Event Date: 
04.01.22 to 04.22.22

Edge Effects | 2022 Post-Professional M.Arch Thesis Exhibition at a83

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Edge Effects

Post-Professional M.Arch Thesis Exhibition

April 1–22, 2022

Opening reception: April 1, 6–8pm

a83 gallery, 83 Grand Street New York, NY 10013

 

 

 

7 projects on Edge Effects 

 

Architecture is on edge, architecture is the edge. Far from the utopian visions and formal bombast of the early 21st century, these projects offer no easy solutions to urbanism, infrastructure, or environment. Instead this architecture offers spaces of safety and succor for adolescence and convalescence. It offers simple shelter to both the human and non-human. It saves both factory and fresco alike, inviting memory back into public life. It looks into emptiness with empathy for those technical things which toil tirelessly for us. This is architecture on edge, fragile in its systemicity, as we are and have been and may continue to be. 

 

The 7 projects exhibited are conducted in the context of the Post-Professional M.Arch program at Princeton University School of Architecture where there is a unique opportunity for professionally trained architects to return to the university to pursue a two-year program culminating in a year-long thesis. 

 

The 2022 Post-Professional M.Arch Thesis class is coordinated by Assistant Professor V. Mitch McEwen. 

 

 

 

 

The Joyful Landscape: Elderly Care Facility

Ai Teng

Advisors: Paul Lewis, Michael Meredith

 

The Joyful Landscape proposes a new paradigm of elderly care facilities in China, balancing between efficient care and joyful experiences, suggesting a positive attitude towards life while facing one's inevitable aging process.

 

Secularized Spirituality 

Beidi Zhang 

Advisors: Cameron Wu, Michael Meredith 

 

By establishing spirituality within secular space, the project  aims to open up new ways of worship and contemplation, incorporating spiritual customs and rituals into the mundane everyday activity. Spatially, the project seeks to create sacred space within the framework of secular architecture/ from the seriality of manufacturing space to the centrality of sacred space/ mass expandable storage versus placeful spirituality.

 

Nine Classrooms

Daniel Hall

Advisor: Cameron Wu

 

Nine Classrooms aims to produce new methods of drawing as the basis for expanding conceptions of both the built and non-built environment and their formative roles in early childhood development. The project addresses the urgent need for five million additional seats to achieve universal access to pre-k by producing nine prototypical one-room classrooms, located across the United States.

 

A Model For Housing

James Wood

Advisors: Stan Allen, Michael Meredith

 

This prototype for collective housing focuses on the negotiation between time, labor, and the rituals of domestic upkeep. The structure leverages the dimensional sympathy of standardized material systems and the dry formal language of the early 20th century to produce  an open stage for various forms and organizations of domestic life. The drama of the project plays out between the rigidity of structure and the variety of the internal organization, using the scale model as a tool to represent the building not as a fixed object but as a spatial mediation of time.

 

More Than Human

John Mikesh

Advisors: Mónica Ponce de León / CEMEX Global R&D

 

Through utilizing the ecological systems at Pfister's Pond in Tenafly NJ, the design changes the role of nature in the project, from one that is viewed as adversarial to one that is cooperative. This design will push back on waste and excess, through embracing time as a design tool.

 

GRANDES MEDIOS

Manuel A. Zermeno

Advisors: Marshall Brown, Stan Allen

 

GRANDES MEDIOS is a proposal to salvage Mexico City’s historic murals and repurpose them into a 1930’s prototypical public market.

 

DELIVERY!

Tyler Armstrong

Advisor: Paul Lewis

 

DELIVERY! is both an everyday pizza delivery gone bizarrely awry and an accidental “great American road-trip” across a mythic Southwest. Driven (both literally and figuratively) by the cartographic concept of points of interest the project presents the unlikely visitor with a chance series of peculiar places that together speculate on the instrumental and symbolic possibilities of novel technical objects and environmental infrastructures. 

 

Public exhibition hours: 

April 1–22, 12:00pm-6:00pm (Wed-Sun) 

83 Grand Street New York, NY 10013

 

Due to Princeton University policies, masks are required to enter the exhibition.