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VISIBLEinviting attention into the landscape
Hayden [email protected]
CONTENTSRESUMEVISIBLE CITIES
VISIBLE RESTORATIONVISIBLE ECOLOGYVISIBLE CRAFTSMANSHIP VISIBLE COLLABORATIONVISIBLY PUBLIC
4 61417182024262829
One day someone discovered that if you walk as fast as possible and looked at nothing but
your shoes you would arrive at your destination much more quickly.
Soon everyone was doing it... No one paid any attention to how things looked, and as they
moved faster and faster everything grew uglier and dirtier, and as everything grew
uglier and dirtier they moved faster and faster...
Day by day the buildings grew fainter and fainter, and the streets faded away, until at last
it was entirely invisible. There was nothing to see at all. Norton Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth
“
“
Grid, Interrupted: Manhattan NYQueensway Market: Queens NY
Dam Removal, Spencer NY
Mundy Wildflower Garden, Ithaca NY
Performing Arts Center: Ithaca NY
Yardworks, Point Chautauqua NY
Finger Lakes Museum, Branchport NYDelaware Botanic Gardens, Dagsboro DE
Waveny Park, New Canaan CT
EDUCATION
Cornell University, Ithaca NY Master of Landscape Architecture, Dec 2015Concentration: Horticulture ‘Gardens to Ecology; Seductive Systems’GPA 3.97
Hampshire College, Amherst MA Bachelor of Arts Degree in Fine Arts, Dec 2009Thesis Show, Dec 2009; 25 pen and ink drawings‘The End of Epic; Uninhabited Spaces’Coursework included Fine Arts, History, and Languages
Chicago Botanic Garden, Chicago IL Healthcare Garden Design Certificate Program
SUNY Albany, Albany NY Coursework in Chemistry, Mathematics and Environmental Science
Pont Aven School of Contemporary Art, Pont Aven, France Coursework in Oils and Mixed Media, recipient of PASCA scholarship
EXPERIENCE
Winterthur Garden Archives Intern, Wilmington DECreated an archival system for historic records of the garden,Organized 100+ years of garden records
Winterthur Horticultural Intern, Wilmington DE Pruning, weeding, garden installation, assisting GIS specialist with documentation of gardens using ARCGIS and AUTOCAD
Cornell Student Weekend ArboristTree identification and preliminary health evaluation for small communities in upstate New York
Crisan Edible Art Gallery, Albany NY Assisted pastry chefs, consulted with customers for custom desert orders, served guests
2012 to 2015
2005 to 2009
Summer 2015
2010 to 2011
Summer 2006
Summer 2015
Summer 2014
Fall 2013, 2014
2010-2011
Self Portrait
Hayden [email protected]
518-588-1591
Triple Brook Farm Nursery, South Hadley MA Assisted customers in selecting plantsCared for a variety of perennials, organized office
Hampshire College Community Garden, Amherst MA Reestablished herb garden, put in paths and planted new fruit trees
Rincoln de la Tierra Orchard, Mendoza, Argentina Assisted in establishing nut trees on local root stock
Hampshire College Farm, Amherst MA Cared for cows, chickens, turkeys, pigs and bees, cut and baled hay
SKILLS & INTERESTS
Professional Computer ProgramsGeographic Information Systems (ARCGIS), AutoCAD, Rhinoceros,Adobe Suite (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign), Microsoft Office
Representational drawing Pen, water color, oil and printmaking
Public Gardens - Children’s Gardens - Therapeutic Landscapes - Cultural Landcapes - Streetscape Design - Ecological Restoration - Agriculture & Permaculture Projects - Hiking and Cycling
REFERENCES
Peter TrowbridgeProfessor, Dept Chair - Cornell Landscape Architecture
Linda EirhartDirector of Horticulture - Winterthur Museum & Garden
Don RakowAssociate Professor - Cornell Public Garden Management
Iggy CalabriaOwner - Crisan Bakery & Edible Art Gallery, Albany NY
2009
2008 to 2009
2008
Summer 2007
Contact InformationAvailable upon Request
Pen Drawing
Hayden [email protected]
This is a proposal for making Broadway safer, more
distinctive, and more ecologically functional.
It is part of a book of proposals presented to the
New York Department of Transportation and the
Flatiron Business Improvement District.
