OFFICE LEISURE/CONGREGATIONAL SPACES
CIRCULATION
DINING HALL/LEISURE/OFFICELEVELS 8&12
TYPICAL OFFICE SPACE LEVELS 9-11&13-15
TECHNICAL SERVICES SPACELEVELS 6-7
CORRESPONDENCE/ARCHIVAL SPACELEVEL 4-5
PUBLIC/CORPORATE INTERFACEHIGH LINE
RETAIL/AUDITORIUM/EXIBITION SPACEGROUND
PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE/CONFERENCE CENTERLEVEL 2
Diagram illustrating a catalog of spatial and programmatic requirements necessary per department. This is a sche-matic diagram allowing for flexibility of design, usage, and necessity.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:FULL URBAN PROPOSAL ALONG HIGH LINE
4
3
2
1
Left: Final model development showing all four prototypes along entire High Line.Right: View on the High Line looking Northeast towards 26th Street proposal. 35JONES
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:SECTIONAL DRAWINGS
South Section. 10th Avenue
West Section.
37JONES
26th Street
Final model of the developed Corporate Headquaters proto-type located at 26th Street. Aerial looking North.
Interior rendering of corporate com-munal space and tower bridging.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:LARGE-SCALE MODEL
Looking South. North looking up from the High Line 39JONES
ARTS FACILITY. LITTLE ROCK CREATIVE CORRIDOR
COMPREHENSIVE STUDIO. FALL 2011MARLON BLACKWELL. TAHAR MASADI
As an effort to revive Little Rock’s downtown Main Street, local architects and city council have proposed a Creative Corridor scheme that will bring a new and vibrant arts culture to the city of Little Rock. This corridor will house venues for arts of all kinds as well as for local and visiting artists which will thus pull culture and entertain-ment back to the city’s center. This scheme for a multi-purpose arts facility will serve as both a hub and a beacon for artistic collaboration as well as community gathering. In addition, it responds to the immediate scales responding sensitively to the forms and orders of the historic contexts. In addition, the creation of a primary interface and cohesion between the built form and the urban environment is critical to this project’s thesis of marriage between the arts and community.
41JONES
THE SITE AND INITIAL DEVELOPMENT:CORNER VACANT LOT AND MID TERM SCHEME DEVELOMENT
Left: Images of site at the corner of Capitol Avenue and Main Street which is currently a vacant lot. Above: Initial design proposal and schematic development. Based off the traditional courtyard scheme this scheme abstracts that idea by raising half of the building onto an arcade which becomes an L-bar that marks the transition between the street and the arts building. The L-tower sits back allowing for most of the public and art interac-tion to happen at the interface while keeping the required office spaces more privatized.
43JONES
Further development of this scheme into both experiential and model form. At this point in the design material expression and detail development become apart of the overall comprehen-sion. After midterm, intense development of not only the skin tectonics but also the structural, mechanical, and urban design was critical to the overall project.
ITERATIVE DESIGN DEVELOPMENT:POST MID-TERM DEVELOPMENT
Further development of the scheme shifts the L-tower to the southwest corner of the facility. This allows for a closer, more intimate relationship with the historic context, clearly defines and exemplifies the impor-tance of the street corner, as well as adjusts to the orientation of the sun to allow for softer light to hit the east-facing facade and courtyard.
45JONES
Above: iterave facade study exploring different textures of material and lighting.Right: A continuation fo the facade study looking at the detailed design of tectonics and how the skin is structured.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:Final exterior rendering and exploded diagram
Exterior rendering at the corner of Capitol Avenue and Main Street. Also showing a connection detail of the tri-mullion where the two glass cur-tain walls and concrete-glass panel wall intersect each other.
HVAC plans illustrating return ans supply ducts, zoning, mechanical and engine rooms, as well as the exhaust.
47JONES
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM
GROUND LEVEL
SECOND LEVEL
THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVEL
FIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
Pearl-white Fibre-C concrete panel.
Structural concrete columns 3x3. Used for arcade only to counter-act wind shear force.
Structural concrete core and shear wall structure. Grounds building in Northwest corner.
HVAC system for typical floor.
