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Architecture Portfolio

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University of Tennessee Knoxville College of Architecture and Design B. Arch Prortfolio.
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ZACH SCROGGINS ARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO
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  • ZACH SCROGGINSARCHITECTURE PORTFOLIO

  • ARCHITECTURE

    DESIGN WORK

    ARTWORK

  • LEWIS TSURUMAKI LEWIS

    L LTLs work with the College of Wooster be-gan in 2001 with an extensive feasibility study of the residential campus plan that culminated in recom-mendations for substantial changes in the density and confi guration of several student halls. Contrary to the prevailing trend at residential colleges toward apartment-style living, extensive discussions with students, residential life staff, and college admin-istration led to the unanticipated conclusion that a double-loaded corridor type actually encourages the greatest degree of socialization and the most posi-tive student experiences. Urban where the apart-ment type is suburban, the spatial format of the cor-ridor building facilitates exchange among students and provides opportunities for diverse levels of inter-action. At a time when students arrive on campus with an increasing array of insulating personal tech-nologies--ipods, computers, gameboys-- this seem-ingly outmoded type offers a social mixing chamber for the cultivation of a collective collegial identity.

    LT

  • LEADING-EDGE DESIGN COMPETITION

  • This project was done for the Leading-Edge Design Competition to design a zero energy co-housing com-munity. The project program was to have 12, 3-bed-room/2 bath units, a common house that would be shared between the units, 3 retail spaces, and a gym that would be used by the public and the co-hous-ing tenants. The site for the project was located north to south so getting adequate solar gain to the units was going to be difficult. Solar access is needed not only for light but primarily for heat gain through the southern facing materials. Orienting the units in a line only allowed for the units on the southern end to have southern facing facades. Since this project requires all the units to be zero-energy this became the main driv-ing issue that led my design. I placed the units in a line of three with a second story mimicked above, with an-

    other set parallel to these. I knew that this tight space between the cohousing forms would be a shady space so I wanted to minimize the exterior circulation so that there would be minimal overhang in between forms. I placed four cores located at the points where each unit meets another, two staircases and two elevators. I then connected each elevator with the stair on the opposite unit. This created just two bridges, accessing three units each, spanning the gap. The placement of these vertical circulation cores allowed for the space directly behind them to be utilized in a unique way. I carried the forms of the cores back through the units to create a sun space and stack ventilation space. It became clear that this space would function best serv-ing the bottom units. But this brought up the question of how to get solar access and stack ventilation to the

    SITE PLAN

    SOUTH-EAST ELEVATION

  • top units. After studying the roof plans I was able to place two smaller versions of the solar access spac-es and stack ventilation spaces above the main living spaces on the top units. This allowed for both units to get adequate solar heat gain in the winter and proper stack ventilation in the summer. In further study of how these spaces would work I understood that since each design strategy would occupy the same space then each strategy would need to be able to be deacti-vated so that only one would be utilized at a time. This understanding made the stack ventilation side to be operable louvers and the southern facing glass to have operable blinds inside the glass. This allows for the unit owners to choose what they want the space to be when they need it. The final question was how to get the heat that would be gained from the south-

    ern facing glass space down into the unit below. This brought about the need to change to structure of these walls to be a hollow concrete mass that would bring the heat down through the wall and into a fan system to push the heat through the second level floor and then down into the space below. Because the stack ventilation space is located away from the half of the unit the question arose of how to allow the flow of air during stack ventilation to move across these rooms. It was then decided that the interior walls, being non-load-bearing, would have vents in the top of the wall to allow the air to flow from room to room until it was pulled up through the stack ventilation tower.

    FIRST FLOOR PLAN

    SECOND FLOOR PLAN

  • 1 2

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    9 8

    10

    11

    12

    16

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    20 21 22

    23

    17

    13 14 15

    7

    65

    24

    1 ROOF MEMBRANE2 TAPERED INSULATION3 STACK VENTILATION LOUVER4 METAL COPING5 ROOF MEMBRANE6 ADHERED MEMBRANE7 8K1 OPEN-WEB JOIST8 IN-GLASS SHADE9 WINDOW TO TOP UNIT10 WINDOW TO TOP UNIT11 RAIN GUTTER12 CMU BLOCK13 WOOD FLOORING14 CONCRETE SLAB15 METAL DECKING16 CONCRETE U-BEAM17 12K1 OPEN-WEB JOIST18 WINDOW TO BOTTOM UNIT19 BOARD SIDING20 WOOD FLOORING21 CONCRETE SLAB22 GRAVEL23 CONCRETE FOOTING24 EARTH

