Introduction
Core Architecture Studio I
Anna Puigjaner, Coordinator
The Grand Interior
Today, digital technologies are undeniably modifying the way we use and live in the city. Due to the actual cyber reality, the classic dichotomies between public-private, collective-individual, night-day spaces… that characterized a great part of the architectural discourse of the twentieth century, have lost their connotation. Today, Architecture cannot be understood detached from an interconnected reality, where buildings, more than isolated entities, are part of a larger system of common spaces and services that link the micro with the macro, having consequences on the social, the economical and the environmental at large.
The increasing mix among public and private spheres, allows us to think of the world as a continuous interior or following Sloterdijk’s image as a ‘grand interior’, an endless domestic landscape defined by spaces, objects and technologies, where the public space is being redefined, moving from the archetype of the street—as the paradigm of the common—to a more complex situation where public and private merge all along the city. In this scenario, the home is also becoming part of this public realm.
This new public condition might be an opening to rethink preset architectural limits and urban classifications that were used to assure benefit in detriment of social rights. Architecture has been traditionally used as a tool to define and perpetuate colonial processes. It is an effective agent of restraint able to assure the power of certain social sectors over others. It is not neutral and it might consequently be perceived as such. Not only has the division of public private has been a driving force for the development of biased social structures, but also other processes of urban planning and building.
In Core I, we understand the shift of public space as an invitation to redefine social structures for a better common welfare. We address the course looking to our actual and close reality, taking the everyday life of Broadway Avenue, Manhattan, as a starting point and base for an architectural proposal. We look at buildings and their urban context, understanding the quotidian as a platform for a deeper research that allows us to comprehend the complexity of the built realm, its actual functioning and requirements in relation to economic, climatic, environmental, social and political issues. And we design Architectures that answer to those realities: transgressing, empowering, complementing, … existing networked spaces. We produce architecture from the urban towards the detail, from the drawing towards the construction, and during that path we always foster graphical, formal and material experimentation as an intrinsic part of the design process.
1
– Houston Street
Lindsey Wikstrom
Lower Manhattan is a dense layering of historic and
contemporary spaces and events enmeshed in the
creation and protection of value. Along Broadway
from Battery Park to Houston, clusters of buildings are
currently designated as civic, financial, or for manufacturing; some still representing a link to some of the
area’s earliest land uses. Outside the wall, from which
we now have Wall Street, used to be The Commons and
the African Burial Grounds, two landscapes that were
part of everyday life in New York for nearly 200 years.
Both sites of extraction were physically external to the
city, but functioned as the primary means by which the
internal prosperity of the city, private property and material ownership, were enhanced. Over time, extraction
sites have been removed further and further outside the
city, but are critical to the function of the city. Students
will be asked to examine accumulation along Broadway,
considering the reciprocal sites of occlusion elsewhere,
and exposing extraction’s continued adjacency to the
erasure of the contribution to the built environment
by Black, Indeginous, and People of Color. With this
in mind, students will respond with arguments for the
deconstruction and reconfiguration of this accumulated
material to ultimately propose a new material commons.
Students: Farah Ahmed, Ian Callender, Teonna Cooksey, Eric Hagerman, Meghan Jones, Ali Kamal, Angela Keele, Gio Kim, Anoushka Mariwala, Han Qin, Dori Renelus
Intervention on Canal
As the idea of shopping and trade shifts from a physical to a more digital realm, stores begin to...
Growing Up
Growing Up proposes a forest school at Bowling Green, leveraging an opportunity to construct a...
Propagation at the Edge of Property
Propagation at the Edge of Property proposes a networked system of spatial and ecological reclama...
Office Hiking Trail
It takes office workers one or two hours to commute and then do the routine work every day. To...
2
Houston St. – W30th
Amina Blacksher
It is incumbent upon any architect to know of the ground
on which they stand, the ground upon which they will
ultimately build.
The studio will employ a lens of historical criticality as
we analyze Broadway and its surrounds from Houston
Street to 30th Street. The region, today comprising three
major historical districts, Noho, Flatiron and Madison
Square North will be approached through a series of
temporal overlays. Guided by pivotal events spanning
from Broadway as a thoroughfare - originally known
as the Wesquaegeek Trail - to the 300 acres of African
owned farms known as Land of the Blacks under Dutch
colonial rule which centered around present-day Washington Square Park, and including the impact of the East
Village/Noho artist movement of the 1980s in which
artists shifted the public consciousness.