Permeable Paving Street Diet Permeable Paving[Parking]
Permeable PavingTree PlanterTree PlanterBikewayInfiltration Practice Infiltration Practice Proposed Typical Street Section
28th Street Looking South
VISIBLE CITIES‘Grid, Interrupted’, Broadway27th-22nd St, Manhattan, NY
Solo Studio Project, Fall 2015
Existing Conditions
GRID, INTERRUPTED
Union Square Park
Madison Square Park
The city grid is physically interrupted by Broadway, creating a set of unique conditions for pedestrians, cyclists, and motorists. We can use this as an opportunity to interrupt the experience of the grid, emphasizing these unique conditions and making Broadway even more memorable.
Manhattan Street Grid §
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
Motorist Pedestrian Cyclist
3 Characteristics of the Grid Subverted as Design Principles
Prioritizing Pedestrians & CyclistsThe grid is continuous for vehicles, but fragmented for pedestrians. This project subverts the hierarchy of the grid, making pedestrians and cyclists the primary users.
Participatory DesignThe grid is an example of top-down design. By engaging users we can create a more participatory, bottom up design.
Site Responsive DesignA grid is uniform, as though the landscape were a blank slate. By emphasizing adjacencies we can treat the grid in a non-uniform way, making each site responsive to its surroundings.
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
§
0 20 40 60 8010ft
User Responsive Design: Loose Parts22nd Street
§
0 100 200 300 40050ft
27th Street
Madision Square Plaza
Madison Square Plaza§
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
§
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
Madison Square Plaza Plan
§
0 100 200 300 40050ft
Master Plan
Along the bike and pedestrian corridor of Broadway are a series of destination plazas.In Madison Square Plaza, the focus is on creating a user responsive design, while responding to the adjacent Madison Square Park and Flatiron Building.
Madison Square Plaza
§
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
Splitting the Grid: Reinforcing ConnectionsIn this area, the grid has been inserted into the pedestrian plaza, and then split and shifted, reinforcing the sense that Broadway is a special place where things work differently.
This creates a unique view of the iconic Flatiron Building, the namesake of the Flatiron District, while providing a home for amenities to heighten pedestrian comfort.
Madison Square Plaza PerspectiveLooking East from West 24th St & 5th Avenue
Cool Weather SunWarm Weather Shade
‘Loose Parts’- Simon Nicholson
Components on sliding tracks can be moved around the design. They stay on site even in the evening when other movable furniture is usually removed.
They allow users to respond to local conditions, seeking sun or shade, to build sociable clusters, and to be active participants in the design.
These components are inspired by the architect Simon Nicholson’s ideas about ‘Loose Parts’.
Moving Parts
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
22nd Street Plan
‘BroadwayBoogie Woogie’- Mondrian
22nd Street Plaza
Site Responsive Design:Emphasizing AdjacenciesThis site is all about adjacencies: Flatiron Building - Plaza - Street. It combines the strategies used in the two sites above, a streetscape and a plaza, to create a hybrid site.
In this site, Mondrian’s painting ‘Broadway Boogie Woogie’ serves as inspiration. The planter-desks are obstructions to invite stopping and stillness, and frame the plaza.
The plaza adjacency also allows the streetscape to expand and become more playful, with the inclusion of swinging furniture, another form of moveable part.
§
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
Site 3 Location - 22nd Street
27th Street
Madision Square Plaza
22nd Street
§
0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.40.05Miles
§
0 100 200 300 40050ft
§
0 30 6015ft
Opposite: 22nd Street Plaza Perspective Looking South from 23rd Street
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
New York Street Design Manual
Existing ProposedSocial Benefits Existing Proposed
Street Diet-50%-86,445 sq ft
Expanded Pedestrian Spacex1.6, +77K sq ft
Continuous Bicycle Network
Extended Public Seating
Tree Canopyx3
Pervious Surfacex1884+220,000 sq ft
Planted Infiltration Practices x40, +27K sq ft
Permeable Pavements+192,000 sq ft
“Design local streets for slower speeds to reduce the number of crashes and to discourage cut-through traffic”
“Expand usable public open space by reallocating underutilized roadway space for pedestrian plazas”
“Design streets to encourage physical activity for all ages and populations by making bicycling attractive and convenient”
“Expand the availability of public seating”
Eco-Benefits
“Minimize impermeable surfaces and maximize vegetation on streets”
“Street designs should use stormwater source controls wherever possible”
“Reduce streets’ rate of heat absorption by maximizing tree canopy cover”
“Minimize impermeable surfaces”
Street Design Policy Goals (Pages 21-24).
