Tuesday, January 24, 2012

EX 1 Who you are



1. Olympic Sculpture Park in Seattle, WA

2. Charles Anderson: Aterier ps

3. The Gardens of the Olympic Sculpture Park are the clothes that dress a 9 acre brownfield site on an abandoned fuel storage facility on Seattle’s waterfront. The Greensward acts as the connective tissue for the gardens. It reinforces a reverse Z-­shaped path linking all of the sculpture settings of the park and connects urban Seattle with the vast landscape of the Olympic Mountains and Puget Sound.

4. Handgraphic, Photoshop.
5. Long and straight lines are controlling people’s moving.  Following the pathway, visitors have various and dynamic experiences.  


1. Eras De Cristo in Granada, Spain

2. Federico Wulff Barreiro

3. This garden is proposed like a place to go or a place to take a walk. Designers alter the levels of land to the natural slope, and eliminate vertical relief and edges. The garden integrates Church. The topography is waved to the passage of the visitors.

4. Auto CAD, Photoshop, Indesign

5. The thinking of space and movement. The graphic shows the connection of elevation change.

1. Trinity River Corridor Design in Dallas TX

2. Wallace Roberts and Todd

3. The Trinity River Corridor Design will represent the character and measure of sustainability for the largest green infrastructure initiative in the United States— a 9 mile long urban park, floodway and transportation improvement project that will anchor the transformation of the central Dallas into a quilt of mixed-use and transit-oriented neighborhoods.

4. Photoshop, Sketch up

5. This project focuses on revitalizing river with adjacent community. The constructed landscape changes into ecological riverside. Wetland, and woodland have a continuous connection and those systems represent the circulation of the park system.


1. CT Water Treatment Facility in New Heaven, CT

2. MVVA Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, Inc

3. Using techniques adapted from restoration ecology and bioengineering, the landscape creates a microcosm of the surrounding regional watershed, from mountain source to reservoir. The landscape is designed to be a didactic microcosm of the entire regional watershed. By transforming a formerly flat lawn into a dynamic, ecologically diverse public space, the design improves long-standing community use of the grounds and integrates the site with its suburban surrounding.

4. Handgraphic, Photoshop, Illustrater, In

5. Human-scaled design brings people into the CT water treatment facility, and it provides vital interaction between people and landscape.

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