Sarah Malak - Architecture Portfolio

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Architecture Portfolio SarahMalak

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Transcript of Sarah Malak - Architecture Portfolio

Page 1: Sarah Malak - Architecture Portfolio

A r c h i t e c t u r e

PortfolioS a r a h M a l a k

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e: [email protected] / p: +1 480 612 2581 or +965 - 65997712

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Contents

Design Basics: Origami Pavilion......................................................................................................................................4

Design I: Al-Sawaber............................................................................................................................................................6

Design II: Aberrant Dweller.............................................................................................................................................10

Design II: School of Art.......................................................................................................................................................12

Design III: Hotel.........................................................................................................................................................................16

Design V: Al-Mitlaa City...................................................................................................................................................20

Design V: Al-Shaheed Park..........................................................................................................................................22

Design VI: Courtyard House..........................................................................................................................................24

Graduation Project: Pet Hope...................................................................................................................................28

Adv. Architecture Studio I..............................................................................................................................................34

Adv. Architecture Studio II.............................................................................................................................................38

Product Design: T’La...........................................................................................................................................................42. Paintings & Drawings.........................................................................................................................................................44

Curriculum Vitae....................................................................................................................................................................46CV

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Design Basics - Dr. Aseel Al-Ragam - 2010Origami Pavilion

Origami Pavilion is a result of studying the basics of origami in which a piece of paper is folded to create a three dimensional shape. In origami more than one piece of paper can be joint together by folding. Based on these principles, the Origami Pavilion got was de-veloped. The pavilion is a result of deforming a basic origami star.

The site location is beside the old central bank in Kuwait City. Many pedestrians pass through the site while circulating in the city center. Based on this fact, the entrances of the pavilion were located, and this affected the form of the pavilion.

The users can pass through the pavilion or have a break inside it. Inside, they can ex-perience the different heights of the origami folds.

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Model

Process Site Plan

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Section & Elevations

Section

North Elevation

East Elevation

South Elevation

West Elevation

Plan

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Design I - Dr. Aseel Al-Ragam - 2010Re-Design of Al-Sawaber

Al-Sawaber residential complex project was meant to provide housing in Kuwait City for Kuwaiti citizens. It was designed by Arthur Er-ickson to create a self-sufficient community. However, the project was not implemented the way it was initially designed, mainly due to financial issues. In addition, lack of mainte-nance as well as other necessities and com-mercial aspects caused the project to fail. Thus, Al-Sawaber attracted a lot of crime and is not safe pleasant place to stay.

Arthur Erickson had respectable ideas in his proposed idea for Sawaber. The 2.1m canti-lever of each floor provided shading for peo-ple in gathering spaces below. Unfortunately, in the actual built design, the cantilever was reduced to 1m providing insufficient shad-ing. Moreover, the initial project contained five types of apartments, one of which was implemented. This type could not accom-modate families with three or more children which is common in Kuwaiti families. This is one of the big reasons why the now existing project is not a success.

As a group of six, our proposal in the Re-de-sign of Al-Sawaber aims to solve the prob-lems we encountered in the site analysis. We tried to benefit from the existing residential complex and Arthur Erickson’s design.

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Panoramic View of Al-Sawaber

Proposed Section Implemented Section

Erickson’s Plan Implemented Plan

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Program Diagram - Our Proposal Layout Grid - Our Proposal Main Pedestrian Path - Our Proposal

Design Process - Our Proposal

Block A

Block B

Facilities

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Our Proposal - Sketch by Abdullah Ali

The orientation and layout of buildings in the site was created by a grid. The grid is made of radial lines that rippled from the central main facilities and east to west lines that determined the North-South orientation of the buildings. There are three main types of buildings; apartment blocks A and B as well as facility buildings. The site is divided into three districts each edged by a pedestrian walkway.