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
Plant SelectionSite Responsive Planting: Using Broadcasted Seed Allows Plants to Participate in the Design
Flowering CalendarM A M J J A S O
Common Names Latin Names
Wild GingerCanada OnionPearly EverlastingThimbleweedSpreading DogbaneRed ColumbinePricklepoppyCanadian MilkvetchRedring MilkweedWhorled MilkweedHarebellStar ThistleSensitive PlantRocky Mountain Bee PlantDayflowerLanceleaf CoreopsisPale CorydalisThreadleaf CoreopsisPurple ConeflowerWhite Trout LilyBeach StrawberryIndian BlanketBeetleweedWhite AvensDowny GentianPrairie SmokeLiverleafPaleleaf Sunflower
Asarum canadenseAllium canadense var. canadenseAnaphalis margaritaceaAnemone virginianaApocynum androsaemifoliumAquilegia canadensisArgemone albifloraAstragalus canadensisAsclepias variagataAsclepias verticillataCampanula rotundifoliaCentaurea americanaChamaecrista fasciculataCleome serrulataCommelina erectaCoreopsis lanceolataCorydalis sempervirensCoreopsis verticillataEchinacea purpureaErythronium albidumFragaria chiloensisGaillardia pulchellaGalax urceolataGeum canadenseGentiana puberulentaGeum triflorumHepatica nobilisHelianthus strumosus
Shade Tolerance - Drought Tolerance - Propagated by Seed - NY Native Species selected for Pollinator Benefits
GRID, INTERRUPTED - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - FALL 2015
Farmers Market Section
This project was for a competition to convert
an elevated railway in Queens into a part of the
street fabric. We proposed a moving marketplace
which would appear along different parts of the
Queensway on different days of the week.
VISIBLE CITIESQueensway, Queens NY
Studio Project with Huan Liu and Akshali Ghandi
Fall 2013
Slowing Down
Eating gives us an opportunity to slow down and make connections to our region and our community. Though there are many farmers markets in Manhattan and Brooklyn, unfortunately there are only 13 in all of Queens.
Our group worked closely on concept and design. I spearheaded the model building for Rhino and GIS. My team mates were in charge of graphic design and planning.
Concept Development
QUEENSWAY - STUDIO - GROUP PROJECT - FALL 2013
Perforated RoofThe roof plane in this part of the Queensway has been replaced by a perforated surface that lets in brilliant points of sunlight.
The perforations are cut in many different angles based on the angle of sunlight throughout the day and year, which creates a constantly changing pattern of light. The roof lets in more light on a winter morning and creates shade on a sunny summer afternoon.
View of Project Entry during Rain Event
Changing Shadows and Azimuth
QUEENSWAY - STUDIO - GROUP PROJECT - FALL 2013SOUTH
67.5
90
11.3
0
22.5
16.9
28.1
33.8
39.4
45
50.7
56.3
61.9
Our team worked closely with local landowners
to determine the best strategy for removing a 95
year old dam while minimizing ecological risks and
maximizing ecological benefits.
Spencer Lake
Stream Channel Design
Watershed Topography
Watershed Land Use
VISIBLE RESTORATIONDam Removal, Spencer NY
Restoration Ecology Group Project, Spring 2015
This is a semester long in-depth investigation of
a single site, a wildflower garden and adjacent
water filtration plant - from geology and soils
to hydrology, landscape ecology and plant
communities to bird habitat.
