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My academic work, professional work samples and CV.
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The Rather UniqueC candy h.y. chan C portfolio C
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9 Once Upon a Time :
2003 2004 2005
2006 2007 2008
2009
2012
2010
2013
2011
2014
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: let’s start with a story...
08 _ public intimacy
14 _ all fake
: keep it simple.
20 _ identity
22 _ prime vision
24 _ a day at tsukiji
: art. or science. or neither. or both.
28 _ poetic mechanics
30 _ embracing extremes
32 _ swarm pavilion
34 _ fragility and violence
35 _ the pipe
36 _ the very many
: never for granted.
46 _ less is mall
48 _ living on display
: the magic of things.
58 _ 33 bond
59 _ garden house
60 _ columbia uni. manhattanville mixed-use development
61 _ morgan stanley children’s hospital
62 _ world trade center memorial & museum
9 Are We There Yet? :
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let’s start with a story...I walk around the school hallways and look at the people. I look at the teachers and wonder why they’re here. If they like their jobs. Or us. And I wonder how smart they were when they were fifteen. Not in a mean way. In a curious way. It’s like looking at all the students and wondering who’s had their heart broken that day, and how they are able to cope with having three quizzes and a book report due on top of that. Or wondering who did the heart breaking. And wondering why.Stephen Chbosky - “Perks of being a Wallflower” (1999)
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let’s start with a story...
(photo taken in 2005, in Hong Kong)
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• STALK THEMThree people were followed from the site to the first entry to any form of intimate space, public transport infrastructure, or private car. Movements were recorded on an aerial map.
• “PIXELATION”The negative spaces (grounds) of the paths were translated into positive “urban pixels” (figures). These pixels are then compressed to the ground plane to inform the outline of the building.
9 Public Intimacy :
1st level of intimacy
2nd level of intimacy
A B C D
Program: Bath-house, Hotel | Site: Old City, Philadelphia | Scale: 40,000 s.f.
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offset
trim
duplicate and rotate
fit into siteproject
plan
A
B
C
D
merge
bath
cafe
hotel
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• SEQUENCEA walk-through sequence was generated to study the spa-tial qualities related to lighting, distance, occupancy and surface effects of pattern mappings.
• ACTIVATIONThese highlights show the space activated by each individuals. Dif-ferent portions of the building are engaged by different visitors.
user 1: Man using steam therapy
user 2: Kid coming for swimming and community program
user 3: Woman staying in hotel and us-ing bath
user 4: Grad student coming to stay in hotel and use bath
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sectional perspective
1 mixed bath2 female bath3 hotel4 steam5 male bath6 cafe7 guest rooms8 lobby9 community programs10 services
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• WET AND DRYThe wet program (bath) and dry program (hotel) are organized around the high line. They grow from two sides and eventually join and intertwine, forming public space underneath.
•WRAPPINGA pattern from the metal work of a railing is transformed in scale and context to become the skin of the building. The building is wrapped in a double layer- mechanized water system on the outside and an inverted figure-ground.
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9 All Fake :
• MORE FAKE PLEASE
_private doings_
: where were you?: where could you have been?
_what’s wrong?_
trigger v.1:whenever i feel cold,i take a picture of whatever is on my left hand side.
_dummies_
trigger v.2:whenever i feel cold,i take one picture of the sky,then one of the ground.
_dress rehearsal_
evidence in context:: an inverted world;: a world without temperature, sound, and air;: maybe also without gravity
• SYNOPSISShe is a fugitive. Worried about being recognized and caught, she always dresses in black from head to toe, with a hat and a pair of sunglasses. She is forever on the run. She kept running, but she never felt like she had run far enough. One day she suddenly found herself in this place where proximity and infinity are inverted- the sky is now concrete, the ground faded. There’s no temperature, she couldn’t feel her heart beat, and she wasn’t breathing. And right there she stopped- she felt calm and happy, because she knew she finally escaped.
Photography Project | Brief: Narrative, Fake Identity, Color Photography (No Photoshop)
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keep it simple.The airline pilot who announces that he is presently anticipating experiencing consider-able precipitation wouldn’t think of saying it may rain. The sentence is too simple--- there must be something wrong with it.William Zinsser - “On Writing Well” (1976)
17(photo taken in 2005, in Hong Kong)
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9 Identity :
• THE MIDDLE CHILDI’m a middle kid- I have an elder sister and a younger brother, and so i have a certain “dual” aspect in my personality. I want to portray a state of balance between two op-posing forces. My initial is CC and I developed two C-shaped curves that have a fluid motion swirling and converging in the middle. In line with the “dual” concept, I want to include elements of both disci-plined and spontaneous. Different shades of multiplying green unify the logo as one.
