Ivan Velev Research Plan

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Orbital Space Architecture

Quantifying recreation in nature in order to artificially fabricate it in a


habitat in outer space

Written by: Ivan Velev


Student number: 5248434
Studio: ExploreLab
Stage: Research Plan
Research tutor: Georg Vrachliotis
Architecture tutor: Roel van de Pas
1/23
Contents:
Abstract 4

Relevance 5

The human in space - Why should we think about settling space?

The architect in space - What value can we add as architects to the current space station design?

Important part of future space stations - Focus on recreational activities.

Research question 7

Frame and background 8

From body to architecture

From craftsmen to industry

From idealized body to environmental affordance

Research method 11

Expected outcome 14

Design concept: Privacy in a closed community 18

Research plan + Graduation plan 20

References 22

2/23 3/23
Abstract Relevance

In today’s world, the way we live has had major influence The human in space - Why should we think about Space promises to bring us economic, political, sociological,
from technology. Since the industrial revolution, technology settling space? scientific, and environmental benefits (O’Neill, 1997, 36-38).
is shaping our lives. The new technologies are focusing more The energy sector, for example, will advance significantly as
and more on the body. This study projects the human into Our species has advanced from cavemen to a worldwide a result of the newly revived space interest. Space stations
the future of the technological advancements in the built civilization for the past several hundred thousand years. require to be designed as circularly as possible in resource
environment to the moment where we are occupying outer We have gradually developed tools and methods to tame usage. This teaches us lessons for efficient living on Earth.
space and living in the machine itself, the space station. the wilderness in hot, dry, wet, and cold climates to make it Additionally, plans are being proposed for solar power to
safe and comfortable, as Gyorgy Kepes (1956, 18) phrased be produced in space and used on Earth. The utilization of
Architects have already begun investigating designs of alien it - “In times of self-confidence, man was able to domesticate asteroids rich in precious materials will reduce pollution from
typologies beyond Earth. There are two challenges with those the worlds and gradually bring it into his human scale.” The mining and manufacturing here. The extraction of resources
proposals. Firstly, the more thoroughly researched ones are ‘human scale’ being the physical or imagined borders that from asteroids will require a human colony. Wherever people
based exclusively on a planetary surfaces, either the Moon frame parts of the planet and make us feel comfortable go there will be a habitat and as architects, we can add value
or Mars. This is practical because of the local soil’s mass there. The physical borders could be a house or town walls. to the lives of the inhabitants. Architecture in outer space is a
for protection against lethal radiation and the available in The imagined borders are territories that we have a mental design challenge guided by different restrictions to what we
situ materials for construction and life support. However, it map of and could navigate with ease. This also has allowed are used to and yet it is still built form for future people and it
is more expensive and harder to escape their gravitational Fig.1 Moon village design for the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale by Could you live here for 5 years? us to operate in and take advantage of our environment. is still architecture.
wells and there is no guarantee that the gravity is enough SOM (Ghinitoiu 2021). It features a spiral staircase with riser same as Today there is another area that we strive to grasp - the
to keep the human body healthy. Secondly, the proposals on Earth, while the gravity on the Moon is significantly lower. technological advancements with which we attempt to The architect in space - What value can we add as
