Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Music Rooms (Ojai, California)

Editor's Note: I actually played a large role in building these. See the Vitruvian Gallery for construction images. See also: Architect Gallery.
SAN LUIS OBISPO, CA PREFAB portable Music Practice Rooms win design award 
Four prefabricated portable music practice rooms for a private high school in Ojai – 
changing the problem of how schools can expand into a simple solution-– have won a 
leading architecture award. 
Laura Joines, AIA of DOMU architects is the winner of the 2010 AIA Merit Design Award given by the Central Coast California American Institute of Architects. The award commends the  design of prefabricated music practice rooms for Besant Hill School in Ojai, California. 

The judges commended the pre-fab music rooms as great inspirations for the future in  classroom design given the upcoming new laws requiring the use of portables in California  schools. 

Besant Hill School commissioned the four 100 square foot music practice rooms as a way to add valuable classroom space for a very affordable cost. The room design was inspired by the sound of an instrument: flute, cello, piano and guitar. Each room expresses the ‘frozen music’ of that particular instrument. For example, the cello room has the largest window. The flute room is horizontal and placed higher in the wall. 

For sound proofing reasons there is only one window, carefully placed for passive solar heat gain in winter, summer ventilation, and day lighting to reduce the need for lighting. The extreme recessed angles of the window façade were needed to naturally block the summer sun from overheating the rooms. The nature of the materials themselves allowed this to occur. The Vitruvian® EPS foam could be carved to virtually any shape easily and for no additional cost. 

Re-locatable Structures 
The rooms extend the usable individual classroom space for the school by being positioned around the theater and music complex. Looking out into nature, they give a student the needed space to focus on their instrument and creating music. Typically the foundation and permitting costs are 30-40% of a construction budget. Eliminating the need for either of these saved a great deal of money. The rooms are portable and under the 150 square feet minimum required to obtain a permit. The self-leveling base allows the rooms to free stand anywhere. 

Hyper-efficient building methods 
An innovative hyper-efficient’ 8” EPA foam wall system by Vitruvian® is used for the entire room: floors, walls and ceilings. Expanded polystyrene and light gauge HSS steel provides a clean, green, and healthy environment for the students to practice music, and for the crew that constructed them. Panels are completely recyclable and last twice as long as traditional wood framing. Plus, no CFC’s, out gassing and no construction waster. Considered ‘hyperefficient’ building materials, the foam insulates the rooms so no added heat or cooling is required. Each room is positioned on the site to harvest winter sun and provide a view into nature.

Natural Cork interior 
The entire interior, floors, walls and ceilings, is covered in pre-finished cork flooring for noise reduction, health and durability. The architect adds that ‘the same cellular structure that makes the floor comfortable also reduces noise and vibration. Cork has natural properties that make it anti-allergenic and resistant to insects and naturally fire-resistant. This provides the air space for acoustic absorption, and a clean, soothing interior. Nothing about the rooms should take away from the musician to fully focus on their music”. 

Extension of Design 
The school was designed in the 1950’s according to modernist principles to look like a ‘Greek village’ on the hills on Ojai. These rooms extend that vision by their white cement-based waterproof plaster exterior finish and clean lines. The cement materials were harvested from local sources. The Galvanized metal roofing wraps 90 degrees to form into a wall on the fourth side. 

The award winning designer is Laura Joines, AIA, an architect committed to a sustainable and simple world. This is her 5th AIA design award since 2004. In 2008 she won the AIA design award for the Teixeira House in San Luis Obispo. Her office, DOMU, meaning ‘house’ in Latin, is a design and architecture firm specializing in products and buildings that give regenerative beauty + practicality back to the world. They extend design into the details via their furnishings and organizational systems.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Best Of (Shell Beach, California) Part 1

This is just one neighborhood. I'll cover more later. The lighting wasn't great due to the fog but these are some of my favorite local pads. If you have any info on who designed these or you wanna submit more, email me!
This mini mansion is awesome because it looks so much bigger than it really is. I love the clean crispness and the it really glows in this neighborhood.

