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Portfolio of Selected Works 2007-2014 Luke Clayton Sinopoli

Luke Sinopoli Architecture and Urban Design Portfolio

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  • Portfolio of Selected Works 2007-2014

    Luke Clayton Sinopoli

  • Luke Clayton [email protected]

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    109 123 RESUME

  • University of Cincinnati Graduate HouseTYPE: ACADEMIC; PROGRAMMING & ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

    LOCATION: CINCINNATI, OHIO

    PARTNER: DREW SUSZKO

    DATE: 2013

    In this self-guided studio which focused on how design influences peoples behaviors, my teammate and I explored graduate housing on University of Cincinnatis campus. Stemming from the Universitys desire to distinguish itself as a research-oriented powerhouse through its graduate and doctoral programs, this proposal centered on a Graduate House for UC that would transform campus life and cultivate greater social interaction between residents, students and the community.

    Inspired by the residential college model, elements of monastic living, and contemporary positions on integrating academic and off-campus living, this proposal aimed at balancing spaces for academic life and social life, private space versus public space.

  • PRIVATE SPACESEach student is provided with a small amount of private space, where amenities are shared with adjacent units.

    Connecting each room, the traditional corridor is expanded to accommodate a number of loosely programmed spaces, intended to foster interaction.

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  • RESEARCHING

    EATING

    SOCIALIZING

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  • SHARED SPACESEach of these programmed areas accommodate a variety of functions; at their most basic are eating, researching and socializing. The conglomeration of these spaces make up the Graduate Houses shared space system meant specifically for the Houses residents.

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  • LOWER LEVEL READING ROOM

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  • BATH-ROOMS (L)

    CUSTODIAL (L)

    LAUNDRY

    WASTE (L)

    STORAGE (OTHER)

    COMMON LOUNGE

    DEANS RES

    SINGLE BRs

    SPAMEDI-

    TATION SPACE

    KITCHEN (L)

    REC ROOM

    VENDING

    GARDEN / COURT

    CUSTODIAL (C)

    WASTE (C)

    MAIL (C)

    PARKING

    BAR

    BATH-ROOMS (W)

    TUTOR SUITES

    MAIL (L)

    REC READ-ING

    REFLEC-TIVE READ

    DINER

    DOUBLE BRs

    FAMILY SUITES

    DINING HALL

    ASSEMBLY

    CATERING KITCHEN

    FOOD GAR-DEN

    GREEN HOUSE

    STORAGE (BIKE)

    FITNESS

    STUDY ROOM

    MASTERS RES

    MEDIA LIBRARY

    PUBLIC PRESENTA-

    TION

    COM-MUNITY CENTER CLASS-

    ROOMS

    CONFER-ENCE

    BREAKOUT SPACE

    STUDIO SPACE

    BIZ INCU-BATOR

    LABORA-TORY

    ART STU-DIO

    GALLERY

    INTRAMU-RAL

    SERVICE

    PUBLIC

    WORK

    PLAY

    LIVE

    COMMON

    BATH-ROOMS (L)

    CUSTODIAL (L)

    LAUNDRY

    WASTE (L)

    STORAGE (OTHER)

    DEANS RES

    SINGLE BRs

    SPAMEDI-

    TATION SPACE

    KITCHEN (L)

    REC ROOM

    VENDING

    GARDEN / COURT

    CUSTODIAL (C)

    WASTE (C)

    MAIL (C)

    PARKING

    BAR

    BATH-ROOMS (W)

    TUTOR SUITES

    MAIL (L)

    REC READ-ING

    REFLEC-TIVE READ

    DINER

    DOUBLE BRs

    FAMILY SUITES

    DINING HALL

    ASSEMBLY

    CATERING KITCHEN

    FOOD GAR-DEN

    GREEN HOUSE

    STORAGE (BIKE)