predominantly suggest an outer shell with an obscure Fig.3 Expedition 59 flight engineers (from left) Anne McClain, David keep up. We could accept that a single person is unable to architects to the current space station design?
Saint-Jacques and Christina Koch inside the U.S. Destiny laboratory (n.d.
volume and later populate the interior with a regular layout 2019).
comprehend all the world’s information or land, but, as a
and program that is identical to those on Earth (fig.1, fig.2). whole, humanity is capable. The current space habitat where people coexist for a
This does not take into account human factors in relation to significant period (6 months at a time) is the International
isolation, enclosure, and reduced gravity. Our journey to outer space has a comparable dynamic. Once Space Station with a habitable volume of 388m³ (Garcia 2021)
we felt sufficient confidence, as a result of industrialization (fig. 3). If we build settlements for people to occupy for 5
Outer space is a harsh environment, yet in its function, it is and technological advancement, we took the next step and years, it will have to feel like home (Connors, Harrison, and
ultimately undefined. There are no established typologies traveled beyond the atmosphere. A universe opened before Akins 1985, 82-85). It will have to suit both the basic needs
or styles. This gives the opportunity for architects to begin our eyes and we saw more clearly than ever our place within of residents and provide numerous leisure activities that will
thinking about space habitats with the human as the center it, both literally and figuratively. Our expansion on Earth is form communal life. What would those activities be and how
of the design. The design process can be entirely from the limited but beyond it, we are liberated. Earth is but a speck might we begin to define the conditions required for them to
inside out or as we would say on Earth - ‘bottom-up’. This 2.7m on a cosmic scale. Should we stay here forever? occur in outer space? How would they differ from the ones
research proposes a design approach that has the human on Earth, if they are not justified by culture or context? Here is
and their experience as a starting point. In an isolated and The settling of outer space is the act of bringing parts of it the point at which this research embarks.
extreme environment, the need for social interactions and into our human scale. That act will make us feel comfortable
recreation become vital to the mental health of people. The 0.5m to go further. By increasingly larger and more complex space The International Space Station is the ultimate machine for
focus is on the human experience on Earth - the interaction stations we are adapting to the way of life in outer space living. It was designed and built by engineers to be compact
Earth Moon
with nature in a public park and the tools we use in that and we begin to grasp its vastness and hostility. It is the next and as easy as possible to assemble. Is space station design
environment to rejuvenate and replenish our spirit. This island to settle. Gradually, the space habitat will become a a field entirely reserved for engineers? Probably for the near
Fig.2 Comparison of the average hight to which a person can jump
experience is itemized with a focus on the human body. The settlement and people will stay for longer periods of time and future, it is. As architects, we grapple with big questions for
on Earth and on the Moon. On Earth a person can jump to 0.5m and
result from the analysis is divided into three chapters on on the Moon to 2.7m (Bright Side 2021). This shows that, for example, they will define the future of how we live there. Based on this the past, present, and future of humanity. We put people at
different aspects important to the experience - body motion, staircases in the two situations do not need to be the same. line of thinking this thesis assumes that the future of humanity the forefront of our thinking. Wherever people go architects
views of the surrounding environment, and sounds. is in space. follow to construct the environment to be inhabited.
4/23 5/23
Research question