Corridor
Patch
Mundy SiteEmpty Hub
Dowtown Ithaca
BrokenWheel Rim
Concept Drawing: A Broken Bicycle Wheel Landscape Ecological Network, Canopy Cover
VISIBLE ECOLOGYMundy Wildflower Garden: Ithaca, NY
Design & Environmental AnalysisGroup Project with Mark Schrader &
Yiying Bao, Fall 2015
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Western Catchment
Small Streams Catchment
Fall Creek Catchment
Lagoon Catchment
Piped Catchments
InletOutlet
Surface FlowDrain Infrastructure
AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
Feet
Catchment Map
1938 1951 1954
1964 1974 1990
Bore 1 Bore 2 Bore 3 Bore 4 Bore 5
Soil Composition: NRCS Web Report 9/15
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JUDD FALLS RD
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CALDWELL RD AR
BORE
TUM
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POST CIR
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Mundy Site - Base Map
0 140 28070
Feet µSite BoundaryBuilding
Impervious SurfaceWater Feature
Road
Fall Creek
Filtration Plant
1:1680
Plantations Service Building
SOIL SURVEY, MUNDY WILDFLOWER GARDEN
HudsonBath, Valois, Lansing
Wayland
Made Land
Middlebury, Tioga
Chenango-C
Genesee
Chenan
go -D
pH 8.2 pH 6.0 pH 7.7
3
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3 4 5
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Lagoon Catchment
Piped Catchments
InletOutlet
Surface FlowDrain Infrastructure
AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
Feet
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Lagoon Catchment
Piped Catchments
InletOutlet
Surface FlowDrain Infrastructure
AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
Feet
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Lagoon Catchment
Piped Catchments
InletOutlet
Surface FlowDrain Infrastructure
AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
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Small Streams Catchment
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Lagoon Catchment
Piped Catchments
InletOutlet
Surface FlowDrain Infrastructure
AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
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InletOutlet
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AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
Feet Soil Testing
Plant Communities
Making Connections: Making SpaceAs the watershed was developed the site became increasingly prone to flooding. To ‘solve’ this problem, Cornell built a flood wall along the creek, and a series of drains at the top of the ridge along the southern edge of the site.
As a result, the site has been functioning less and less like a floodplain. The Sycamores and Cottonwoods in the canopy are being replaced with drier understory volunteers, such as Beech and Birch.
But as the region becomes more prone to flooding and dry spells Cornell will need to make space to hold water. By understanding the connections between different systems, from soil to plant communities, we can understand that this site is ready to return to floodplain and provide services that Cornell needs.
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InletOutlet
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AB C
Catchment MapWatersheds & Catchments - Figure 1 ´0 250 450112.5
Feet
MUNDY WILDFLOWER GARDEN - DESIGN & ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS - GROUP PROJECT - FALL 2015
Sycamore Cottonwood
Floodplain Forest
Sycamore Cottonwood
Floodplain Forest
with Garden UnderstoryHemlock Beech Birch
Moist Upland Forest
Hemlock Maple Moist
Upland ForestMixed Oak
Dry Upland ForestSedge-grass
Open Wetlands
Cattail Open Wetlands
Herbaceous Ruderals
Woody Ruderals
Lawn
Lawn with
Specimen Trees
A generic concrete plaza surrounding a Renaissance
inspired building? With attention to detail, beautiful
material choices, and a more playful relationship
with nearby buildings - a once bleak space can
become a place to remember.
STAIR 2 DETAILSL702
3/26/2014
8"
1'
4'
4"x2'x4' Marble cope
4000 psd concrete
#4 bars 18" OC, typ
Bluestone wall
#2 Crushed granular base, typ
+Top of stair 739'4"+
+Wall height740'6"+
+Wall height 741'10"+
14"
+Bottom of stair 737'10"+
+ Wall height 739'6"+
30"
20"
8"
1'
4'
+Top of stair 739'4"+
+Wall height740'6"+
+Wall height 741'10"+
14"
30"
4"x2'x4' Marble cope
4000 psd concrete
#4 bars 18" OC, typ
Bluestone wall
#2 Crushed granular base, typ
HC&K LA
Hayden KingCornell UniversityIthaca, NYDept. ofLandscapeArchitecture
Schw
artz
Per
form
ing
Arts
Cen
ter
Corn
ell U
nive
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Revisions ByHayden King
Checked ByPeter Trowbridge
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 2 SECTION10L702
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 2 PLAN10aL702
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 2 SECTION ELEVATION FROM NORTH (A) (FOR REFERENCE ONLY)10bL702
SCALE: 1"=2'
STAIR 2 SECTION ELEVATION FROM NORTH (B) (FOR REFERENCE ONLY)9cL702
SCALE: 1"=2'
MASONRY SCHEDULE10dL702
3'
2"
4'
8"
#2 Crushed Granular Base, typ
4000 psi concrete
16"x6" marble treads variable width seedetail 10d-702set in 1
2" mortar bed with 4" pins 12" OC
#4 bars 18"OC, typ
6" 6"
8"
4'
Top of stair+739'4"+
Bottom of stair+737'10"+
8"8"8" 8" 8"8" 8"
8" 8"8" 8" 8"8"
1'6"
1'4"
1'4"
1'
1'
HI
JK
A B
C
L
M
MASONRY SCHEDULEFOR STAIR 2
A 1' x 2' x 6" 7B 16" x 2' x 6" 7C 18" x 2' x 2" 5
H
1'
1.5" 9"
I
J K
1'9"
16"
2'7"
2 18"
1'4 14"
16"
1112"
18"
1'1014"
1'1112"
L M14 14"
1'
Bottom of stair+737'10"+
Top of stair+739'4"+
Surface mount stainless steel plate, see detail 9f-g 701
Marble tread stairs staggered joints
2" diameter stainless steel handrail see details 9e-j 701
18" mortar joint
4/8/2014
4/15/2014
4/21/2014
All marble treads to be heat treated for grip.