There are three main types of buildings in the site; apartment blocks A and B as well as facilities buildings. The residential blocks A and B contain 6 types of apartments to suit different types of families. The facilities include clinics, groceries, mosques, schools, daycares, and other such requirements. A main focal point with major facilities is locat-ed in the center of the site. There are also four small focal points scattered around the site to provide quick services for residents.

Within the site is a pedestrian walkway, which is unique. It creates an easy connection be-tween all areas and orients people in the site. It is connects all focal points and passes through two building blocks were the ground floor is open to allow this.

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Block BBlock A Site Mass Model

Apartment Type 2A - Designed by Sarah Malak

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Design II - Dr. Mohammad Al-Jassar - 2011Elong - Aberrant Dweller

Aberrant dweller is a project that aims to de-sign a shelter, dwelling or any kind of pavilion for an aberrant person whom the designer makes up from his or her imagination, and writes a story about. This building should ful-fill the aberrant person’s needs, and has to be built on a randomly made up topography.

Elong is the aberrant person for this proj-ect. He is a talented baker, but his problem is that whenever he feels heat he becomes very active and elongates up to 2.5 m. How-ever, when it is cold, he becomes sleepy and shortens until 30cm short.

The designed building is a combination of an abnormally small cold underground mas-ter bedroom where Elong can shorten, stay cool, and sleep, and a high ceiling bakery, where he can cook and welcome people to his bakery.

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Model

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3D Sketch

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Underground Bedroom Plan

Section B-B

Ground Floor Plan

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Design II - Dr. Mohammad Al-Jassar - 2011School of Art

The School of Art is a project is a that aims to offer a learning environment for three departments; Fine Arts, Fashion Design, and Graphic Design.

The site lies in Kuwait City in front of Souq Sharq. If a building is built on it, that building would be part of the skyline of Kuwait City facing the Arabian Gulf. In the site, the his-torical buildings such as old schools, houses and mosques are much more than the re-cent and modern ones, and this fact was considered in the design in terms of sur-rounding views. Actually, the whole form of the school is affected by the surrounding historical buildings, since the exterior walls are oriented to be parallel to the historical building facing them.

The Form of the building and the distribu-tion of the program was also affected by the design’s main concept, which is the interlock of three schools. Each department in this school has its own defined zone for class-es, studios and staff offices. However, they all come to meet each other and interlock three-dimensionally to create public spac-es like the library and lounges where all stu-dents and staff can meet and interact.

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Model Interior: Ground Floor Main Entrance Model Interior: Mezzanine Lounge access

Model

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Conceptual Model to Actual Design (Interlock)Exterior all Orientations & Surrounding Historical Buildings

Site North Elevation

Vehicular Circulation Historical vs. Modern Buildings

Fine Arts

Fashion Design

Graphic Design

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Ground Floor Plan

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The ground floor is mainly for administration and public spaces such as galleries, audito-rium, fashion runway, cafeteria and a library that extends to three floors, each floor ded-icated to a department, yet it is considered as a public space.

The first and second floor is where most of the education happens and where the three departments interlock to create public spaces. In the first floor, departments inter-lock to create two student lounges and the library, while in the second floor they inter-lock to create a staff lounge and a balcony that overlooks one of the student lounges in the first floor.

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First Floor Plan with interlock public zones Second Floor Plan with interlock public zones Section B-B/ North Elevation

Fine Arts

Fashion Design

Graphic Design

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Design III - Arch. Ledia + Arch. Jassim Shehab - 2011Boutique Hotel

Boutique Hotel is a project that aims to de-sign a hotel in an extreme climate, such as North Pole, Alaska. The chosen site, near the Hulahula river is a remote quiet place, 77km away from Kaktovic City and 43km away from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The site provides a nice view of nature, whether in winter when snow covers the landscape and freezes the water, or in summer when snow melts revealing the beautiful green mountain landscape.

All hotel units enjoy view of nature whether the river on the East or the mountains on the South and West. They are also protected from the strong North and West wind. That is because the main building of the hotel has a higher roof than the living units, and is situ-ated in the North and West acting as a bar-rier against the wind.