Students will construct spatial hypotheses grappling
with scale, ownership, property, land, appropriation,
center narrative, the concept of ‘for the public good’ and
be sufficiently conversant in forces that govern public
use in order that final spatial proposals produce expressions that are both imaginative and critically poignant.
Through the use of the orthographic cut, students will
dissect history as a stack, responding to the figuration
and reconfiguration of society as a continuum. Through
the study of precedent sites students will cultivate an
understanding of the flow of placement and displacement, of land and belonging, transpiring over time in
the horizontal plane. Finally through the articulation of
the section, the theme of the studio, Cutting Through,
students’ design proposals will seek to reveal and activate historical and contemporary truths hiding in plain
sight. Amongst a suite of techniques outlined in the
Core 1 syllabus, student proposals will present concepts
utilizing the architectural convention of the cut, namely,
techniques of orthographic cuts, in horizontal and vertical planes, to reveal the significance of their conceptual
provocations on public space.
Students: Hanouf AlFehaid, Lucy Baird, Adam Fried, Kennedy Geraldo, Katerina Gregoriou, Caining Gu, Mohamed Ismail, Chris Kumaradjaja, Rilka Li, Kayla Parsons, Rebecca Siqueiros
re-[center/activate/negotiate]
In the summer months, modern-day Washington Square Park functions as a social oasis on seemingly ...
6th Ave: A Reanimation
The following intervention is situated in the south village, in a neighborhood formerly known as ...
Alley Tensions
A tensile, climbable system spans the narrow width of the former public laneway of Jones Alley, o...
Hidden Histories
The Hidden Histories Museum & Community Hub brings the public together to experience the past...
Hydraulic Sensorium
The sensorium aims to highlight various states of water and ways energy can be harnessed, specifi...
3
W30th – Columbus Circle
Thomas de Monchaux, Carlyle Fraser
At a time when the world is in a state of flux and uncertainty, there is a need to reflect upon its varied origins
and rediscover life on earth and the greatness of its
shared past that defers to truth and equality for all. As
during the birth of this diverse nation, it is necessary to
recall the freedoms that make New York the epicenter of
new thought, culture, opportunity, and change in an illusive city that has died and has been reborn once more.
Broadway cuts diagonally across virtually every major organ of the city passing through the heart of Time
Square and continues further beyond the cultural soul of
Lincoln Center. Students will study the residual public
pockets along this artery and how they are stitched
together to become the fabric of the city and platforms
for voice. These exchange places are public interventions within the network that become mechanisms for
paradigm shifts and where many different levels of
interaction occur to provoke change. The government,
economy, media, and streets support numerous activities and movements that are the result of both evolution
and revolutionary processes. Today it is essential to understand their complexity, and where social technolgies
such as twitter, facebook, and other forms of media can
be of avail. Moving between precincts that comprise the
institution where people will discover communal places
to gather and secret places to be alone in research and
contemplation. These local forums are a palmpsest
meant to be explored and discovered over time through
its history. In doing so these local interventions will be
for all who search to belong, a place where alternative
positions intersect, friendships are formed, and where
the unimagined can happen.
Students: Maria Berger, Nicole Biewenga, Omer Gorashi, Maithili Jain, Yichun Liu, Hunter McKenzie, E.J. Shin, Burcu Turkay, Julia Vais, Frédéric Verrier-Paquette, David Zhang
Broadway Stories: ‘The One'
My proposal, focused on the creation of an interior economy within One Times Square, was conceive...
Port Authority Halfway House
This proposal creates an intervention for the formally incarcerated, providing them with a tempor...
A Parish Library for Objects
A Parish Library for Objects is a reconceptualization of the cathedral typology in the age of lat...
4
Columbus Circle – W87th
Anna Puigjaner
In 1959, President Dwight D. Eisenhower turned earth
to start the construction of a new cultural center in New
York City, the Lincoln Center. The project was part of
Robert Moses’s program of urban renewal, and displaced more than 7,000 families and 800 businesses.
Before then, the area used to be called San Juan Hill an
it was a vibrant and culturally important neighborhood,
populated mostly by African-Americans moving from
both the southern United States and other areas of New
York City, and by Puerto Ricans. With the project of
urban renewal, 56% of the community was displaced.
Those that stayed were mostly moved into a new public
housing development, the Amsterdam Houses. As other
NYCHA projects, the dwellings were formalized as a
set of residential towers in a superblock with almost no
urban services. The isolation of the complex reflects the
challanges of public housing today that struggle with
preset sharp physical and economical boundaries. In
the studio, taking Amsterdam Houses as a paradigm,
students will be asked to research and respond to
existent urban boundaries that boost social and racial
inequalities along the Upper West Side.