    DETAILED SECTION

    STACK VENTILATION

    SOLAR GAIN

  • SECTION

    UNIT PLAN

    CROSS VENTILATION

  • A NEW NEIGHBORHOOD FOR THE CENTER-CITY

  • SITE PLAN

    SAMPLE FLOOR PLAN

    This design is an apartment complex located in downtown Knoxville, TN on a site that has been previously thought up by a landscape ar-chitecture studio. The design had us orient our buildings in a line looking over three large soc-cer fields. My design started with finding a way to have an apartment layout that would have an open common space with access from northern and southern light with the bedrooms on the cor-ners allowing each one to have a light source. The back balcony is punched into the main build-ing shape so that it would be shaded from the southern light. The northern facade of the build-ing is a large curtain wall that overlooks the fields

    bellow. This glass wall is open to the air acting as a visual barrier and not a conditioned space. The glass wall is divided into a grid pattern with a ran-dom pattern of empty panels, transparent pan-els and blue translucent panels. This is to allow privacy to the front doors of the apartment units. There are two ways to access to site. There is a street that comes directly off an adjacent street and runs right in front of the bottom level of the buildings which are retail spaces. The apartment owners come off the northern end of the site and park underneath the buildings in a large covered garage.

  • 1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS 4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS

    CIRCULATION SECONDARY SPACES

    LEVEL 2 FLOOR PLAN 1/8 - 1

    1 BEDROOM4 BEDROOM 2 BEDROOM 1 BEDROOM

    SAMPLE FLOOR PLAN

    UNIT LAYOUT DIAGRAM

  • SUMMER SUN

    SECTION

  • WEST ELEVATION

    EXTERIOR GLASS SHELL

    INTERIOR FACADE

  • LEAP COLLABORATIVE

  • The concept of this design is a steel structure bookended by two large brick on CMU shear walls. The steel structured middle of the de-sign is layed out so that both north and south facing facades are curtain walls allowing maxi-mum exposure to the exterior. The main office work spaces are centrally located on alternating double-height spaces oriented to the southern faade. Each floors office spaces have a di-rect outdoor balcony overlooking the landscape

    on the ground level. These balconies are canti-levered out form the main building shape. The executive offices and the conference rooms are oriented on the north faade encompassing the two middle structural bays. These two bays are bookended by outdoor balconies cut into the main building shape. These outdoor spaces al-low for all major occupied spaces to have a land-scape feature. These two main office spaces are divided by the main vertical circulation ele-

    SITE PLAN

    SECTION

    N

  • ments with staircases working in a switchback movement. Having the two large brick massing bookends on the building allows the middle of the building to look lighter because of its steel frame and comparison to the windowless brick. The column grid allows for an open plan for the office spaces. The outdoor balconies on the southern faade are also used to shade the southern curtain walls from direct sun, allowing for more than two-thirds of the fa-ade to be in the shade at all times. This allows for a large sum of light to come into the office spaces but keeps direct sunlight off of the work stations.

    FLOOR PLAN

    FLOOR PLATE DIAGRAM

    SOUTH ELEVATION

  • BRICK ON CMU

    METAL PANEL ROOF

    2.5 x 5 METAL MULLION

    CURTAIN WALL

    4 BRICK WRAPPING

    OUTDOOR BALCONY

    WALKWAY AROUND OPENING TO FLOOR BELOW

    METAL HANDRAIL

    GUY

    W12X26 WIDE FLANGE SECONDARY SUPPORT

    W24X162 WIDE FLANGE PRIMARY SUPPORT

    HSS14X14X5/8 HOLLOW STEEL COLUMN

    8 CONCRETE ON METAL DECK

    4X4 ACOUSTIC CEILING

    8 CAN DOWNLIGHT

    BRICK WRAPPED STEEL COLUMN

    2 TERAZZO FLOORING

    WALL SECTION DETAIL 1/2 - 1

    CIRCULATION

    PRIMARY WORKSPACE

    SERVICE SPACES

    SECONDARY WORKSPACES

    ELEVATORS

    WALL DETAIL

    STRUCTURAL SYSTEM

    GRID SYSTEM

    SPACE DIAGRAM

  • EAST KNOXVILLE PAVILION

  • SITE PLAN

    WEST ELEVATION

    After studying the history and demographic of east Knoxville, TN our studio teacher challenged us to come up with a design that would bene-fit the area the most. After seeing people sell-ing random items out of their trucks at a gravel parking lot I decided that a covered bazaar/pavil-ion would be the most beneficial addition to the area. This design is located in between a historic church and a large neighborhood. The horseshoe shape allows for a playground to fit nicely in the middle. The central area of the design has a long row of stalls for the general public to sell whatev-

    er they choose. This is not intended to be some-thing people would have to pay to use but a free area. The structure of the pavilion is a wood col-umn and beam structure with large brick bases to the columns to tie the design to the large brick church next door. The roofs alternate in a slant-ing pattern to allow indirect light into the bazaar pathway. The two ends of the horseshoe are open spaces with some park benches and some open spaces to allow for the public to have some flexibility to how they want to use the spaces.