business card front & back letter head
Graphic Project | Brief: Identity, Branding, Logo & Stationery
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Nude
ink on white drawing paper
420 x 594mm
Shoes
ink on white drawing paper
420 x 594mm
Cubes
ink on white drawing paper
420 x 594mm
9 Prime Vision :Drawing Exercises | Brief: Composition, Hierarchy, Solid & Void
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Chinese Character and “9-Square”
pencil on white drawing paper
420 x 594mm
Chinese Character and “9-Square”
pencil on white drawing paper
420 x 594mm
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9 A Day at the Tsukiji Market :
• FRONT & BACK-STAGES“A Day at the Tsukiji Market- the Seen and the Unseen” seeks to illustrate the different stages of food processing and production of the tuna trade. Each rectangular unit is about one particular stage, while each triangular unit focuses on the transition between stages. The white sections are the ones seen and conceived by tourists/ amateurs, while the grey sections are the “backstage” operations understood only by profession-als working in the trade. With the shifts in scales and changes in contexts, this illustration reveals the intricate workings of the food supply chain both in global and local scales.
Graphic Project | Brief: Folding, Research, Information Graphics
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art. or science. or neither. or both.When I am working on a problem, I never think about beauty but when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong. R. Buckminster Fuller
27(photo taken in 2009, in Philadelphia)
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9 Poetic Mechanics :
• STRUCTURE & INFILLThe atmospheric effect for this project is “sound waves”. The wave pattern is studied and abstracted. It is later translated to a simple “A-B-A-B” pattern, and surface is created when the com-ponents are joined together.
alternation transformation
patterning
side elevation front elevation top elevation
Installation Project | Brief: Poker Cards, Assembly Logic(In collaboration with Andrea Gulyas)
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• COMPONENTSeeking to portray the tension between past and future, the patterning process is a series of “cutting-and-pasting” starting from a square. The resulting shape has sharp corners and can fill a non-porous surface. This shape is stretched in the third dimension to form a leaf-like component, which is then arrayed on surfaces to form enclosures.
stretching
surface test surface rendering
9 Embracing Extremes :Program: Exhibition | Site: Eastern State Penetentiary, Philadelphia
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• GESTUREA curve is derived by abstracting the gesture of a swarm of bees. Programs are allocated along this spine. Conceptual forces are as-signed to different programs.
• PATTERNINGPattern from the previous exer-cise is used to form the structural frame of the roof. There are three types of infill panels- solid, translu-cent membrane and voids (apiary & queen rearing spaces).
outline
surface
lift-inside
lift-outside
forces
solid panelstranslucent membrane
void
structural frame
minimum density
maximum density
Program: Exhibition Space, Education Facilities, Bee-Raring | Site: Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
9 Swarm Pavilion :
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ground floor plan
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1 kitchen2 cafe/ event3 sales4 office5 meeting room6 information7 display wall8 apiary9 queen rearing10 equipment11 packaging12 honey bottling13 storage
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• SCRIPTED ON PURPOSE
void setup(){ size (360,640); background(255,0,0); noLoop(); smooth();}
void draw(){ translate (-200,700); scale (2); for (int p=10; p<50; p+=10){ float p2=pow(p,1.5); stroke (255,0,0); Aggregate (p,-p2); }}
void Aggregate(float a, float b){ pushMatrix(); rotate (radians(random(-5,-35))); translate(a,b); for (int w=0; w<5; w++){ Module(random(.8,1.2),width*2); } popMatrix();}
void Module(float q, float u){ for (float x=0; x<u; x+=1){ float y= pow(x,q); stroke (255,255,0,125); line (x,y,x,y+random(50,70)); stroke (255,120,0,175); line (x,y,x,y+random(5,11)); strokeWeight (random(.3,1)); }}
9 Fragility and Violence :“Drawing” Project | Brief: Scripting, Triptych, Color, Embroidery
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9 The Pipe :Program: Skate Park, Club | Site: Deptford, London(In collaboration with Janine Sutton)
•THE “COOL” ALTERNATIVE“The Pipe” is to be the first indoor skate park in London. We see skateboarding as the representa-tion of the new wave of alternative culture. Working with parametric modeling, it deals with constraints and requirements of differents us-ers including pedestrians, bikers and professional skateboarders. Lofting techniques enable smooth transitions between spaces, and the boundary between inside and outside is blurred. This is the next coolest place to be in.