Model

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North - East - South - West Views

Design Process

Site- Hulahula River, Alaska

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Lobby Restaurant Multi-Purpose Hall Exercising Room Hotel Units Ice Rink/Pool

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The design of the residential units of the ho-tel was inspired from the indigenous archi-tecture of the area. In the North Pole, people lived in igloos in winter and in tents in sum-mer. Therefore, the living unit of the hotel is an insulated closed unit in winter and a tent in summer.

The first attempt to design the unit was made of a fixed tent while the insulating structure moves to shade the outside and reveal the transparent tent. However, the insulated structure is difficult to move, and shading is not needed in the extremely cold climate. Therefore, the final design is made of fixed insulated walls and a movable trans-parent tent that can be moved to increase the room area of the unit and give a bigger view to the nature.

Ground Floor Plan - Section A-A

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Final Hotel Living Unit - Tent is closed

Initial Hotel Living Unit - Tent Insulated

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Initial Hotel Living Unit - Tent Revealed

Main Structural Elements Model

Main Structural Elements Model

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Design V - Dr. Talal Al-Kandari - 2012Al-Mitlaa Master Plan

The Master Planning of Al-Mitlaa is a 16 stu-dents group project in collaboration with Ku-wait Society of Engineers and SSH. Al-Mitlaa is now a desert that is intended to be de-signed as a new City by Kuwait Government. We participated from Kuwait University in collaboration with SSH and Kuwait Society of Engineers to provide our vision of this city. The advantage of the site is that it lies next to Shiekh Sabah Al-Sabah natural reserve, where many plants and birds live. Al-Mi-taa lies between Kuwait City and the future Al-Hareer City. Therefore, Al-Mitlaa can be a link between two major cities.

To design the city we extended the reserve so that it blends with the city. The green re-serve bleeds into the city and decreases in density as it goes closer to Kuwait City, while residential units increase. The design tries to minimize car use as much as possible by providing public transport and locating main services within a walking distance from res-idential units. Three levels of transportation exist in the city; the future Kuwait metro, a tram system and cars. In Kuwait the strong wind carrying dust comes from the North East direction. Therefore, the higher buildings of the city were placed on the North Eastern side to protect it from wind and dust.

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Site View

Site Analysis

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Buildings’ HeightsCirculation

Zoning Diagram Zoning Pie Chart

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Residential High

Entertainment

Business

Residential Medium

Industrial

Governmental

Residential Low

Solar Field

Landscape & Vegetation (not in pie chart)

35-140 mMetro Route 25-30 mTram/Car Route 15-20 mCar Route Transportation Station 10-15 m

Services

Residential Farms

Educational

Cultural

Multi-Use (Res./Comm./Bus.)

Multi-Use (Res./Comm./Bus.)

Commercial

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Design V - Dr. Talal Al-Kandari - 2012Al-Shaheed Park

Al-Shaheed Park is part of the green belt that separates the old Kuwait City from the outside new districts. It is situated where the old Kuwait Sour existed. Kuwait Sour is the wall that protected the old city. One of the wall’s gates is located within the site. Today the park is still visited by a few people for exercising and some children from nearby residential areas for playing and cycling.

However, the walkways in the park are not easily understood by the user. And there are no amenities for playing or exercising in the park. Since this is what a park should be for, and this is what it is being used for, the con-cept of this project is Play-Park.

Play-Park is a playground where both chil-dren and adults can play. It offers indoor and outdoor play areas, as well as indoor and outdoor exercise areas. All the main spaces are connected with a shaded walkway that produces solar energy. Energy is also pro-duced by the users of the park. The kinetic energy of people playing and exercising can be harnessed to illuminate the park at night. This project also considers sustainability by leaving most of the existing trees in their places instead of cutting them.

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Playful looking structures make up the buildings of the park.