This one's right up the street and super cool. I love the simplicity, massing and the curvature of the front facade.

Actually talked to the owner of this one. She was very nice but a little concerned about the scruffy lookin dude taking pictures of her house. I told her how awesome it was and all was forgiven, on the condition that I wouldn't give out the street address. She said it was designed and built in the 70's but didn't know by whom. They just recently remodeled it and it looks great. Love the louvered privacy porch and natural color scheme.

This isn't my favorite house in the world but it's in the same neighborhood. I can tell it's a remodel by the gross 70's stone but they definitely brought it back to life. Plus, I just like this picture.

The lighting's not great in this pic but a cool house none the less. Very horizontal and Frank Lloyd Wright-esque.

I'm a sucker for upside-down roofs and just any rebellion against convention in general. I'd love to give it a brighter paint job but I'd probably get arrested.

This is another fresh remodel that I really dig. Not a huge fan of board and batten siding but it's probably the original stuff and they pulled it off.

I was "window shopping" literally with John Pryor the other day and we came across this beautiful Copper rig from Loewen at Ventana in SLO. I don't even want to know what these bad boys cost but they are definitely luxurious.

Local Interiors by Sterios (San Luis Obispo, California)

Tridosha


Seagate Software Headquarters

Fire Station by Duffy (San Jose, California)


The City of San Jose Fire Department Station 34 design is based on fire fighter operations with careful attention to durability, sustainability and an architectural aesthetic that defines the building as a Civic facility while complimenting the industrial and high tech neighboring properties. Building massing, materials, orientation and engineered systems work together to balance the demanding programmatic necessities of fire station operations with LEEDTM certification requirements and neighborhood compatibility.
The goals and priorities of the program are outlined below along with the design solutions developed for Fire Station 34.

FUNCTIONAL - The room layout was designed primarily to achieve the most efficient circulation patterns for firefighter operations specifically minimizing the response time from any location to the fire apparatus during an emergency call.

DURABLE - The design utilizes simple massing and a limited palate of robust materials, including decorative concrete block walls, stained concrete floors, exterior and interior metal wall panels and aluminum storefront glazing, that are easy to maintain and will age gracefully over time.

SUSTAINABLE -Living spaces are located on the east and south faces to capture daylight during the winter months and shaded to keep out direct gain during the summer and late afternoon hours. Building materials, selected for durability, were also considered for their low embodied energy and high recycled content as well as their future recyclability. Operational windows and ceiling fans were provided in a living space s and bunk rooms to minimize the need for air conditioning.

NEIGHBORHOOD COMPATIBILITY - The station is located in a semi-industrial neighborhood between factory, warehouse and high tech office park uses. The composition of solid and transparent massing  is used to express the function of the spaces and the operation of the fire station.  The massing, material and colors were intended to compliment the neighboring buildings as well as subtly evoke the image of a fire engine archetype, specifically from the Northeast corner entry perspective.

 JIM DUFFY, NCARB, LEED AP

 J I M  D U F F Y  A R C H I T E C T U R E

www.jimduffyarch.com

805.540.8896

Friday, October 15, 2010

Pismo Heights House (Pismo Beach, California)

Designed by Steven Puglisi Architecture with a little help from Enrica Costello. (I've met both of them and they're super cool people.) This house is almost finished and a modern refreshment for locals like me. Sitting on a sheer cliff, this house overlooks the ocean, Pismo Pier, Shell Beach, etc. Maybe they'll let me take a look inside so I can post some pics of that. (Hint hint.)

CRU 3 MIXED USE (San Luis Obispo, CA)


Designed by my friend Laura Joines (DOMU Architects) "CRU_3 is a sustainably designed Mixed Use building with a commercial office below a 450sf studio apartment. Designed as a 'Passive Building' to collect its own heat, electricity and irrigation water. An inverted gable metal roof funnels rainwater down a scupper/chain to thriving horsetail." DomuArchitects.com