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Program: Marine Simulation Laboratory, Aquarium | Site: Lake Texcoco, Mexico City
9 The Very Many :
• ZERO DISCHARGE“The Very Many” is an interven-tion that seeks to mediate the ecological relationship between Mexico City and the vast rural site of Lake Texcoco. Learning from the collective intelligence of colony formation of phytoplanktons, this colonization can transform and adapt to different environmental conditions. It could serve as an example of how to cope with this essentially empty site by providing a decentralized and openended solution.
Situated between two existing ponds, this project takes advan-tage of the readily available land, salt, and water. It adopts a cost ef-fective desalination operation with zero discharge by coupling a solar pond with a thermal desalination system. It is a self-sustaining sys-tem that ameliorates water supply and provides salt for industrial production at the same time.
land & sunlight
salt
watersite
collected rain water trapped heat
existing salt water
clean water
building/ other uses
salt
electricity
solar pond
desalination system(membrane filtration)
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• COMPONENTS & COLONIESA big step in evolution was when algae began to live together in col-onies. Advantages include being larger than any protozoan, thereby being less likely to be eaten, etc.
• HAIR AND STRUCTUREMicrotubules underlying the plasmalemma of Pediastrum and other species have a cytoskel-etal function, regulating not only the shape of the zoospore as it becomes a cell of the colony but also the development of prongs and the flattening of cells where they adhere upon contact.
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never for granted.Little events, ordinary things, smashed and reconstituted. Imbued with new meaning. Suddenly they become the bleached bones of a story… Ammu said that human beings were creatures of habit, and it was amazing the kind of things one could get used to.Arundhati Roy – “The God of Small Things” (1998)
45(photo taken in 2009, in London)
never for granted.
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9 Less is Mall :Program: Retail | Site: Villanova, Philadelphia | Scale: 200,000 s.f.(In collaboration with Thabo Lenneiye)
• WHY MORE IS LESSA typical supermarket carries more than 30,000 items, among which you can find 61 varieties of sunblock, 80 different pain reliev-ers, 40 options for toothpaste,150 lipsticks, 75 eyeliners, and 90 col-ors of nail polish from one brand alone.
We normally assume that more choices make us happier, but too much choice comes with the burden of confusion, regret of options not taken, and information overload.
Graphic Design
Mechanism
layering + multiplying translucency + colors
reflection + refraction irregular surfaces
the “amoeba”
mismatch + cycle shifting
Means Unit
Iridescence
Minimal Music
: Do you want more choices?
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not enough choice too much choice illusion of choice (structure)
illusion of choice (visual interest)
diagrammatic plan interior
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9 Living on Display :Program: Housing, Food Retail | Site: Delaware Riverfront, Philadelphia | Scale: 100,000 s.f.
• REFRIGERATION, ENERGY, AWARENESS The refrigerator is the most energy consuming appliance in a typical U.S. household.
The bigger and deeper your fridge is, the more you tend to buy, the more food would go bad at the bottom, and eventually, the more you waste. What if everything is transparent and on display? What if your neighbors can see your rot-ten tomatoes? What if the taken-for-granted appliance becomes a space you have to LIVE in?
: Do you keep potatoes in your fridge?
TYPICAL BUSINESS vs. DISINTERMEDIATION
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home
home
store
store
middleman
middleman
source
source
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•LAYERINGThe whole architecture is orga-nized around the constraints of the central refrigerated space and conveyor belt. Structure is simple steel post-and-beam. Microclimate is regulated by refrigeration cur-tains which are lighter and cheaper than glass, which keeps the inte-rior configuration flexible.
• SHOPPING & SPECTACLEThis project studies and chal-lenges the conventional shopping configuration- it seeks to reverse the action of seeing and being seen, the moving and the static.
conceptual model
exploded axonometric
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typical unit plan
• PROTOTYPEThe siting makes use of the ef-ficiency of the grid system. This proposal is one third of the pos-sible occupation of the site.
• INTERFACEThe “teething” configuration maxi-mizes the surface area between two entities. Air is the interface be-tween the refrigerated warehouse and housing units.
•LIFTINGThe building is lifted from the ground floor for access and ser-vices. One side is for lobbies of residents and visitors, another for loading.
site plan exterior view
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g/f plan 3/f plan
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apart-hotelstudio 1- bedroom2- bedroom3- bedroom4- bedroom
70 deg F
-5 deg F
unit distribution
short section
+0 Ground Level
+13’ 1/F
+23’ 2/F
+33’ 3/F
+53’ 5/F
+43’ 4/F
+63’ roof
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.. And there is the magic of the real, of the physical, of substance, of the things around me that I see and touch, that I smell and hear... Among all the drawings produced by architects, my favorites are the working drawings. Working drawings are detailed and objective... they are free of associative manipulation. They do not try to convince and impress like project drawings. They seem to be saying :”This is exactly how it will look.”Peter Zumthor – “Thinking Architecture” (1998)
the magic of things.