Engineers have a fundamentally different approach to solving Important part of future space stations - Focus on happen in areas that are slightly more complex and involve How can we simulate the spatial experience of recreation in nature?
problems. They are given a mission, which they divide into recreational activities. larger numbers of people. Here, we also find a large number
separate goals that have to be achieved for its success. These of vital leisure activities. Recreation plays an important What does one minute during a picnic with friends in a public
goals come with their sub-tasks and problems that have to In order to give form to an environment for people in outer role in health and happiness. It is something that we will park look like? How do the surroundings facilitate the experience
be resolved by discrete teams, and in the end, the different space, where there is no context, we can begin by thinking most definitely have to build into a future space colony for to have a rejuvenating and invigorating effect on people? What is
parts are integrated within one system (Hauplik-Meusburger about the personal experience of a resident of a future occupants to strengthen communities and develop a sense of the dynamic of the human body in relation to its surroundings and
and Bannova 2016, 12-13). Meanwhile, architects ask colony. What might they need if they live there for 5 years at belonging to the place - essential for them to feel at home. other people? What objects does the body interact with? What
overarching questions about the mission itself - why do we a time apart from the essential life support systems? Probably This is the scale that we shall dive into in the current study. effect do those have on the person’s experience? How would that
do it and what makes sense to be a priority of a construction that person would expect to be able to enjoy a similarly experience happen without gravity?
project for people in outer space? comfortable life as they did here on Earth. A balanced The public park is one of the first steps from a city to the
fulfillment of duties and relaxation is the way we normally wider environment at our disposal on Earth. It is outdoors
There is more to be gained from architects designing for spend our days. The daily habits and rituals are important and brings wildlife and biodiversity to the city. Communities
space. As we know, a new place with new constraints opens to us. We will have to provide an environment that allows evolve within it. It houses a vast range of activities and can
our minds to new ways of approaching a topic or problem. those to occur. There are behaviors on several timescales be adapted to many uses. The park instills calmness that
We might question norms and rules that are followed here that are part of our lives. Adapting the theory of behavior by rejuvenates us by reducing anger, stress, and anxiety. Our
on Earth. For example, if we do not walk in microgravity, Atelier Bow-Wow to the discussion purely focused on a single built environment is enriched by it. With so many positives,
why do we need floors? Simple situations in outer space person, we can frame life into four timescales (Tsukamoto such a feature would be a necessary addition to the habitat
might have many thought-provoking conundrums that will and Momoyo 2012, 9-10). On the smallest scale is the daily for extended occupation. The goal of this thesis is to study
stretch our perception of what is vital to us, our values, and, routine, which is characterized by waking up, regular meals, the human experience in a public park in order to create an
ultimately, how we do architecture here on Earth. Space children going to school, traveling, working, interacting with artificial environment that yields such a mode of recreation.
architecture perhaps could be of greatest interest to the colleagues, meeting friends, communicating with family, and
research of two major streams of thought - the human- sleeping. This takes up most of the time of an average adult
machine interaction and the human-environment interaction. with a family. On the weekly scale, a person might spend time
On one hand, there is the space station’s shell and services- a with a group of friends, go to a restaurant or a bar, go to the
habitat machine, a living organism, built into the nothingness park, practice sports, or go to a church. On a monthly scale,
of space. It will be the epitome of smart living and the they might visit relatives, have important meetings, or visit
eventual consequence of our attempts to make our smart their children’s school. On a yearly scale, happen the holidays
homes and cities here on Earth. On the other hand, is the and traveling to visit new places. These vary from person to
human utilizing their environment created within the space person. With such a model of human habit on Earth, we can
station and the purposeful designing of that environment for begin to focus on what should we accommodate in a habit in
positive affordance. The question of how the body occupies outer space.
its setting in different gravity levels than the one on Earth
is essential to designing an efficient habitat that supports a Consequently, we can derive that the larger the time scale
person’s health and comfort. This research focuses on the the larger the area that a person covers on Earth and the
second of the two major topics identified here although their larger the community of people involved. With the growth
courses are related. of the scale, it also becomes increasingly harder to imagine Fig.4 Vitruvian man (Da Vinci 1485-90) Fig.5 The Modulor (Le Corbusier 1958, 57) Fig.6 Vitruvian astronaut (Araiza n.d.)
how it can be compacted into an artificial and enclosed
environment. Generally, we could say that we have captured
the smallest, daily, one within the built form in our cities
already. What about the weekly activities? Those begin to
6/23 7/23
Frame and background