Provide one each of H-M and one each of mirrorcopies for opposite edge of stair.
H-K, M 6" depthL 2" depth
Stair Construction Detail
VISIBLE CRAFTSMANSHIP
Performing Arts Center, Ithaca NYSite Construction Solo Project
Spring 2014
STAIR 1 DETAILSL701
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 1 SECTION9L701
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 1 PLAN9aL701
Scale: 2"=1'
HANDRAIL SURFACE MOUNT PLAN9fL701
3'
2"
4'
8"
#2 Crushed Granular Base, typ
4000 psi concrete
16"x6" marble treads variable widthsee detail 9d-701set in 1
2" mortar bed with pins 12" OC
#4 bars 18"OC, typ
6" 6"
8"
4'
Top of stair+739'8"+
(4) 14"x4" Expansion masonry bolts
14"x6"x6" stainless steel plate
1" stainless steel rail
1' 34" 1'6"
1'4"
1'4"
1'
5"
3'8"
3'8"
6'
6'
Bottom of stair+738'2"+
Top of stair+739'8"+
Surface mount stainless steel plate, see detail 9f-g 701
Heat treated marble tread stairs staggered joints2" diameter stainless steel handrail see details 9e-j 701
HC&K LA
Hayden KingCornell UniversityIthaca, NYDept. ofLandscapeArchitecture
Schw
artz
Per
form
ing
Arts
Cen
ter
Corn
ell U
nive
rsity
Revisions ByHayden King
Checked ByPeter Trowbridge
1316"
1316"
1316" 13
16"
358"
358"
2/13/2014
2/18/2014
2/24/2014
3/9/2014
3/9/2014
3/10/2014 3/25/2014
Scale: 1"=2'
STAIR 1 SECTION ELEVATION FROM NORTH (A) (FOR REFERENCE ONLY)9bL701
SCALE: 1"=2'
STAIR 1 SECTION ELEVATION FROM NORTH (B) (FOR REFERENCE ONLY)9cL701
Top of stair +739'8"+
Bottom of stair +738'2"+
Marble veneer (existing) - Performing Arts Center
Wall height +741'10"+
Wall height +739'6"+
8"
4'
1'
16"
2'2"
8"
4'
1'
Top of stair +739'8"+
Wall height +741'10"+
2'2" Marble veneer (existing) - Performing Arts Center
4"x2'x4' Marble cope
#4 bar, 18" OC, typ
4000 psi concrete footer
Bluestone wall
#2 Crushed granular base, typ
4"x2'x4' Marble cope
#4 bar, 18" 0C, typ
4000 psi concrete footer
Bluestone wall
#2 Crushed granular base, typ
Bottom of stair+738'2"+
1'
1" SS rail, square
Wooden rail, see detail 9i-j 701(3) 1" SS rail, square18" SS cable see detail 9h 7011" SS rail, square
Surface mounted, 14" SS plate see detail 9e-f 701
3'
1.5"1"4"1"
1"
4 14"
5 14" 5 1
2" 2' 1'
Scale: 1"=2'
HANDRAIL SECTION9eL701
Scale: 2"=1'
HANDRAIL SURFACE MOUNT SECTION9gL701 Scale: 4"=1'
CABLE SYSTEM9hL701
Scale: 2"=1'
WOODEN RAIL9iL701
Scale: 1"=1"
WOODEN RAIL SECTION9jL701
Scale: 2"=1'
MASONRY CONNECTION9kL701SCALE: 1"=2'
MASONRY SCHEDULE9dL701
3/18/2014
3/27/2014 3/30/2014
'A Select' grade cedar with clearfinish
1 12"
r=12"
2"
Perimeter=6.15"
8" 8"
8"
(4) 14"x 4" Expansion masonry bolts
14"x6"x6" stainless steel plate
1" stainless steel rail
(4) 14"x 8" Expansion masonry bolts
14"x6"x6" stainless steel plate
1" stainless steel rail
TOP OF STAIR BOTTOM OF STAIR
MASONRY SCHEDULEFOR STAIR 1
A 1' x 2' x 6" 11B 16" x 2' x 6" 7C 18" x 2' x 2" 5
D
All marble treads to be heat treated for grip.