    FITNESS

    STUDY ROOM

    MASTERS RES

    MEDIA LIBRARY

    PUBLIC PRESENTA-

    TION

    COM-MUNITY CENTER CLASS-

    ROOMS

    CONFER-ENCE

    BREAKOUT SPACE

    STUDIO SPACE

    BIZ INCU-BATOR

    LABORA-TORY

    ART STU-DIO

    GALLERY

    INTRAMU-RAL

    COMMON LOUNGE

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    BATH-ROOMS (L)

    CUSTODIAL (L)

    LAUNDRY

    WASTE (L)

    STORAGE (OTHER)

    COMMON LOUNGE

    DEANS RES

    SINGLE BRs

    SPAMEDI-

    TATION SPACE

    KITCHEN (L)

    REC ROOM

    VENDING

    GARDEN / COURT

    CUSTODIAL (C)

    WASTE (C)

    MAIL (C)

    PARKING

    BAR

    BATH-ROOMS (W)

    TUTOR SUITES

    MAIL (L)

    REC READ-ING

    REFLEC-TIVE READ

    DINER

    DOUBLE BRs

    FAMILY SUITES

    DINING HALL

    ASSEMBLY

    CATERING KITCHEN

    FOOD GAR-DEN

    GREEN HOUSE

    STORAGE (BIKE)

    FITNESS

    STUDY ROOM

    MASTERS RES

    MEDIA LIBRARY

    PUBLIC PRESENTA-

    TION

    COM-MUNITY CENTER CLASS-

    ROOMS

    CONFER-ENCE

    BREAKOUT SPACE

    STUDIO SPACE

    BIZ INCU-BATOR

    LABORA-TORY

    ART STU-DIO

    GALLERY

    INTRAMU-RAL

    PROGRAMMINGProgramming was a significant component to this project. Critical programs were identified and ranked from most important to least important with respect to their ability to foster interaction at multiple levels: residents, UC students, and the adjacent community.

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  • SITE PLANThe House was divided into two buildings, forming a central pedestrian mall and connecting the busy retail street to the south to the bustling heart of campus.

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  • GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES

    CIRCULATION

    W CALHOUN ST

    W MCMILLAN ST

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  • ACCESSIBILITY

    GEOGRAPHICAL FEATURES

    PROMINENT VIEWS, AXES, AND GREENS

    SITE SELECTIONThe site was selected to act as a strategic gateway or southern portal into the campus. This edge of campus has very few prominent connections between the newly revitalized retail dis-trict along Calhoun and McMil-lan Streets and UCs own Main Street.

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  • Residence Hall RenovationTYPE: PROFESSIONAL; ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN & RENOVATION

    LOCATION: CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

    DATE: 2012

    Tasked with updating a number of the universitys historic residence halls, the firm was challenged with preserving the facades of these significant structures while enhancing the lifestyle of the universitys well-known undergraduate residential colleges. The process sought to understand the implications of future renovations based on a few key factors: access, structure, program, main entry and circulation. Each of these variables were singled-out, analyzed and re-assembled to develop a series of comprehensive options for the clients review.

    ROLE: My initial role was to manage the digital model of the existing structure originally outsourced and constructed based upon its 1930s drawings.

    Towards the design, I was charged with developing initial strategies and concepts for accommodating the common space program, access and circulation of the first floor and lower levels of the residence hall, eventually fusing these with the residential floors above.

  • CONTEXT AND CIRCULATION

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  • EXISTING TUTOR COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION AND CIRCULATION

    PROPOSED HYBRID ORGANIZATION AND CIRCULATION

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  • STRUCTURAL BEAM LOCATIONS

    EXPLORATION IN INTERNAL ACCESSIBILITY

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  • ITERATIVE EVOLUTION OF GROUND FLOOR PLAN

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  • ENTRANCE STUDIESEarly concepts concentrated on the buildings access and circulation on the first floor. As the building had many level changes, including a 30 plinth which the majority of the first floor rested upon, different strategies were explored to provide accessible and meaningful approaches to the buildings interior.