From body to architecture (Artists Network Staff, n.d.). At the time, art movements thumb (fig.8) (Neufert 1936). This has become the standard a robotic figure could defy the natural laws. Schlemmer
questioned and reimagined the aesthetics, scale, ornament, for architecture throughout the world based on living in a took these ideas as inspiration for his costume design. He
In order to understand how to use the body’s experience form, and function of architecture and art. After an initial mechanized society. abstracted the body in proportions, form, and movement to
as a design guide for future habitats, it would be of use to nostalgic grip of the past, Art Nouveau (1890s) and Art Deco challenge the perception of how we inhabit our surroundings
position the research within the wider view of architecture (1920s) slowly explored ways of expressing the spirit of the In that regard, Bauhaus represented a fundamental step (Schlemmer et. all, 1961, 17-19). He used the cubical and oval
as it has been advanced in the past by similar notions. industry-oriented society (Artists Network Staff, n.d.). In that towards the practice in architecture today. The collectivization forms to outline the different parts of the body (fig.9) and
By doing this, we would hope to extrapolate not only a context, the human body was seen as part of the masses, as of people was also the union between architects, artists, and exhibit their proportions. Through these methods, Schlemmer
logical continuation of a branch of an established theory in a unit. Yet, in the common everyday worker’s life was what craftsmen. With common thinking, they would be able to expressed his view of people in the industrial age, the new
architecture but also a method used to study the body and architecture should be about - clean and functional. design the whole spectrum of modern life - imagery, objects, look, and the style of regularity and repetition.
its environment. Primarily we analyze 20th-century avant- furniture, and architecture (Gropius 1919). That ambition led
garde art and architecture in the industrial and technological Mechanization of the world dominated all facets of life, to the question of the place of people in their environment From idealized body to environmental affordance
context. This thesis’ topic is similar to the questions asked a changing norms and status quo. Designers slowly learned both physically and consciously.
hundred years ago because it positions the person and body how to use the new methods for production and out of More recently the idea that the body and its scale could
in a new scientific societal revolution - the one of building their work with new materials came the new look for our Oskar Schlemmer’s work in the theater portrays robot- or be the basics for a functional design has been challenged.
the future mode of living in outer space. It is argued that homes, both for exterior and for furniture (Giedion 1969, doll-like masks and costumes that were inspired by the A field of research has been done using James Gibson’s
personal experience should be the inspiration for the new 489-507). The new look was derived from the way factories industrial period. The dances in the Triadic ballet were also (1986) ‘The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception’ as
built environment. manufactured products along an assembly line, instead of inhuman (Triadisches Ballett von Oskar Schlemmer 2013). a basis for affordance study of environments in which we
simply attempting to mimic old ornaments and forms. Fig.7 Frankfurt kitchen by Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky (May 1926).
Fig.9 Abstract of the triadic ballet (Schlemmer 1961). The human body was only capable of restricted balance and operate. It is theoretically different from focusing solely
What brings together, under the same functional laws, athletics. It has its natural limits in the Earth’s environment. on the body because it sees the relationship of the body
vernacular architecture from across the world is the human The human body was the focus of the study for functionality The body could only be obstructed and challenged further to its surroundings as inseparable. The study of the way
body that occupies them. It is its size and capability that and efficiency. Chairs, airplane cockpits, kitchens, and other and not be liberated by its fundamental obstacles. Only bodies can take advantage of objects goes beyond the
transcends cultural influence to make a living space practical spaces or objects were based on basic human ergonomics. purely single purpose, ‘perfect design’, according to a single
and safe. In Europe, the human body’s scale and proportions The body was studied in motion as well as in rest. It was size measurement of the body (Souza 2020). Partly the
have been a conscious fascination of architects already traced in its movements in order to map patterns and devise argument stems from the fact that the standardized body
since the 1st century BC. Vitruvius’ (1960) ‘Ten Books on efficient user-oriented experiences. Étienne-Jules Marey’s type, used for measuring how tall a chair should be, does
Architecture’ define the perfect ratio of body parts, which was methods for photographing and mapping bodies in motion not communicate the variety of the body’s shapes and sizes.
then translated into a building’s proportions. Famously, the benefited our understanding of nature and the world. Studies Environmental affordance focuses on the surroundings and
‘Vitruvian Man’ by Leonardo da Vinci draws on the notion of of the efficient movements of people became what factories the opportunities it can provide for a body. Thus the design
ideal proportions and relates the person to the world. Later, needed to optimize their production lines and increase directive of the concept comes from a test and evaluation
Le Corbusier devises the Modulor following the golden ratio. output (Giedion 1969, 32). process, rather than the body itself as the starting point.
This returning to the fundamentals of the body attests to the
persistent presence of the body as a central role in the theory The strive for functionality was implemented into every Our attempts to tame the character of the machine world
of architecture. aspect of living. The ‘Frankfurt kitchen’ by Margarete Schütte- Fig.8 Body measurements (Neufert 1936, 9) and become synonymous with it have kept falling behind
Lihotzky was an outcome of the analysis of the workflow the progress of technological advancement. The adjustment
From craftsmen to industry in the kitchen (fig.7), which was then translated to an of society to the technology of the 20th century was a
arrangement of the hardware and appliances to reduce the continuation of industrialization. “Rapid expansion of
In our contact with the complete reorganization of stuff movements required (Bois 2020). Ernst Neufert and others knowledge and technical development have swept us into
and labor, which was the industrial revolution, the classical in Bauhaus sought the human scale in all its typical activities a world beyond our grasp” (Kepes 1956, 19). Sciences have
model for art and architecture became nonrepresentative in daily life and use of furniture and architecture and devised dealt with this by reducing fields into smaller, more precise
of the change in the social and demographic conditions the Architects’ Data, which is used until today as a rule of Fig.10 A man jumping over an obstacle (Marey 1890)
specializations, each one drifting apart from the others.
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Research method