Play-Park is for exercisePlay-Park is for fun

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Kinetic Energy ZonesSection A-A / Section B-B

Park Plan Solar Energy Zone - Shaded walkway

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Design VI - Dr. Qutaiba Hamada - 2013Courtyard House

This Project is an attempt to design a gov-ernment house on a 150m2 plot of land. Gov-ernment houses are prototype houses de-signed and built by the Kuwaiti government for Kuwaities with a limited income. They are usually repeated on several blocks. These houses are usually designed on 350m2 or 400m2 plots. However, about 70% of the land is built while the rest is kept as an outdoor space surrounding the house. This outdoor space is rarely used by residents because it is hot outside and there is no privacy.

Courtyard House is an attempt to provide the same program of the government house on a smaller plot of land. A courtyard house is a representation of an old Kuwaiti house. This house design reintroduces the court-yard as a private outdoor space for the oc-cupants. The courtyard is the heart of the house where it is surrounded by most func-tions such as living room, dining room and bedrooms. With the repetition of the hous-es each house would enjoy the view of the translucent stairs mashrabiya of its neigh-bor.

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3D Model

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Section A-A / Section B-B Living Room View

Courtyard Interior View

Courtyard Top View

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This house was designed using Autodesk Revit to submit a set of drawings from the Building Information Model at the end. The skeleton of columns and beams was also studied and added to the Revit model. This model was then rendered for final presen-tation using V-ray for Sketchup and Photo-shop.

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Ground Floor Plan First Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

South Elevation - Drawing Set

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Ceiling Plan - Drawing Set

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Second Floor Plan Third Floor Plan

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Graduation Project - Dr. Muhannad Al-Baqshi - 2013-2014Pet Hope

aims to shelter lost, stray, and unwanted animals, encourage pet adoption, and protect and control pet population. As a pet shelter, the building ought to engage the community by providing public spaces like a pet adoption area, an education center, a pet shop, and a pet park with playgrounds and a pet contests area. The project will ex-plore the architectural opportunities that arise from the fact that the main users of the building are animals. However, the project’s main architectural focus will be the building skin. The skin will be the interface between the interior and the exterior at which human and non-human users interact. This inter-face does not only protect and display shel-tered animals, but also offer shelter, food and water for animals outside the building.

The site is located on the Sulaibikhat Bay; a natural habitat for flamingos, and other birds. Thus, the shelter’s skin provides shel-ter for outer birds. It is also located next to a walkway, thus the shelter is designed within a park in which the walkway continues.

The program is based on research in animal related fields, precedent animal shelters and an operational guide for planning and build-ing an animal shelter done by Animal Arts; an animal facilities architectural firm.

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Habitat for sea animals and plants

Habitat for birds inside and outShelter and play area for cats

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259 m

211 m

206.5 m144

m

37109 m2

50 100 200

Abu-Dhabi St.

Jamal Abdul Nasser St.

Site Location - Kuwait, Sulaibikhat Bay Site Area= 37109m2 Why people come to the site?

Program

Animal Habitats

Administration& Support

PublicSpaces

Entertainment

Animal HabitatsAnimal Habitats Public Spaces Administration & Support Separated Direct Relationship Indirect Relationship

Sport Facilities Natural Reserve The Site Socializing Walking Eating Playing Taking Photos

Entertainment City

Sulaibikhat SportClub Boardwalk

Traditional Cafe

Al-Doha Natural Reserve

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The building has spaces for many types of companion animals categorized into cats, dogs, birds, and small and exotic animals. It offers each type of animal a courtyard for outdoor activities. Three types of circulation were considered; animal intake circulation, animal adoption circulation, and staff circu-lation. It is very important to separate the intake animals from the adoption animals to prevent the spread of disease. It is also very important to create a nice interactive dis-play of adoption animals for visitors to en-courage pet adoption. At the same time, it is important to create an easy access to for staff to take care of these animals.