Provide one each of D-L and one each of mirrorcopies for opposite edge of stair.
D-K 6" depthL 2" depth
E FG
H
I
J K
11.5"
1'6" 2'
1'
10"
6" 1'
1.5" 9"
1'9"
16"
2'7"
2 18"
1'4 14"
16"
1112"
18"
1'1014"
9.75"
7" 1'1112"
18" mortar joint
Wood handrail rounded at end
116" SS band around wooden rail,Radius of wooden rail 1
16"of an inchnarrower under SS band Edges ofSS band are flush with wood
SS 34" dome capSS beveled washer
SS cable 18"
SS 14"diameter, 3" screw
D
EF
G
HI
JK
A
B
C
12"
2"
SS rail
8" 8" 8"8"
8"8" 8" 8"8" 8"
L2'
1'
11.5"
L
Bottom of stair+738'2"+
Top of stair+739'8"+
18" mortar joint
4/8/2014
6" rise, 1' run, 18"wash
R=24"
R=30"3 1
4"
3 14"
6 12"
SS rails welded at joints
16"x6" marble treads variablewidth see detail 9d-70112" mortar bed
4" pins 12" OC
4" overlap
4/15/2014 4/21/2014
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER - SITE CONSTRUCTION - SOLO PROJECT - SPRING 2014
PAVING DETAILSL700
Scale: 1"=1'
CURB BETWEEN PLAZA AND PERMEABLE PAVING ON STREET5L700Scale: 1"=1'
PERMEABLE PAVING IN PLAZA4L700
Scale: 1"=1'
PERMEABLE PAVING ON STREET3L700
Scale: 1" to 1'
CURB BETWEEN PERMEABLE PAVING ON STREET AND ASPHALT6L700
Scale: 1" to 4'
DROP CURB PLAN8L700
Scale: 2"=1'
SILT FENCE1L700 Scale: 1"=1'
CHAINLINK FENCE2L700
1"=1'
DROP CURB SECTION8aL700
Heavy dutyInterlocking Brick pavers 8"x4"x4"14" Sand joint
1" Vertical weeps 3' OC
8" #2 Granular Stone Base
Geotextile fabric
Brick Brand and ModelBrick pavers 8"x4"2" typ, and 1"x1
2"x2"14" Sand joint
Geotextile Fabric
8" #2 Granular Stone Base
2" Sand setting bed
2"2"8"
5"X18"Granite curb
Concrete bead footer1:3:6 Dry MixUniform piles at eachend on 3' centers beneath curb for fulllength of curb
Permeable Paving on Street
Marble Border set into Permeable base
Sawcut
Existing Asphalt
New AsphaltGranite CurbPermeable pavers in streetGranite Curb1'x2"Marble Border with thermal finish
Permeable pavers in plaza
Drop curb does not exceed 1:12 slope
Cast Iron Detectable WarningNeenah Foundary Manufacturer
Existing Asphalt
Sawcut
NYSDOT #7 Top course
2"3"
1'
NYSDOT #1 Base course
1' #2 Granular stone baseGranite curb
Concrete bead footersee detail 5-700
SawcutGranite curb with concrete bead footerbelow see detail 5-700
1:12 slope
Cast Iron Detectable Warning see 7-7005x6 WW Mesh
#2 Granular stone base 2/13/2014
2/18/2014
2/24/2014
3/9/2014
3/9/2014
3/10/2014 3/25/2014
6"
2' min
2' min
6"
2' min
2' min
Woven geotech fabric secured to stake with metalfasteners and reinforced between fasteners and fabric
Drawstring along top of fabric
Dig trench, bury bottom flap of geotechunder #2 stone, tamp in place.