Through art, we have attempted to capture a more complete The methodology for this thesis is derived from previous experience of the person (Diagram 2). When we talk about
understanding (Gropius, in Kepes 1956, 94). Yet, science has examples of ways the body was studied to influence recreation what is meant is the act of doing something for
continuously advanced and changed our lives even with the architecture for a change. In the same way, multiple times in pleasure. It does not involve any aspect that is related to
lack of our capability to overview the entirety of its growth. It Kralingse Bos the past to rethink norms and functionality, architects have what we might consider as work. It also does not include
seems that our system has a natural way of fitting subparts, Area: 2,5km² gone back to observe the basic principles of the body in its exercising. Leisure in this case does involve contact with other
which grow in isolation, into a coherent whole. It could be environment to produce architecture that answers the basic people in a natural environment with water, trees, grass, and
said that this study is complacent about subdividing topics
by focusing on an extremely particular research situation for = City: Rotterdam
Area - 324,1 km²
fundamental requirements. To do this, the study focuses
on the activity of recreation in nature. More precisely, the
park furniture.
With these methods, the research tries to gain insight into
the sake of scientific rigor. However, this research attempts to Population - 623 652 (2015) activity of sitting with two other people in a park, having what is considered the most important aspects of a person’s
focus on a fundamental starting point for thinking about a beer and snacks. The specific park targeted for the study is experience in a particular environment. The goal is to extract
new way of living not only in outer space but also on Earth. Kralingse Bos, which is the largest city park in Rotterdam, the insights from what are the constituent elements of that
It falls back on the principles explored at the beginning of Netherlands (Fig.12). environment that add to the positive, leisure, relaxing, enjoy
the 20th century when lifestyle had to be redesigned - it being in nature. The natural vegetation and life of the park
explores the human body and its environment to extract Kralingse Bos (Kralingse Bos n.d.): are key for this study because it is something that might be
spatial insights. Similarly to what has been the fascination of • total area = 2,5 km² perceived as hard to be encapsulated and captured as an
Étienne-Jules Marey (fig.10), Ernst Neufert (fig.8), and others • water = 1 km² experience in a room.
a. b.
from the end of the 19th and early 20th century, here the • forest = 1 km²
human body is studied so that the new advancements in Standardization • open areas = 0,5 km²
the built environment will be based on the fundamentals
of functionality. Additionally, we will analyze the external In the setting specified above, a set of recordings shall be
factors that afford the habits of the body. Our presence in made during one minute of the experience of a person. The
our surroundings is what defines them for us and what gives motion of the body, surroundings, direction of gaze, sounds,
them meaning. and interactions shall be documented (Diagram 1). The
means of capturing those aspects of the experience will be:

