Showing posts with label floor plan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label floor plan. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Updated Plans

I added more grass and furniture in the Engineering departments. I also filled in the interior walls which help to bring out the boundaries. Grass now has a texture pattern for a clearer visual explanation. The conference table in the large conference room is now rectangular and pushed to one side, allowing for a larger passing area rather than two small passing spaces. Major passage areas are now marked with dimensions.
For my Office Design project, I decided that for my final book that I want each page to be landscape. Therefore, I had to rotate each of my plans and my text as well. I also added titles, a logo, and page numbers for my final book. Both of the following plans have had some revision that help to explain my decisions more clearly.

I changed the symbol for my exit signs as well as for my LED troffer lights. The slash in the symbol helps to differentiate it from the wooden ceiling and acoustical tiles. I added acoustical tile to the kitchenette because it may get loud in there and I would not want to disturb the offices attached to it.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Extra Credit

I am going to take a break from writing about my Office Design project and instead write about the extra credit assignment that accompanies it. The assignment requested that I design one room to be my personal interior design office and that it should be 15' x 15'. I decided to do my space planning in Revit since I had been using AutoCAD for my other coursework and felt that I could use a refresher. Revit is nice because it adjusts my text sizes accordingly.
I feel that I have been using too many spring greens, teal, and sky blues, I decided to go for a different color scheme this time, which includes red, yellow, blue, white, black, and gray. I was very excited to render my SketchUp views for this mini project.

Though my ceiling design is simple, I am very happy with its correspondence to the windows and using the colors to create balance on every surface of the space.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Office Design Midterm Presentation

I began my office design presentation by very briefly summarizing my office statement and then explaining the mood board that I chose and the word summary that supplemented it (which can be viewed in my previous posts). I organized my presentation to flow smoothly by discussing my mood board, then my floor plan, and then my chosen lighting, materials, and furniture. Throughout my floor plan presentation, I often referenced my loose samples so that my peers knew exactly which material I wanted where, what it was made of, what color it was, and the opacity of each material. I also referenced my sketches of specific areas that I thought needed further visual explanation. I will upload those sketches once I can get a better photo of them.

A guest may enter the space from two locations-- one near the reception desk, and the other near the lobby couches. This is to ensure that the guest feel comfortable immediately upon entering and relatively knows where to go even if he or she has never been here before. The space can be divided into three sections, one end is for engineering, the other is for office employees and conferencing, and the middle is a mix of communal spaces and offices. The middle area of the plan includes the lobby, copy room, and kitchenette so that no one office is too far from these spaces that everyone will be using. Though the spaces are divided, they are still open through the use of 3form, which has different opacities that allow one to see through a little bit but not enough to disturb one's privacy. Each of the three spaces uses a different type of 3form panel.

One entry is right near the conference rooms and that allows guests to have easy access to it. The smaller conference room's walls are entirely made of 3form's "Ting Ting" panel, which is meant to make people feel as if they are surrounded by trees. The small conference room also uses sliding doors, as many of the other rooms do as well. Each office has windows to ensure that each employees is getting sunlight to increase well- being. Any spaces that are not against a wall will have 3form panels to let the light stream through, especially for the large amounts of grass that are included in the space to create an office-garden hybrid.

The library includes Steelcase's Walkstation to further promote wellness at work. The bookshelf is also custom-made to provide growing grass on the top shelf. Each space that was allowed to be an open space, such as the CFO and VP Sales, were kept open. The engineering areas were kept open to promote collaboration between both departments.


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

My First AutoCAD Project

I learned how to draft at the beginning of my second year at RIT in a class titled Architectural Drawing, or at least that was what it was called in the quarter system. At this point I know basic rules about drafting, and I am excited to learn more because I understand the importance of creating a document that is clear for everyone reading it. Each part of the plans needs to be explained thoroughly because there may not be an opportunity to explain it in-person. Much can be explained by line weights and in the areas that the lines are placed. Dimensioning also varies depending on if the wall material is masonry or not. It is also important to create everything to scale, in this case 1/8th of an inch is equal to a foot.
For this project, I was given the exterior walls for the basement and first floor in a packet and I had to draw it in AutoCAD. I used my architectural scale to get the dimensions before putting the floor plan into the program. Layers were created with different colors and line weights to distinguish exterior walls, interior walls, dimensions, lighting, electrical work, windows, doors, and furniture. Page A1 and A2 are shown dimensioned without furniture, and millwork such as cabinetry does not count as furniture. The kitchen counter and breakfast bar are my original custom designs.

For this project, I was allowed to leave the dimensions on my furniture plans (A3 and A4) but in a real life situation I would turn that layer off so that the plan appears less complicated. For the basement area, I decided to create a recreation room complete with a mini bar, television, pool table, and additional seating. In the first floor plan, I chose furnishings for each room and decided to create a home office rather than a guest bedroom, but this depends on the needs of the client.
A Reflected Ceiling plan shows everything that is touching the ceiling, including interior walls, lighting, and differences in ceiling height. For the basement I chose overhead lighting, which would be ideal for using the pool table. On the first floor, I chose to create focal points using chandeliers in the sunroom, dining room, master bedroom, and the entry. The use of a chandelier near the entry serves to make a good impression on guests. Recessed compact flourescents are used in closets, the garage, hallways, laundry room, and the bathrooms. One thing I would have liked to change is that the smoke detectors should be on the Reflected Ceiling Plan rather than the Switching plan. I also would have used less flourescent lighting since this is cool-colored lighting that makes people look less attractive. Flourescent lighting is cheap and more appropriate for a public school or a shopping center. Since there was no budget for this project I could have used something more flattering.


The Electrical plan shows the placement of outlets, including power and data. There are also more specific annotations for outlets that require more energy which are included in the Legend. Looking back I would have liked to make the symbols larger because some of them have subtle differences. There is also a rule that smoke detectors must be in bedrooms and in hallways.


This part of the floor plan has been enlarged to go into greater detail, and that has been annotated using dashed lines on the original floor plan. Each page, such as A9, should match up with its symbols. These elevations help orient the viewer through different line weights that explain which objects are the closest. The darker the line, the closer the object is.

Elevations help to describe what the original floor plan may not, such as the bookcase attached to the kitchen cabinets, and that the chairs are taller than they appeared to be and have a different shape. It also provides stylistic details such as the leaves decorations on the cabinetry.

My plan for the fireplace was to have a smooth white matte surface with added acrylic, opaque squares in different shades of spring greens. Though the elevation shows the general appearance of the fireplace, one day I would like to put this into SketchUp and render it with appropriate colors and textures.