Structural steel beam and joist grid
Floor cavities. Concrete slab, floor and ceiling finishes.
Pear white Fibre-C concrete panels. 5x10; .25inStrip windows. 5x5. (curtain wall: 5x5 and 5x10)Black steel mullions as sub structureGypsum board. Interior finish. 5x4.5; .25 in
Structural steel columns 16x16 fire-proofed with gyspum board.
North-facing glass curtain wall facade of tower.
East-facing glass curtain wall facade of bar.
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM GROUND LEVEL SECOND LEVEL THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVELFIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
TYPICAL HVAC SYSTEM PER OFFICE FLOOR. ASSEMBLED USING A RECTANGULAR DUCT SYSTEMTO ALLOW FOR A PLENUM SPACE OF NO DEEPER THAN THREE FEET.
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM GROUND LEVEL SECOND LEVEL THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVELFIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
TYPICAL HVAC SYSTEM PER OFFICE FLOOR. ASSEMBLED USING A RECTANGULAR DUCT SYSTEMTO ALLOW FOR A PLENUM SPACE OF NO DEEPER THAN THREE FEET.
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM GROUND LEVEL SECOND LEVEL THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVELFIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
TYPICAL HVAC SYSTEM PER OFFICE FLOOR. ASSEMBLED USING A RECTANGULAR DUCT SYSTEMTO ALLOW FOR A PLENUM SPACE OF NO DEEPER THAN THREE FEET.
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM GROUND LEVEL SECOND LEVEL THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVELFIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
TYPICAL HVAC SYSTEM PER OFFICE FLOOR. ASSEMBLED USING A RECTANGULAR DUCT SYSTEMTO ALLOW FOR A PLENUM SPACE OF NO DEEPER THAN THREE FEET.
BASEMENT/ MECHANICAL ROOM GROUND LEVEL SECOND LEVEL THIRD LEVEL
FOURTH LEVELFIFTH THROUGH TENTH LEVELS
MAP KEY
RETURN AIR GRILL, 600 CFM
SUPPLY AIR GRILL, 300 CFM
ZONES
EXHAUST
TYPICAL HVAC SYSTEM PER OFFICE FLOOR. ASSEMBLED USING A RECTANGULAR DUCT SYSTEMTO ALLOW FOR A PLENUM SPACE OF NO DEEPER THAN THREE FEET.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:INTERIOR RENDERING
49JONES
Interior render-ing of main art gallery viewing southwest.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:FINAL MODEL IN SITE AND SECTION-AXON DETAIL
This page: Aerial and street views of the final model.Right page: Wall section of the east-facing glass curtain wall which incor-porates same logic as the concrete-glass panelled facades.
51JONES
Custom mullion detail
Hardwood floors
Tempered glass
Cavity for air vents and thinner profile.
Concrete pavers.
Vertically extended mullion to keep with facade logic.
BLACK BOX THEATRE
PERFORMER LOUNGE
DRESSINGROOM
DRESSING ROOM
DANCE STUDIO 1
DANCE STUDIO 2
PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO
BLACK BOX RECEPTION AND SOUVENIR SHOP
CONFERENCE ROOMOFFICE SPACE
OFFICE SPACE
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:PLANS, SECTIONS, GROUND RENDERING
Left: Urban interface plan at ground level. Above: Main arts produc-tion level with black box theater and main gallery at level three; and typical office space level at levels 5-10.
51JONESWest Section. North Section.
View of ground level looking southeast into the courtyard.
VERTICAL CEMETERIES. CHICAGO MAUSOLEUM.
SECOND YEAR SEMESTER-LONG PROJECT. SPRING 2010DAVID BUEGE
Set in the heart of Chicago, this project required a space that would hold 10,000 bodies with 6000 being urns and 4000 being caskets. Be-cause of the limited square footage of 80’x100’, a vertical “house for the dead” was necessary. This proposal takes the ideas of a traditional cemetery in which the markers of the buried are, for the most part, physically and visually ac-cessible to the public. The primary goal of this proposal is to express and celebrae the people and memories of the past within the heart of Chicago. This is acheivable through the layered facade of glass curtain walls and a vitrine wall which holds all urns as well as through the ground level which is accessible to the public during the day time so that the passerby can experience the idea of an urban mausoleum.