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  • Designing for Reuse: Mixed-Use StructureTYPE: ACADEMIC; ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

    LOCATION: PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA

    DATE: 2014

    Identifying issues in the limited lifespan of buildings due to economically engineered tactics of planned obsolescence, this thesis proposal approaches design and construction from a different vantage point. Rather than designing buildings that are constructed and demolished completely, what if certain building elements were designed to remain? What components would be left behind as usable infrastructure? What would the building look like? How would it be used?

    In essence, it means a building meant to be adaptively reused, a building designed for change. This proposal explores what it would mean for a building to be a continual construction site, where certain common elements remain and new or specialized elements become interchangeable - a contemporary ruin, of sorts - viewing the shared permanent portion of the building more as a system of infrastructure than as a traditionally programmed structure.

    The building proposal is comprised of two parts: the permanent and the ephemeral. This proposal explores how the permanent can accommodate the many different uses of the ephemeral via configuration of structure, chase and corridor space.

  • SITELocated in the southern part of Olde Kensington, Philadelphia, the site is situated between a recently gentrified neighborhood to the south and a former industrial corridor to the north. The site is chosen strategically to capitalize on these two areas in great flux as an ideal environment to suggest an adaptable building proposal.

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  • 1/4 m

    i

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  • STRATEGIESThe permanent system is meant to be a conduit to allow multiple units to plug in to it, essentially a series of corridors vertically and horizontally oriented. The system is designed in such a way that each tenant can construct their own unit during any time in the life of the building without disturbing the general functions of the units around them.

    Temp Occupiable Space

    Temp Infrastructural Space

    Perm Occupiable Space

    Perm Infrastructural Space

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  • TEMPORARY AND THE PERMANENT

    VERTICAL CHASE CONFIGURATION

    DUAL STRUCTURAL SYSTEM

    TOTAL BUILD-OUTCONFIGURATION

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  • PROGRAMOne of the primary roadblocks for constructing a building intent upon change is that change is not predictably foreseeable. This proposal intends to accommodate programming that is by its very nature temporary.

    Programs such as: - Incubator space- Pop-up retail- Transitional restaurant space (i.e. food truck to perm. location)- Temporary art exhibition space- Field office locations- Short term apartment/lease

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  • TWO SYSTEMSThis project proposes two structural systems. The first system, at the core, facilitates the buildings main arteries, conveying people and services laterally and vertically creating a core and anchor to which units will be fixated. In these corridors is a 3 utility strip that provides access to the plenum space below each floor for maintenance and hook-ups for new construction

    The second is a lighter external structure meant to be a permanent scaffolding for temporary units. Supported by thin/light columns and bracing, the units can be constructed on-site with available space on all sides for workers to access.

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  • Cincinnati School of Environmental LearningTYPE: ACADEMIC; SITE PLANNING & ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

    LOCATION: CINCINNATI, OHIO

    DATE: 2011

    This graduate design studio focused on developing a school of environmental learning in an urban neighborhood near a thriving retail street and an iconic neighborhood church. While responding to its context, the core idea of this proposal was to expose the site to an environmental process - the water cycle - and design the building and its landscape around it. By designing a setting that would tell the story of rainfall, collection, filtration, storage and reuse as educational tools allowed experimentation with developing inside/outside relationships with the building spatially and structurally.

    External the site, the school is scaled in harmony of its urban context with a focal entry point on its north side, oriented towards the neighborhood landmark of the church and acting as a backdrop for a new public plaza. Internally, a series of hallways follow the flow landscape terraces culminating in indoor/outdoor laboratory adjacent a water body used for the study of plant and aquatic life.