Students: Chris Armstrong, Carmen Chan, Maura Costello, Kelsey Jackson, Jillian Katz, Mikhail Kossir, Li, Jared Orellana, Sherry Aine Te, Raj Thorat, Xavier Zhapan-Sullivan
Monuments of Monuments
Monuments of Monuments consists of three typologies that occupy 20 monuments and public art insta...
Intergenerational Spaces for Care
The Cooling, Ecological Rewind
NYCHA complexes in the Upper West Side are situated in historically redlined areas. Heat is exper...
Interpretive Center in Response to Cultural Displacement by Museum
In response to cultural displacement surrounding the American Museum of Natural History, the inte...
5
W87th – W120th
Lindy Roy
Columbia University’s presence dominates the northern portion of this stretch of Broadway and several
blocks to the east and west. The university’s strained
history with Black and Latinx communities of Harlem
and Morningside Heights is rooted in a competition for
space. This ongoing tension centers around the ability
of local residents to maintain control over their living and
recreational space in the face of the significant power
the university wields as landlord and through its episodic campus expansion plans.
Opposition to the Vietnam War and the recent killing of
Martin Luther King Jr. had already raised tensions on
campus when in 1968, student outrage was triggered
by the start of construction of a new $11 million 2.2-acre
gym for Columbia students in Morningside Park, the
13-block long public park that had become a boundary
line between the campus and neighboring communities
to the east. The building’s two entrances: one for students above and a second small entry for local residents
below, set up the segregated intent of the gym and
reinforced the broader separation between the university and surrounding communities. This history will be
context for our exploration of Morningside Park as a site
of invention of new and inclusive formulations for public
space.
Students: Key Aiken, Olivia Braun, Will Cao, Ken Farris, Isaiah Graham, Mariam Jacob, Genevieve Jones, Shiyu Lyu, Tochukwu Uyanne, Hanna Wiegers, Juliana Yang
Common Ground
Morningside Park sits at the crux of barriers: some natural and defined over millennia, such as t...
A Cut through Columbia
At one time, the stretch of 116st Street through Columbia was a public road that was then privati...
Paroxysmal Apparatus
This project is located along the edge of Morningside Park, the result of hundreds of millions of...
6
W120th – W152nd
Alessandro Orsini
For an Architecture of the New Commons
The studio aims to re-envision the urban voids of Harlem between 120th-152th street as an opportunity to
create new ways of living collectively. Since urban voids
— in the form of vacant land and buildings — directly
relate to the gentrification of neighborhoods and the
continuous spatial re-arrangement of African American
communities in the area, making the new commons
will generate tools to reject the violence of real estate
capitalistic forces.
The new commons aim to address how architecture
can create alternative paradigms to the individualistic,
patriarchal, and white supremacist values that have
shaped wealth disparity and accessibility to resources.
These spaces will be designed and developed for the
community through a universally inclusive strategy,
assuring accessibility to food, education, housing, and
meaningful work for all. Students will investigate the
history of these interruptions to determine what and
who generated these voids, to whom these plots of land
belonged before becoming unused. They will be asked
to articulate visions to reconfigure the urban fabric of
Harlem, enabling more equitable and inclusive visions
that transcend the nuclear family and facilitates alternative living, working, and educating arrangements.
Specifically, we will target discriminatory urbanization
patterns that will be re-oriented to a collective model of
ownership and responsibility for “the commons,” defined as the space that ensures access to food, education, shelter, civic engagement, and meaningful work for
all. This approach to the evolution of the cities can be at
the base of the nation’s urban policies and planning revolution, where the collective is at the center of society’s
well-being and prosperity.
Students: Lauren Brown, Sarah Bruce-Eisen, Haoge Gan, Anais Halftermeyer, Kelvin Lee, Jason Li, Erisa Nakamura, Syeeda Simmons, Sophia Strabo, Duncan Tomlin
The Cookout at Serenity
The Cookout at Serenity seeks to be an architectural manifestation of the traditional African-Ame...
Vertical Street
Street culture used to be an essential part of the History of Harlem. The immediacy and sponta...
The Common Urban Oasis
This project aims to encourage and foster a more equitable food environment for the Morningsid...