The Building Skin, as shown in the next page, was designed in a way that animals can in-habit it from inside and out. It is made of Pyramids placed on top of each other in a structurally stable way. It is Structurally Sta-ble that it carries the roof of the building. The Pyramids change in size and density de-pending on the animal inhabiting them. The biggest pyramids are found in the cats living units, where the units are actually within the skin. Cats can play within the skin’s opening s and three dimensionality in the cat’s court-yard. In the birds outdoor nests, and indoor fly area, the smallest pyramids are found. They create a mesh so birds won’t fly away.

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Site Plan - Section

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Ground Floor Plan - South Elevation

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Ground Floor Plan 1:200

South Elevation 1:200

A

B

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1 Lobby2 Waiting Area3 Reception4 Shop5 Intake Lobby6 Intake Holding7 Drop Off8 Large Animals Holding9 Dog Evaluation10 Cat Evaluation11 Storage12 Freezer13 Dispatch14 Volunteers Room15 Kitchenette16 Staff Lounge17 ACO Office18 Manager’s Office19 Cat Community Room20 Cats’ Courtyard21 Indoor Cat Area22 Cats Holding23 Evaluation Room24 Food Preparation Room25 Cats Adoption26 Cafe27 Education Room28 Canine29 Puppies Adoption30 Dogs Adoption Kennels31 Dogs Courtyard32 Dogs Holding Kennels 33 Dogs Swimming Pool34 Socialization Room35 Birds Fly Area36 Birds, Small & Exotic Animals Area37 Birds Adoption38 Small Animals Adoption39 Exotic Animals Adoption40 Exotic Animals Holding41 Small Animals Holding42 Birds Holding43 Birds, Small & Exotic Animals Courtyard

Animal Adoption

Animal Intake

Staff

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Section B-B 1:200

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Elevations Diagram - North Elevation

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Skin Model 1:4 (Cat living inside viewing a bird living outside)Skin Study Model

Skin Process Skin Model 1:4

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Adv. Architectural Studio I - Pr. Diego Garcia-Setien - 2015White Box vs. Black Box

This project is a rehabilitation Stauffer Hall, an existing building in Arizona State Univer-sity Tempe. This building is composed of two parts, Stauffer A composed of two build-ings connected to each other by a bridge. Stauffer A which is overlooking the Forest Mall houses the Hugh Downs School of Com-munication, and Stauffer B which lies behind it and houses Arts, Media + Engineering. The B wing has a flex space where students from different schools come to interact with tech-nology, so it acts like a technological public room. There are other public rooms near the building, and the most significant are Forest Mall, and the secret garden.

The new Stauffer hall is a technological pub-lic room where students interact with tech-nology from inside and outside the building. The program is distributed between the two buildings where Stauffer A is the White box with fixed functions such as classrooms and seminar rooms, and Stauffer B is the Black box with flex spaces and technological Labs. These flex spaces come in various types that can be divided, or opened to one another. Some of them are indoor, and some are out. Students from both schools use both build-ings.

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Analytical

Forest MallSecret GardenStauffer Hall

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Wall Section Floor Plans Physical Model

Physical Model

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Solar Panels

LED

LEDFirst Floor Plan

Second Floor Plan

Third Floor Plan

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Night shotAfter Re-Adaptation

Before Re-Adaptation

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Outdoor interactive space - scenario 2 Research labBlack Box atrium

Courtyard / flex spaceWhite Box atriumOutdoor Interactive space - scenario 1

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Student Pavilion

The ASU Student Pavilion is a focal point where education meets the business and the pubic realms. It is located on ASU down-town campus, adjacent to Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communi-cation. This makes it a great location for the interaction of students with the businesses of downtown and the public.

The building is divided into three zones; the student academic zone, the business office zone, and the public zone. The ground floor of the site, which opens up to three streets, is a retail space. Entrances from those streets guide people to a central grand staircase guiding them up the ‘urban room’ from which they head to the student or business lobbies.

The ‘urban room’ is an outdoor public space where the three characters of this story meet. It is framed by the student academic building from the west, the business office building from the east, the retail space be-low, and the event space above. It is a flexi-ble multipurpose outdoor room where peo-ple can meet outdoors, eat, play or attend an outdoor event.