  • WEDGE

    DOUGHNUT

    EXPLODED BLOCK

    HYBRID

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  • SITE STRATEGIES

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  • SITE PLAN

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  • CIRCULATION

    SOLAR STRATEGIES

    Roof runoffRoof runoff

    Surface Runoff

    VegetatedChannel

    Undergroundconveyance

    Undergroundconveyance

    Catchment areas

    Main storage andfiltration area

    WATER FLOW

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  • Drop-off

    School Courtyard

    Second Floor Terrace

    Public Plaza

    No access

    Limited publicaccess

    OPEN SPACE

    Access to Public

    Public Entrance

    Secured Entrance

    School secured duringpublic events

    EVENT ACCESS

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  • Classrooms

    Community Spaces

    Gymnasium (ht. `)

    Media Center/Library

    Corridors

    Third Floor

    Media Center/Library

    / Health Clinic

    Gymnasium

    Classrooms

    Community Spaces

    Corridors

    Second Floor

    Specialized Classrooms

    Great Hall

    Classrooms

    Community Spaces

    Corridors

    Maintenance

    Media Center/Library

    First Floor

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  • Fabric Forms and the ModuleTYPE: ACADEMIC; MATERIAL STUDIES

    TEAM: FREDERIK BERTE, JORDAN LEWIS, & ANDREW NEWMAN

    DATE: 2012

    FABRIC CASTINGFabric casting was the common interest in the group as a means of exploring fluid form from a material that, when cured, would be solid and massive. Of particular interest was the tendency of fabric formed concrete to be unrecognizable as a material. The textural imprint of fabric onto the surface of the concrete was also of interest as it was another means of transforming the concrete from a known material to an unknown material.

    THE MODULEThe team was encouraged to consider integrating the idea of the fabric pours with that of the module; one, for the sake of greater applicability of the proposal as a construction element, and second, as a means of exploring deeper functional solutions to using concrete and the connection between materials in ways not previously explored. As the investigation progressed, it was recognized that there were even greater benefits of the module related to texture. The modular elements, when assembled created another level of texture at the macro level that contributed to the idea of rendering the materiality of the concrete obsolete.

  • FORMWORKIn considering the formwork and the module it was paramount that the material that made up the formwork was resilient enough for repeated use - a strategy derived from an interest to save material and time while ensuring consistent modules with each pour. We decided on quarter inch thick polycarbonate as the material would not degrade with each pour.

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  • FORM & MATERIALIt was decided that the interlocking concrete elements would not be structurally possible as the concrete would be brittle at these connections. Instead, interlocking would be in the form of tabbed inserts that would be integrated within each poured module, evident in the polycarbonate formwork. The bottom three layers in each pour would accommodate a tabbed polycarbonate layer to facilitate this connection. Finally, it was also considered to switch to a hexagonal module which would provide greater opportunities for interlocking without being too complicated.

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  • The Baths at CranbrookTYPE: ACADEMIC; SITE PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

    LOCATION: BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MICHIGAN

    DATE: 2012

    As a two quarter course, this graduate design studio focused on comprehensive design from conceptual site strategies down to detail design. The following work embodies the culmination of the first quarter which focused on site strategies and conceptual design of this proposed spa on the Cranbrook school campus just north of Detroit Michigan.

    This design focused on converting an under-utilized site facing a prominent green space on the Cranbrook campus. Space between an existing structure and this prominent green space is limited so various studies focused on narrow building configurations while designing for ample natural sunlight

  • SITE STRATEGIESThe proposed site was selected as part of an infill strategy transforming the a long strip of green called the Grand Allee into a green heart of the campus.

    As the proposed site resided on the north side of an existing building, access to natural daylight became a large focus of this design.

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  • DAYLIGHT ACCESSAccess to daylight became a prominent driver in the design. As such, a light scoop became the primary architectural feature, garnering some influence from the campuses historic architecture, while providing interior spaces with washes of daylight.

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  • NORTH ELEVATION

    FIRST FLOOR SITE PLAN

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  • LAYERSAs the design evolved, the buildings interior spaces were formed through a series of layers. Some of these layers acted as light scoops, providing different types of light for different types of spaces.