7
W152nd – W184th
Miku Dixit
With its dramatically elevated terrain, monumental
infrastructural entanglements and largely diasporic
and uniquely mobile Carribean and Latinx population,
the spaces and territorialities of our segment of Upper
Manhattan challenge the ways we might conventionally
situate architecture against geological, infrastructural,
regional and transnational scales. The linear megastructure of the Trans-Manhattan expressway straddles
New Jersey and the Bronx while cleaving the thickest
and one of the narrowest geological transects through
the island. The totality of bridges, roadways, on-ramps,
tunnels and high-rises here transcends the scale of the
urban fabric through which it coils, burrows and towers
over.
Immigration from the Dominican Republic to Washington Heights coincided with an era of affordable air
travel producing a rapidity of movement and exchange
between Manhattan and the Caribbean nation; between the imperial metropole and its periphery. The
transnational territories and networks of the population
transcends the city proper with many residents shifting
seasonally or generationally between the Global North
and Global South. The vibrancy of the neighborhood
— under threat from gentrification in recent years —
owes much to this exchange and the dual identity of its
inhabitants.
The vertical shift in terrain at the Heights occurs where
the island begins to feel like a part of the Hudson Valley,
causing the relentlessness of the Manhattan grid to
skew, fracture and loosen. Through intensive sectional
analyses of the built environment and topography, the
studio will seek to leverage the neighborhood’s verticalty, monumentality and inherently cosmopolitan and
transnational character to produce new forms of public
spatial intervention. In this way, we hope to question and
further dislodge the colonial project of the grid and imagine new alternatives to the myriad spatial articulations
of hegemony, visible and invisible, that permeate the city
along the axes of both race and class. As we think about
the expanded global territory of our segment of the island, we will also be conscious of the ways these forces
of subjugation extend beyond the city in the form of the
imperial project of the United States globally
Students: Tasha Akemah, Zackary Bryson, Andrew Chee, Emilie Kern, Brianna Love, Jamon Mok, Lula Chou, Shujing Chen, Chris Deegan, Marberd Bernard, Edouard Joiris de Caussin
Broadway on Air
When the grid fractures, an orphan plot is born. These awkwardly shaped plots with inconvenient s...
Community Healthcare Hub
I envisioned creating a free community healthcare hub prototype for making medical services acces...
Buffer
The project seeks to fill the voids of New York City while envisioning the future of the city. On...
Made-Land
Made-Land aims to promote discourse around land ownership and the origins of the soil which const...
“Problems need more problems in order to catalyze or
leaven the organization. The desire of having a right
answer is, in this frame, a mistake.”-Keller Easterling
The highly choreographed infrastructural systems of
lower Manhattan become frayed in our zone. Northern Manhattan has historically functioned at the city’s
fringe. Visible power stations, surface parking, elevated
subways, original homesteads and natural landscapes
all characterize our section of the city. From the city’s
inception, the resources of northern Manhattan have
largely been dedicated to the function and supremacy
of lower Manhattan. Northern Manhattan’s subordinate
role to its prodigal southern neighbor isn’t something
that evolved by chance; it was designed and has been
reinforced through zoning and public policy for centuries. Despite this structural inequity, the neighborhoods
of Inwood and Washington Heights coalesced and
thrived within the informality and resource scarcity.
Known as the “Little Dominican Republic” the neighborhoods are home to a significant Latinx population.
A recent ‘up-zoning’ of the area now puts the existing
communities at risk of becoming the next frontier of
gentrification and cultural erasure. Our challenge is to
scenario plan a more just and public approach to our
site’s growth, cultivating its assets to the benefit of the
existing and future populations in a new Grand Interior.
Students: Maria Doku, Marika Falco, Autumn Harvey, Kelly He, Jacob Kuhn, Daniel Li, Isabella Libassi, Xinyi Lin, Allon Morgan, Laurin Moseley, Taha Ozturk
The Link
A destination designed for waiting, meeting, beginning, and ending one’s journey—the subway stati...
The Cloud Post
The definition of a contemporary public infrastructure in NYC has been largely challenged by the ...
The New Sky Farms
The New Sky Farms investigates Inwood as a neighborhood subject to many challenges caused by inco...
Repurposing Church Land
Located at the corner of Broadway and Isham Park in Inwood is the Church of the Good Shepherd. Or...
Modular Streetscape
This project located at 77 Vermilyea Avenue in Inwood is an attempt to create a new prototype of ...
Dyckman Urbanism for Resiliency
New York City: the city where dreams are made. But until most get to their dreams they can only a...
A Public Pool in Inwood
This project is a network of public swimming pools, saunas, and baths with social gathering space...