• stationary video
+ = • wide-angle video
• microphone - sound recording
• personal notes
• temperature
• sky overcast
c.
The result of these recordings is then visualized into
Affordance
sequential diagrams, charts, and sketches to turn data
Fig.12 Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam (Algemeen Dagblad n.d.) gathered into a design tool, but also to study and
pick out details that might relate to the recreational
Fig.11 Comparing approaches of standardization and affordance.
Diagram adopted from:
a.
b.
The Universal Standard (Neufert 1936, 9)
Sitting positions for the Wire, Plywood LCW, Rocking, Diamond and Tulip chairs (Cionca, Muscu, and Bartha 2013).
Record Convey Analyse Collect Atlas
c. Multiple affordances of an object (Atmodiwirjo 2014)
10/23 11/23
Diagram 2 Methodology

far
movement touch This diagram is showing how the methodology
of analysis on Earth relates to the specific
Feel design of a recreational facility in a space
Earth Space Space station Section of station colony in outer space. The research method
close takes 5 major steps that can be seen here.
interact proximity 1. Picking a place on Earth that creates
Focus of the design that relates to the topic of research Recreation experiences that are to be emulated in the
space colony.
intimate 2. Picking a man-made object or architectural
Public area element from the park.
3. Recording people’s experience in relation
to that object with video, pictures, and
Outdoor sounds.
1. Place of research
4. Analysing the recordings in diagrams and
Park mapping of the human in relation to that
Nature architectural element.
light 5. Collecting the findings into a structured
What that part of the space and clear form.
Atlas of recreation See
environment
station should be like
2. Architectural element
objects Object in the park
3. Parts of the activity that shall
be recorded 4. Processing after recording 5. Grouped result

Body Diagram

Combined objects and movement


surroundings
Hear sounds

to create experience
Moment Diagram
surroundings
Complete
Light Diagram
experience

Objects Diagram

Sounds Diagram
Diagram 1 Diagram of the different aspects of the experience that will be recorded during the study.

12/23 13/23
Expected outcome

Chapter 1: Feel Chapter 2: See Chapter 3: Hear This series of studies are first attempts at representing movement and
the areas around the body it occupies.
The first example is of a person reading a newspaper for 5 seconds. The
situation has been sketched in 3 ways.
1. The whole picture with surroundings
2. Only the newspaper being flipped in relation to the human body
3. 4 frames per second for 5 seconds of the activity of the whole body
and the newspaper outlined.
The second example is of a man performing a fencing movement (04.).
The analysis that follows is of the space the man occupies during the
movement and the area he does not and the flow of movement of 00. Person reading a news paper 01. Complete view 02. Only the movement of the
different parts of the body simultaneously. newspaper in relation to the body

0,25 sec 1 sec 2 sec 3 sec 4 sec 5 sec

03. 5 Seconds of reading a newspaper

sword tip hand gaze

hip L

knee R
knee L

foot R
Diagram 3 After studying the focus areas of the activity, the results are grouped into three chapters. Chapter 1 - for the body
habits and behavior; Chapter 2 - the environment that facilitates the experience; Chapter 3 - the sounds that create the atmosphere
during the activity. 04. Stroboscopic image of a fencing movement
14/23 15/23
Play me

Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam (by author)

Lessons learned from initial testing: This image shows the multitude of variables in any given ‘real’ situation in
the public park. This is the challenge when trying to translate an experience on paper. Thus, the area of focus around
the activity and the object of study will be important for the research. It will be vital for the final result to have clear
boundaries on which parts of the surroundings are included both in terms categories (natural elements, light/shadow,
movement, man-made objects, etc.) and rage (5/10/n m radius) from the activity.
16/23 17/23
Design concept: Privacy in a closed community

manufacturing
Design diagram: We can begin to divide the program functionally too. transport
30 person Because it is possible to induce the feeling of gravity through spinning,

48 person
some areas would benefit to have similar to Earth’s gravity to keep lab
people healthy. However, not all areas need to have gravity, for example,
24 person the body while lying down has been found to feel the same effects as the
body in weightlessness. Another practical benefit of being off-planet is park
that it can be daytime constantly where people need it to be, meanwhile
6 person

in a different part of the colony it can be night. Thus, facilities can be


utilized permanently with reduced capacity. People can just be rotating
1 person

through the colony with differing schedules.