    FRAMING

    SHEAR WALL

    DIAPHRAGM

    COMPOSITE

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  • Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design CompetitionTYPE: ACADEMIC; URBAN DESIGN

    LOCATION: NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

    DATE: 2014

    TEAM: DREW SUSZKO, GRETCHEN KEILLOR, KEN KO, AARON GUTTMAN

    This years competition site, located in Tennessees state capital, Nashville, was situated in an underdeveloped yet historically significant district north of the downtown. Prone to flooding, the project site spanned an area between the citys civic mall and the river, a neighborhood comprised of an eclectic mix of former industrial buildings, parking lots, state offices and older condominiums. Charged with proposing an economically viable urban development plan for the site, each team was required to integrate a newly proposed minor league baseball stadium and supporting mixed use development into the competition proposals.

    ROLE: Urban Designer; The team was divided into three groups: Finance, Marketing and Design. I oversaw the design group, focusing on implementing the program, open space and circulation as determined by the teams vision for the site while contributing to the competition graphics.

  • CAPITAL CITY BLUESOur teams vision for the site dealt with the transiencies typically plaguing capital cities. The sites competing narratives were viewed as distinct systems seeking unification.

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  • COMMUNITY HEARTOur teams proposal transformed the impending ballpark into the community heart, imbuing it with a framework capable of addressing a variety of different neighborhood and city-wide functions. This heart was part of a larger promenade (formerly a bikeway) that formed a centralized pedestrian linkage from significant public museums along the mall to the newly redeveloped waterfront.

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  • 410

    5 10 10 7

    455 4 5 51010 812 8 1220Shared

    8 88 87 710 1064 4 8 84 4 4410.510.5 10.510.56

    7 5 5 75510.5 10.5 10.512 1210.57 5 5 11.5 11.573 7557 311.5 11.5

    4 5 10 10 7 Meandering Bikeway

    36 36

    6048

    80

    100 100

    80

    410

    5 10 10 7

    455 4 5 51010 812 8 1220Shared

    8 88 87 710 1064 4 8 84 4 4410.510.5 10.510.56

    7 5 5 75510.5 10.5 10.512 1210.57 5 5 11.5 11.573 7557 311.5 11.5

    4 5 10 10 7 Meandering Bikeway

    36 36

    6048

    80

    100 100

    80

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  • 410

    5 10 10 7

    455 4 5 51010 812 8 1220Shared

    8 88 87 710 1064 4 8 84 4 4410.510.5 10.510.56

    7 5 5 75510.5 10.5 10.512 1210.57 5 5 11.5 11.573 7557 311.5 11.5

    4 5 10 10 7 Meandering Bikeway

    36 36

    6048

    80

    100 100

    80

    410

    5 10 10 7

    455 4 5 51010 812 8 1220Shared

    8 88 87 710 1064 4 8 84 4 4410.510.5 10.510.56

    7 5 5 75510.5 10.5 10.512 1210.57 5 5 11.5 11.573 7557 311.5 11.5

    4 5 10 10 7 Meandering Bikeway

    36 36

    6048

    80

    100 100

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  • Kunming Xishan Urban ParkTYPE: PROFESSIONAL; PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN

    LOCATION: KUNMING, YUNNAN, CHINA

    DATE: 2009

    Kunming, known as the Spring City - because of the citys year-round agreeable weather, is renowned for its flower festivals. Nestled between two of Kunmings most treasured landscapes, West Mountain and Dian Lake, this proposal delivered an urban park anchored by a central flower expo and growing fields - a collection of what would be some of the citys largest attractions. The team was charged with accommodating a myriad of programs such as a Botanic Garden, Art Exhibition and studio spaces, Resorts and spas, and Flower Expo center and surrounding flower fields. Orienting these programs along a small sliver of developable land between the mountain and the lake, the proposal sought to accommodate a large amount of program that had the best of both worlds, access to the mountain to the west and views to the lake in the east.