2"x2" Wooden stakes, placed 8' OC
8'
4" 4000 PSI Concrete
1" Sand setting bed
#4 Bar 12" OC both ways
4000 PSI Concrete, typ
4"
4"
8"
2"3"
1'
#6#1
#1
#1#6
#1
#1
#6
Tension bar #5
Rail or brace end
Acorn top
Welded
Welded
Galvanized Chain Link #9
Scale: 2"=1'
CHAINLINK FENCE GATE2aL700
Top rail
Permeable Paving in Plaza
Scale: 1" to 1'
ASPHALT REPAIR7L700
Existing AsphaltSawcut
NYSDOT #7 Top course
NYSDOT #1 Base courseMarble BorderPermeable Paving in Plaza
1"3"
8" 4/15/2014
4/21/2014
PERFORMING ARTS CENTER - SITE CONSTRUCTION - SOLO PROJECT - SPRING 2014
Layout Plan Grading Plan
Lighting Plan Planting Plan and Furniture SchedulePERFORMING ARTS CENTER - SITE CONSTRUCTION - SOLO PROJECT - SPRING 2014
Yardworks is a collaboration between the Cornell
Lab of Ornithology and MLA program and towns
in New York State to build ecologically resilient
communities. I worked closely with a Home Owners
Association and nearby residents to design two
small parks which are currently under construction.
Memorial Fountain Park Perspective Looking East
VISIBLE COLLABORATION
Yardworks Studio, Point Chautauqua, NYSolo Work, Spring 2014
Memorial Fountain Park Perspective Looking West
Site Analysis
Proposal Development Drafts
Technical Planting Plan
BEARBERRYEASTERN RED CEDARBLACK CHOKEBERRY
NEW JERSEY TEASWEET CLETHRA
RED OSIER DOGWOODBLACK HUCKLEBERRY
FLOWERING RASPBERRYSTEEPLEBUSH
RED MAPLE
Arctostaphylos uva-ursi 1’Juniperus virginiana ‘Grey Owl’Photinia melanocarpa ‘Iriquois Beauty’Ceonothus americanusClethra alnifolia ‘Sugartina’Cornus sericea ‘Arctic Fire’Gaylussacia baccataRubus odoratusSpiraea tomentosaAcer rubrum
2-3’2-3’
3’3-4’3-4’1-2’
3-6’2-4’
40-60’
COMMON NAME LATIN NAME HEIGHTMar. Apr. May Jun. Jul. Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov.
WATER HABITAT BLOOMTIME, FRUITING TIME
YARDWORKS - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - SPRING 2014
SUN
The Finger Lakes Museum is devoted to celebrating
the Finger Lakes and educating visitors about
stewardship. Turning the museum land into a bird
habitat exhibit will showcase the biodiversity of the
region, educate locals about ecological design, and
entice the many birders who visit the area.
Finger Lakes Museum Section
VISIBLY PUBLICFinger Lakes Museum
Keuka Lake, NYSolo Project, Spring 2013
Important Bird Breeding Areas in Region
70 Protected species in 3 miles of the Museum
Region located in the Atlantic Flyway
Finger Lakes Museum Plan
Mixed Forest Riparian Buffer Exhibit
Boat Garden
Children’s GardenTeaching Kids about Bird Watching
Wildflower GardenShowing Wildflowers in A Formal setting
Sun Loving ShrubsBlock Less Desirable View
Meadow
Wet Tolerant Plants
Boat House
FINGER LAKES MUSEUM - STUDIO - SOLO PROJECT - SPRING 2013
We contacted 20 children’s gardens throughout the
country and interviewed their personnel to create
a list of recommendations for the future Children’s
Garden at Delaware Botanic Gardens. These
recommendations will be used to design the new
garden.
Photographs from Participating Children’s Gardens
VISIBLY PUBLICDelaware Botanic Gardens
at Pepper Creek, Sussex County DEPublic Garden Management with
Karen St. Clair & Danielle ParkSpring 2015
This garden, designed by the Olmsted Brothers in
the 1910s, was converted into a public park in 1967. I
worked with the Parks Department of New Canaan
to create a Cultural Landscape Report for the garden
which documents the evolution of Waveny and
assesses its present condition.
Historic and Contemporary Site Photographs
VISIBLY PUBLICWaveny Cultural Landscape Report,
New Canaan, CTSolo Project, Spring 2013
HAND DRAWINGUndergraduate fine art thesis,Drawing, painting, print makingUninhabited spaces
Hayden [email protected]