1 person sleep

mining

o u t
h
Wit ty
i
lab

g r a v relax

bar

sport
6 person

eat
Capacity: 10

With ty
20 person

Non-communal model of private and public Communal model of private and public
r a v i Capacity: 20
g
The design concept that shall come out, as a result, will be related to the person within a closed community. If the residents in a space colony live there Capacity: 20
for 5 years, they will be sharing that habitat with 50 people with little opportunity for external diversity. How to sustain that community and provide
that people maintain healthy relationships amongst one another? On Earth, we have our personal space and can choose to take retreats if we need
to. We can choose to take part in public events whenever. Private and public will be a vital balance for the space community. It is fascinating to think Capacity: 50
about what privacy might be like in a closed community. We can imagine a structure in which public and private are closely knitted and personal
space is available throughout.
18/23 19/23
Research plan Graduation plan

September 2021 Start Graduation opening - Research plan September 2021 Start Graduation opening - Research plan
Focus topic Focus topic
Read
Read: space architecture book, space design, Living Aloft, The High Research interest, research question, research method
Frontier October 2021 Park visit (Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam) and photographing, activity focus,
Draft
first diagram representations
Sketch: research interest, research question, research method Design: Concept, program

November 2021 P1 Submission


October 2021 Draft Read: standardization, Bauhaus, affordance, public spaces in the city, city life, mechanization,
Atelier Bow-Wow, Visiting public park (Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam) with camera and recording device
Record in detail activity around a bench in the park
Park visit (Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam) and photographing, activity focus, first diagram Mapping, diagrams, visualization
Draft Combine findings into 3 chapters
representations December 2021
Write research report
Design: Concept, program Design - program, site, typologies, Whats possible in space?, construction method, concept

January 2022 P2 Submission Research; Design beginning


November 2021 P1 Submission Research plan; Design concept Design study - form, function, areas with levels of gravity, activity distribution
What will I focus on and how will details look?
Diagrams
Visiting public park (Kralingse Bos, Rotterdam) with camera and recording device February 2022
3D models and physical model studies
13-21 Nov Record in detail activity around a bench in the park Plans, Sections, Initial rendering and models

March 2022 P3 Site analysis, Design concept, Plans, Sections, 1:100, Renders, Atmosphere
Rework plans and sections, reorganize, draw to portfolio standards
22-05 Dec Mapping
December 2021 Diagrams 3D representation, Atmosphere, Views
Visualization
April 2022 P4 1:100, 1:50, Renders, Views, Atmosphere
Draft
Combine findings into 3 chapters 3D representation, Atmosphere, Views
06-16 Dec
Write research report
May 2022
02-12 Jan Design - program, site, typologies, Whats possible in space?, construction method, concept
January 2022
P2 Submission Research; Design beginning
June 2022 P5 Submission 1:100, 1:20, 1:5

20/23 21/23
References Image references

Book: Articles: Online: Museum:

Connors, Mary M, Albert A Harrison, and Faren R Akins. 1985. Living Aloft: Human Artists Network Staff. n.d. “The Bauhaus Effect.” Artists Network. Accessed October 19, 2021. Algemeen Dagblad. n.d. Coronacirkels of picknickcirkels in het Kralingse Bos in Rotterdam. Da Vinci, Leonardo. 1485-90. Study of the proportions of the human body, known as the
Requirements for Extended Spaceflight. Washington: NASA, Scientific and Technical Information https://www.artistsnetwork.com/art-history/the-bauhaus-effect/. Algemeen Dagblad. August 8, 2020. https://www.ad.nl/rotterdam/parkeerplaatsen-kralingse- Vitruvian Man. Metalpoint, pen and ink, touches of watercolour on white paper. Gallerie
Branch. bos-dit-weekend-afgesloten~a4bd85f4/?referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.nl%2F. dell’Accademia, Venice.
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