    ROLE: Urban Designer; Managed design vision and implementation from the initial kick-off meeting to the final report. This meant mediating information between economic and environmental reports; balancing ideal programmatic mixes and development strategies with ecological and historic preservation as well as recommended water infiltration infrastructure - tied to a cohesive structure of open space, circulation and developable areas that were part of a larger narrative for the city and region.

  • PRESERVATION AND PLANNINGThe large amount of program proposed for the park actually provided many opportunities for preservation and ecologically sensitive design and planning. Existing roads, buildings and farm fields were planned for reuse rather than demolition to not only minimize costs, but also helped preserve some of the important history of the site.

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  • West M

    ountain

    Dian Lake

    Context

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  • FLOWER FIELDSTransitioning the existing farm fields into flower fields for Kunmings annual flower festival also led to an immediate rural aesthetic. This rural aesthetic influenced a large part of the planning of the parks infrastructure: the reuse of the existing village as well as the preservation of many of the vernacular roads and pathways.

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  • Planning Structure: North-South Spine Landscape Zones

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  • Land UseCirculation

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  • Research Forest Forest Park Arts Village Flower FieldsBusiness RetreatResort Villas Botanic Gardens Cultural Village

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  • Artist Village Central Plaza

    VIEW OF ARTISTS PLAZA

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  • Artist Village Central Plaza

    ARTIST VILLAGEThe parks centerpiece is the Artist Village, an existing farming village planned for relocation and demolition. We convinced the client to preserve its inherent structure, revitalize choice building stock, re-inhabit and re-fill as a local artists village, accommodating live-work studios, food streets, theatres and boutique hotels.

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  • VIEW TOWARDS BOTANICAL GARDENSBotanical Gardens and Wetland

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  • Botanical Gardens and Wetland

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  • The Monumental Core Framework PlanTYPE: PROFESSIONAL; PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN

    LOCATION: WASHINGTON DC

    DATE: 2007

    In 2003, Congress declared the national mall as a substantially completed work of civic art, closing it off to future museum and monument installations. Future museums and monuments would need to be located elsewhere, ideally integrated into the surrounding urban fabric. As a response, the Framework Plan proposes a series of near, mid and long term strategies for strengthening the connections between the National Mall and the immediate urban context. Through a comprehensive evaluation of the citys historic plans, current public space framework and future growth, the Plan implements a surgical strategy to identifying areas for future museums and monuments that would catalyze future growth while preserving historic connections; increasing livability downtown.

    ROLE: Urban Designer; Responsible for developing initial urban structural concepts, phasing implementation and graphic depiction.

  • Monumental Framework PlanPlanning Influences

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  • Yundonghai Landscape MasterplanTYPE: PROFESSIONAL; PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN

    LOCATION: SANSHUI, GUANGDONG, CHINA

    DATE: 2008

    Referred to as a D.E.E.P. Project - collaboration between Design, Environmental, Economic and Planning teams - the task was to enhance an existing masterplan based upon implementing more intelligent economic, environmental, and planning principles to refine and establish a new CBD, entertainment and government districts and a variety of new housing villages. The planning sought to develop an interconnected green waterfront edge about a newly constructed water body as a means of linking/unifying each of the lakefront nodes through a variety of infrastructures and activities.

    ROLE: Urban Designer; Managed revisions to the existing planning framework: developing districts, programming, character, landscape zones, open space framework, circulation and water systems. Developed design guidelines for lakefront promenade.

