View allAll Photos Tagged architecturestudent
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Architecture faculty explore the abstract constructions of Anton Dekom (B.Arch.'12), during his thesis presentation.
Students trying out a piece of furniture designed and built by thesis student Richard Jolta (M.Arch.1'12) in the Milstein Hall dome crit. space.
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Guest critic Jonathan Ferrari engages one of Steven Silverstein's feeding tools, part of Silverstein's thesis project "Full Service."
Abbie Ford, freshman in the architecture program
If you ever need inspiration for creating a building, ask Abbie Ford and her architecture studio group. For their first project, the studio was assigned to design a structure at the outdoor dance pavilion just west of Potter Lake and the Campanile. For research, the group went to the Hatch Reading Room and cut out photos of ramps, stairs, bridges, and pergolas from architecture magazines and pinned them on a wall. “The pictures are … just sort of crazy and hectic, which is actually a really great representation of how our lives are going right now (in the best way possible),” Ford says.
Ford included the hashtag #architorture with her photo. That’s because while it’s enjoyable, the KU architecture program is also very difficult, she says. And that hashtag linked her with other struggling architecture students from around the world — she’s seen posts with the hashtag from Harvard, and even China and England. “Something about that made me feel really connected to the network of architecture students out there. I hope that by sharing my great experiences, and using that tag, I could potentially make someone else out there fall back in love with their own school and program.”
Brandon Leung (B.Arch. '26) wearing his device for a blizzard for first-year B.Arch. studio midterm reviews led by architecture Assistant Professor Felix Heisel.
Tansey Mak (B.Arch.'12) presenting her thesis project STREETSCAPE DIACRITIC in room 144 Sibley hall.
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Assistant Professor and Director of the M.Arch. Program Caroline O'Donnell responds to Henry Chuang's thesis project.
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Tansey Mak (B.Arch.'12) presenting her thesis project STREETSCAPE DIACRITIC in room 144 Sibley hall.
Also referred to as the Hermit's Castle, but I rather like the implication that it's some ancient ruin, rather than a fabulous fifties architecture-student project.
I love the way it just grows out of the landscape, both metaphorically and literally - the aggregate mixed into the concrete clearly comes from the immediate area. Dragging all that cement there must've been hard work...
As you see, I rather enjoyed photographing this place...
Tansey Mak (B.Arch.'12) presenting her thesis project STREETSCAPE DIACRITIC in room 144 Sibley hall.
Designed, fabricated, and installed by a student team at Virginia Tech, the Masonic Amphitheater in Clifton Forge, Virginia, provides a public park and performance space for the rural Appalachian community. Organized by design/buildLAB, a third year architecture studio at Virginia Tech, 16 undergraduate students were asked to work with the community to plan and submit individual design proposals. Once received, a master plan was then devised as a convergence of each student’s proposition. For the interior, ALPOLIC panels in four attractive finishes were CNC-routed to clad the underside of the structure.
Panel Manufacturer: ALPOLIC
Architect/Fabricator/Installer: design/buildLAB
Project: Virginia Tech Masonic Amphitheater
Location: Clifton Forge, Virginia
Completion: June 2012
image courtesy of © Mark Rhodes for Mitsubishi Plastics Composites America