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the magic of things.
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9 33 Bond :
33 BondHandel Architects | Brooklyn, New York | 500,000 s.f. | 2013 - present (under construction)
Second Floor Plan Typical Unit Layout
Ground Floor Partial Elevation
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9 Garden House :
Plan Sections
Garden House (Single-family Residence) Space Group Architects | London, UK | 1,500 s.f. | Completed
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9 Columbia U. Manhattanville Mixed-use Development :
Columbia University Manhattanville Mixed-use Development Davis Brody Bond w/ Renzo Piano Building Workshop | Manhattan, New York | 450,000 s.f. | 2007 - present (under construction)
Typical Lab Floor Plan Revit Model - Ground Floor Curtain Wall
Typical East West Corridor Elevation
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9 Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital :
Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital Davis Brody Bond | Manhattan, New York | 35,000 s.f. | Completed
Nurse Station Plan Game Wall Interior Elevation
Game Wall Interior Elevation
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9 World Trade Center Memorial & Museum :
Site Plan West Vent Structure Plan
World Trade Center Memorial & Museum Davis Brody Bond | Manhattan, New York | 350,000 s.f. | Completed
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Curriculum Vitae
CAREER & QUALIFICATION HIGHLIGHTS • Professional licensure (NY State) with 5+ years’ professional experience • Proficiency in Revit: 2+ years in large scale projects • Worked on world-renowned projects including the World Trade Center Memorial, NYC
WORK EXPERIENCE • Handel Architects, LLP, NYC / Associate (Feb 2012 – Present) - 33 Bond Street (25-story residential) / NYC - Participated in all project phases from initial client presentation through conceptual design; production of contract documents; coordination with engineers and consultants; development of interiors, finishes, and specifications; and construction administration - 111 Washington Street (40-story residential) / NYC - Carried project from concept deisgn through construction documents; worked with clients’ marketing team to define program; was in charge of apartment planning, kitchen and bathroom design - Other Projects - 400 Park Avenue South (40-story residential) / with Christian de Portzamparc / NYC
- Journal Squared (54-story residential) / with HWKN / Journal Square, NJ - Capitol Place (13-story residential) / Washington DC
• Ismael Leyva Architects, PC, NYC / Intermediate Architect (Nov 2011 – Feb 2012) - Hunter’s Point South (40-story residential) / NYC
• Davis Brody Bond, LLP, NYC / Junior Architect (Jul 2010 - Nov 2011) / Intern (Jan - Aug 2007) - Columbia University Manhattanville Mixed-use Development / with Renzo Piano Building Workshop / NYC - Managed door schedule in Revit and worked on construction documents - Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital / NYC - Assisted in construction administration; reviewed shop drawings and responded to RFIs
- World Trade Center Memorial & Museum / NYC - Conducted LEED research, designed bathroom details and produced construction documents
• Space Group Architects, London / Architectural Designer (Sept - Dec 2009) - Garden House (Single family house) / London - Produced bid drawings, 3D model and renderings, and conducted material research
• Aedas Limited, Hong Kong / Intern (Jun - Aug 2009) / Intern (Jun - Dec 2006) - Civic & Culture Center / Singapore
- Ocean Heights I (81-story residential) / Dubai
• Other Consulting Work / Interior Designer (Oct 2014 - Feb 2015) - Hotpot Expert (1,500 s.f. restaurant) / Jersey City, NJ
EDUCATION • University of Pennsylvania / Master of Architecture (2010) • Architectural Association School of Architecture / London Semester Abroad (2009) • University of Hong Kong / Bachelor of Arts in Architectural Studies (2006)
AWARDS & PUBLICATIONS • “New School University Center”, Community Design Magazine of Tsinghua University (2014) • “Grand Canyon and Crystal Village”, Community Design Magazine of Tsinghua University (2011) • Winner, World Architecture Community Awards 3rd Cycle, World Architecture Community (2009) • Winner, E. Lewis Dales Travelling Scholarship, University of Pennsylvania (2009)
OTHERS • Computer Skills: Autodesk Revit Architecture | AutoCAD | Rhinoceros & Grasshopper | Maya | Google Sketchup | Processing | Adobe Creative Suite | Chinese Typing • Language Skills: English | Cantonese | Mandarin • Visa Status: Permanent Resident (Green Card)
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(left to right) sept 2009, philadelphia; aug 2009, new york city; oct 2009, manchester; nov 2009, amsterdam
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