  • STUDY AREA

    DESIGN AREA

    SANSHUI

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  • FOSHAN

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  • Development SuitabilityExisting Land Use Plan

    Proposed Land Use Plan

    Economic Development Model

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  • Accessibility

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  • Circulation - Typology

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  • ACCESSIBILITY / GATEWAYS

    PUBLIC TRANSIT

    BICYCLE & PEDESTRIAN CIRCULATION

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  • Sindh Education CityTYPE: PROFESSIONAL; PLANNING AND URBAN DESIGN

    LOCATION: KARACHI, PAKISTAN

    DATE: 2011

    This massive university city of over 3600 ha will be the first of its kind in Pakistan, housing over a dozen of the countrys top universities. This design proposed a central address road by which each university would be oriented. By concentrating activities and circulation along this central corridor, opportunities were created in developing urban nodes and centers for student life. The primary urban node of this project came in the form of a central urban Spine created by the overlapping of two Main Streets.

    ROLE: Urban Designer; Focused on articulating the land use plans into clearer urban fabric through hand rendered drawings applied to a 3D model. Borrowing from principles of Muslim city design, the spatial and circulation hierarchies focused on developing a mixture of private developments for student housing amidst a larger framework of public amenities such as a souk and Mosque.

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  • 4Souk / Bazaar District along the Central Spine

    1. Retail Souk / Bazaar2. Souk Gateway Plaza3. Transit Stop4. Institutional

    Pedestrian Gate5. Institutional Main

    Vehicle Gate6. Public Entry Plaza7. Mixed Use Retail

    Anchor8. Education City

    Administrative Offices9. Recreational Open

    Space10. Education City Formal

    Arrival Boulevard

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    Events District along the Central Spine

    1. Cultural Events Center2. AKU Athletics Stadiums3. Transit Stop4. Institutional Pedestrian Gate5. Institutional Main Vehicle Gate6. Public Entry Plaza7. Mixed Use Retail8. Mixed Use Residential9. Residential Commons

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    Village Mixed Use District1. Retail Souk / Bazaar2. Souk Gateway Plaza3. Transit Stop4. Institutional Pedestrian Gate5. Institutional Main Vehicle Gate6. Public Entry Plaza7. Mosque8. New Residential9. Anchor Retail Mixed Use10. K4 Greenway Open Space11. Education City Public Commons12. Agricultural Preservation Zone13. AKU Residential Village14. Existing Village Core15. Village Expansion Zone16. Village Gateway and Bazaar

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  • Luke Clayton Sinopoli

    [email protected]

    703-300-5935

    EDUCATION

    2010 - 2014

    2000 - 2005

    The University of Cincinnati, Ohio Master of Architecture

    The Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania Bachelor of Landscape Architecture

    EXPERIENCE

    May 2013 - Sep 2013

    July 2012 - Dec 2012

    Sep 2011 - Dec 2011

    Mar 2011 - Jun 2011

    Apr 2008 - Jul 2010

    Sep 2007 - Mar 2008

    Jul 2005 - Aug 2007

    GBBN Architects | Architectural Intern Cincinnati, OH

    KieranTimberlake | Architectural Intern Philadelphia, PA

    BHDP Architecture | Architectural Intern Cincinnati, OH

    CK NBBJ | Architectural Intern Boston, MA

    AECOM | Urban Designer Guangzhou, GD, China

    EDAW|AECOM | Designer Brisbane, QLD, Australia

    EDAW|AECOM | Designer Alexandria, VA

    HONORS

    2013

    2012

    2010

    2010

    University Graduate Scholarship

    University Graduate Scholarship

    AIA Honors Award | Planning and Urban Design Monumental Framework Plan

    University Graduate Scholarship

    COMPETITIONS

    2014

    2011

    2006

    2004

    Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition

    Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition

    URBAN VOIDS: Grounds for Change

    Flight 93 National Memorial International Design Competition

    Revit

    Sketchup

    AutoCAD

    Rhino

    GIS

    3DS Max

    Sefaira

    THERM

    IES

    Photoshop

    Illustrator

    Indesign

    Lightroom

    Premiere

    After Effects

    Woodworking

    Laser Cutter

    Concrete

    Milling machine

  • [email protected]

    Thank you