  • SECTION

    FLOOR PLAN

  • DESIGN WORK

    LEWIS TSURUMAKI LEWIS

    L LTLs work with the College of Wooster be-gan in 2001 with an extensive feasibility study of the residential campus plan that culminated in recom-mendations for substantial changes in the density and confi guration of several student halls. Contrary to the prevailing trend at residential colleges toward apartment-style living, extensive discussions with students, residential life staff, and college admin-istration led to the unanticipated conclusion that a double-loaded corridor type actually encourages the greatest degree of socialization and the most posi-tive student experiences. Urban where the apart-ment type is suburban, the spatial format of the cor-ridor building facilitates exchange among students and provides opportunities for diverse levels of inter-action. At a time when students arrive on campus with an increasing array of insulating personal tech-nologies--ipods, computers, gameboys-- this seem-ingly outmoded type offers a social mixing chamber for the cultivation of a collective collegial identity.

    LT

    The diagram for the building was a product of resolving confl icting pressures. The college requested a single building not to exceed four fl oors. Therefore, each fl oor needed to hold 46 students. Yet, the ideal hall unit needed to be limited to twenty-fi ve to thir-ty students. The residence hall is actually two build-ings, which share a ground fl oor mechanical system. Within each wing, the hallways fl are at their ends and embraces lounges, a kitchenette, and more intimate sitting areas. A collective outdoor courtyard is cre-ated by this split. This exterior room functions as the public center of the building. It is an unusual space, simultaneously at the heart of the building and at the ends of each wing. It contains both social and private spaces. It provides a sequence of entry into the build-ing and passage through to a park framed at the rear of the building.

    Wood-clad study nooks cantilever, like box seats, into the theatrical space of the courtyard, pro-ducing a dynamic entrance to the building and estab-lishing private study areas in a collective setting. The

    The success of the double-loaded corridor as a catalyst for college social life is predicated on sev-eral important conditions: 1) the scale of the hall unit--the total number of rooms served by a single corridor--should be neither too small nor too large, as this resulted either in isolation or institutional anonymity, 2) the corridor should be wide enough to function as an ad-hoc social space and connect to or incorporate other collective spaces, and 3) the corridor should be integrated with the main circulation paths through the building.

    The generative brief for Bornhuetter Hall, a new 47,500 sq. ft. residence hall comprising 185 beds, was derived from this research. Sited on the northern edge of a liberal arts campus, Bornhuetter Hall encourages social interaction by transforming the conventions of the double-loaded corridor and enriches student experience by pro-viding a balance between private spaces for study and public gathering areas for communal life and discussion.

    ENRICHES STUDENT EXPERIENCE BY PROVIDING A BALANCE BETWEEEN PRIVATE SPACES FOR STUDY AND PUBLIC GATHERING AREAS FOR COMMUNAL LIFE AND DISCUSSION

    daily activity of coming and going from the residence hall is turned into a public event

    The hall is sited at the northern edge of the campus and abuts an under-utilized park. The courtyard pro-vides both the major collective space for the building, while also forming a link between the campus and the landscape beyond. One can move through the build-ing to the parkfrom outside to outsidewithout pass-ing through a door

    Wood-clad study nooks cantilever, like box seats, into the theatrical space of

    the courtyard, producing a dynamic entrance to the building

    Enriches student experience by providing a balance between private spaces for study and public gathering areas

    The building is conceived as two copper clad boxes, wrapped by two veneers of brick. The brick skins unify the building, while the details at the edges, window and joints of the building expli-cate the interplay between the brick surfaces and the copper volume

    This design titled Movement was made for a Presentation Design professional elective. We were first tasked to come up with a design using twenty black and gray rectangles to show move-ment. We were not allowed to have them overlap each other. We then had to mimic our design using as little text as possible in any different fonts, overlapping allowed.

    Another design for the Presentation Design professional elective. We were tasked with creating two double-page spreads for a bulding and firm of our choice. We had to find ways of connecting all of the pictures and the text accross all pages.

  • ARTWORK

  • ZACH SCROGGINS - 865.603.3938 - 6001 GLENMAY DR. KNOXVILLE TN, 37921

  • ZS


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