The site is located on the intersection of Orange street and Chapel street in New Haven, CT.
The project program was to "design a mix-use space which included transitional housing and residential support in a city center" which was in terms a homeless shelter.
So to jump right into it here were the building specs we needed.
So like any project you need a site analysis.
NOISE AND ACOUSTICAL
WEATHER
MORE WEATHER
And then you gotta have precedents for your site.
My main intention for this building was to emphasize on the connection of the people and the city. I love utilizing green space as a way of connectivity. It not only draws the building into the skyline of whatever is around it, but especially for this project, it draws the people it's being designed for into it as well. Meaning, these people have been living outside homeless, so anything with a small similarity gives them that much more to feel comfortable with in this transition. "Transitional housing"
This brings me to the precedents of how the design was going to be.
Now we get to the fun stuff, where I start putting it all together.
Hey there Sketch Up, nice to see you again.
So here we have some rough rough elevations. As you can see this is where my semester ended for me. I didn't finish adding windows and such.
Then I played around with how I would want the circulation to pan out for public vs private spaces of the building.
The bottom two floors consisted of public space where you'd find coffee shops, a little convenient store, mailroom newspaper stand, clinic, etc.
The idea of adding these spaces specifically was one because there was a bus stop right on the corner so a coffee shop, new stand, etc. would be beneficial, and also because adding places where jobs were needed to be filled allowed the homeless people to be able to transition to the work force.
This last render is the last of what I completed in this project. This angle showcases the ideal of green space and how it connects the whole building and doesn't give a harsh skyline addition.
Thanks for keeping up with me,
Michelle
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