53JONES
Mausoleum design development:axonometric and 2-D studies
Axonometric drawing studying how the building ends. How does it touch the sky?
55JONES
Axonometric drawing studying how the building hits the the ground. How does it open to the public?
Sectional development planametric development
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:Representational drawings of the tower
Flipped axonometric drawing illustrating all four walls of ground level (to understand, turn port-folio upside down to see other two walls clrearly).
57JONES
Connection detail develop-ment and final axonometric drawing of alluminum mullion connection.Right: Final section represent-ing full tower.
FINAL DEVELOPMENT:SECTIONAL DRAWINGS
Close-up water color of the detailed design of the tombs. Each tomb is alotted a shelf-like area for personal gifts or belongings brought by family members. At the ground level, the tombs form the walls of a chapel which is housed behind the ones represented.
EAST CHESTNUT AVENUE NORTH STATE STREET
59JONES
Axonometric drawing of high rise mausoleum with context at the corner of E Chestnut Ave and N State Street.Left: Final plan drawings.
WOOD STRUCTURES. CONTOUR CANTILEVER
THIRD YEAR THREE WEEK LONG PROJECT. FALL 2010LYNN FITZPATRICK
Models studying weight resistence of wood veneer through different forms to determine which was most efficient and most structurally sound.
Continuing a semester long study of wood struc-tures in design, this project explores designing for issues of load, the structure, and the weight of the structure. This was a group competition project in which I was paired with Geronimo Debeza-Rodriguez. The primary objective of this competition-project was to design a wood cantilever with the best weight-to-load ratio. Each group chose from three properties--tessellation, folding, contouring--in which to base to design of the cantilever. We chose contouring, or bending to create a structural form. To achieve the lightest structure to hold the greatest amount of weight, we laminated veneer wood in continuous loops. Our cantilever structure weighed a total of 15 pounds and held up to 127 pounds before deflec-tion. Out of 24 cantilevers tested, this had the fourth best ratio.
61JONES
Six feet wood cantilever. Final model.
TRAVEL SKETCHES. PAINTINGS
SPRING 2012INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL SKETCHES. STUDY ABROAD. ROME, ITALYA series of sketches done during the University of Arkansas’ study abroad program. These were done during leisure time, field trips, and during Architecture of the City class.
MISCELLANEOUS STUDIO DRAWINGSThese are selected renderings which have been hand drawn over the years throughout various studios.
PAINTINGSThis is a series of personal works done over the past seven years most of which have been sold. They dipict the Mississippi Delta and its rich blues culture as well as its troubled past which brought about the blues.
63JONES
Plan, section, aerial perspective of Chiesa di San Carlimo Alle Quattro Fontane by Borromini.
BORROMINI
ROMAN FORUM
Aerial view of the Roman Fo-rum. Concept diagram showing a proposed new path across the Roman Forum and Imperial Forum.
Roman Forum show-ing Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus, Curia Julia, and the background context of the Tabularium.
Basilica of Maxentius within the Roman Forum. 65JONES
ROMAN CATHEDRALS AND SQUARES
Sant’ Andrea al Quirinale by Bernini.
The Pantheon. Piazza Sant’ignazio.
67Elevation-perspective of Piazza del Popolo. JONES
FIRST YEAR STUDIO RENDERING
69
THIRD YEAR LYCEUM COMPETITION RENDERING
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FIELD WORKERS 1. OLD MISSISSIPPI DELTA.
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FIELD WORKERS 2. OLD MISSISSIPPI DELTA.
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OLD FIELD BARN. STONEVILLE, MS.
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SWAIN PLANTATION HOME. TRIBBETT, MS.
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FIELD BARN AT 438 AND 61. ARCOLA, MS.
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OLD GREEN HOUSE ON 61. ARCOLA, MS.
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THANK YOU.
SARA EVANS JONES.
SARA EVANS [email protected] 662.931.4563
2138 N. GARLAND AVE. APT 6. FAYETTEVILLE. AR. 72704