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Adv. Architectural Studio II - Pr. Philip Horton - 2016

Public Experience Student Experience Business Professional Experience

Concept

BUSINESS

ACAD

EMIC

PUBLIC

Site Typology

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Second Floor Plan, ‘the urban room’ Section B-B Wall Section

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Sixth Floor Plan, event space Section A-A

EventSpace

ControlRoom

Terrace

FanRoom

Storage

Dressing+ GreenRoom

elect.

tel.

DN

UPUP

UP

Pre-event Space

DN

FanRoomElect.

Tel.

Janitor

StudentBuildingLobby

OfficeBuildingLobby

tel.

elect.

Janitor

MediaLounge

Cafe'

CasualLounge

EOSSOpen

Workstations

WorkRoom

UP

UPUP

UP

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The Student Pavilion has a double envelope protecting it from heat and ventilating it. The exterior skin is made of perforated copper panels located on the east and west fa-cades where most heat and dominant wind exist. The narrowness of the business tow-er benefits from the cross ventilation of the prevailing east-west wind. The wing covering the roof of this tower creates a wind tunnel effect that pulls and accelerates the air be-tween the exterior and interior skin.

Group Work of:Sarah MalakBhoomi DesaiNicholas Ansara

My Roles:Architectural Design3D Revit + Sketchup modelsRendering PlansPhysical Model

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Habitat for sea animals and plants

Shelter and play area for cats

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Wall SectionSecond Floor Plan, ‘the urban room’ Section B-B

Sixth Floor Plan, event space

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Product Design- Dr. Abdulmuttalib Al-Ballam - 2012T’la

T’la is a project that aims to utilize the tradi-tional glass marbles in new products such as accessories and lighting elements.

The main issue was how to join the glass marbles to each other without using glue, for glass marbles are very difficult to drill a hole through, if not impossible

In these products the used technique was binding the marbles together using metal wires. The wire can be plated silver or gold or covered with colorful threads.

A unique sparkling effect can happen by cracking the glass marbles in the oven. This process is done by heating the glass marbles and then immediately cooling them with ice.

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Glass Marbles Wiring

Glass Marbles Bonding Experimentation

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Candle Light

Jewelry Set Bracelet

Chandelier Earing

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Drawings & Paintings

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Arabic Calligraphy showing Kuwait’s Skyline (Quranic Verse: “He has produced you from the earth and settled you in it”) - 2010

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Gwash on Canvas - Replica of Tommervik’s painting (Pooh) - 2010 Pencil Drawing - Model from a magazine - 2007 Oil on Canvas - Replica - 2007

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CV Curriculum Vitae

Education

2009-2014: B.Arch. at Kuwait University,

GPA: 3.84 - MGPA: 3.81

2015-present: M.Arch at Arizona State Uni-

versity

Awards

2009: His Highness Sheikh Sabah

Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah Excellance Award for

Kuwait top 50 graduates.

2014: College of Architecture 2014 Stu-

dents Salutatorian Award

2014: AIAS Award for Exceptional Crafts-

manship

Exhibitions

2011: 8th annual KASA Exhibition (Basics)

2012: 9th annual KASA Exhibition (Design II)

2012: Art For Architectures Sake (Painting)

2014: 10th annual KASA Exhibition (Thesis)

2015: 11th annual KASA Exhibition (Grad.)

Sarah Malak

Work Experience

2013: Summer internship at As-Built

2014-2015: Project Management at Mas-

sive Order Co.

2016: Summer internship at Massive Or-

der.

Workshops

2008: Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDe-

sign courses by Info-centre.

2013: What not to process: Architectural

Research and Diagramming by AOK

Computer Programs

Adobe: Photoshop - Illustrator - Indesign

Autodesk: Autocad - Revit

Microsoft: Word - Excel - PowerPoint

Other: Sketchup

Languages

Arabic - English

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e: [email protected] / p: +1 480 612 2581 or +965 - 65997712

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Thank You