Meghan Palmer Undergraduate Portfolio

Page 1

PORTFOLIO SELECTED WORKS

2021-2023
MEGHAN PALMER

MEGHAN PALMER

meghanpalm2@gmail.com

ABOUT

Hello, my name is Meghan Palmer and I am an undergraduate architecture student. As I grow and evolve as an aspiring architect, I am committed to never stopping in my pursuit of knowledge. Architecture has the ability to impact the way people experience their surroundings, and I feel that architects have the responsibility of making these experiences leave an impression. Buildings tell a lot about the people behind the design, what occurs inside of them, and also how people interact with it. I want to be a part of creating and facilitating this multi-faceted interaction. I also have an appreciation and curiosity of the built environment, in its construction and design. The way in which these pieces come together is extremely fascinating to me. I would love to continue to explore these subjects in the future.

EDUCATION

8/2020 - 5/2024

Texas A&M University / College Station, Texas

Bachelor of Environmental Design

Minor in Art & Architectural History

GPA: 3.915

Relevant completed coursework

• Design Foundations and Design I, II, & III

• Integrated Studio - Structures and Systems

• World Architectural History I & II

• Social and Behavioral Factors in Design

• History of Modern Architecture

• Sustainable Architecture and Planning

• Communication, Religion, & Arts

Involvement

• American Institute of Architecture Students

• Society of Women in Architecture

• Editor for AXIOM - School of Architecture student publishing organization

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

05/08/23-08/04/23

Architectural Intern Miller Boskus Lack Architects / Fayetteville, Arkansas

DOCUMENTATION

2022, 2023

AXIOM Publication

Fall 2022, Spring 2023, and Fall 2023 studio work published in the 2022 and 2023 book publications for AXIOM.

TECHNICAL SKILLS

Rhino

Revit

Enscape

AutoCad

Adobe Photoshop

Adobe Illustrator

Adobe InDesign

SKILLS Leadership Problem Resolution Organizational Skills Efficient Critical Thinking Active Listening
SOFT
01

A SERIES OF COURTYARDS

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE ACADEMY VISITOR CENTER

ARCH 405, FALL 2023

INTERWOVEN

BARCELONA URBAN CENTER

CARC 301, SPRING 2023

FRAGMENTED REALITY

GALVESTON JUNETEENTH MEMORIAL PARK AND MUSEUM

ARCH 305, FALL 2022

LINES OF COMMUNITY

CARTER LAKE COMMUNITY CENTER

ARCH 206, SPRING 2022

KNOWLES-ROWLAND CENTER

RECORDING STUDIO FOR YOUNG ARTISTS

ARCH 205, FALL 2021

CONTENTS 01
02 03 04 05
02

01 A SERIES OF COURTYARDS

UNITED

STATES AIR FORCE ACADEMY VISITOR CENTER

ARCH 405 Integrated Studio Professor: Ray Holliday Partner: Kate Holbrook

Located in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, the USAFA embraces the natural beauty of the landscape. Significant landmarks for the academy are scattered amidst the extensive campus calling for an exploration and progression through the scenery. In contrast to the topography, the academy strictly obeys a rectilinear grid organized by a series of courtyards, which weave the various activities of the cadets together. Oriented toward the heart of campus, the USAFA Visitor Center aims to progress visitors and potential cadets toward campus through a central corridor. Utilizing the design of campus’ courtyards, each volume branches along the central corridor creating interstitial courtyard spaces, which allow for natural daylighting and access to viewscapes.

Site research and analysis, schematic design, production of architectural documents, structural framing, wall section detail, analysis diagram production, rendering Individual Contributions

03
“... a series of courtyards and plazas that knit together the buildings and contrast with the irregular patterns of the landscape.”

- SOM’s Design Statement for the USAFA

LONGITUDINAL SECTION 04
SITE PLAN 50’ 150’ 250’ 05
LEVEL 1 - PUBLIC 01 ENTRY 02 VISITOR LOUNGE 03 AMBASSADOR READY ROOM 04 VISITOR MATERIAL STORAGE 05 WOMEN’S RESTROOM 06 MEN’S RESTROOM 07 CORRIDOR 08 AUDITORIUM 09 LOUNGE 10 COURTYARD 11 MULTIPURPOSE ROOM 12 EVENT CATERING 13 AV ROOM 14 FURNITURE STORAGE ROOM 15 RESTROOM 16 SYSTEMS SHAFT 17 ELEVATOR 18 CAFE 19 CAFE SERVICE 20 BOOKSTORE 21 RETAIL STORAGE 22 WATER SPRINKLER RISER 23 EXHIBITION 10’ 30’ 70’ 06
WALL SECTION 1’ 3’ 6’ 07
EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC 08
09
10

02 INTERWOVEN

BARCELONA URBAN CENTER

CARC 301 Study Abroad Professor: Miguel Roldan Partner:

Under the streets of Barcelona, there is a largely unknown series of excavated underground spaces that have been abandoned. These spaces range from metro stations and sewer systems to bunkers used for hiding during raids in the civil war. The barrier between the underground and the above ground is a crucial element of these places where excavation is used as a means of hiding what is placed beneath. In our proposal, we explored how we could take the idea of using the underground to retain space above for the walkability and greenery that the neighborhood desires, while also having program beneath the square.

A public square in Gracia is the tangible place where neighbor’s lives are woven together and a community is formed, leading us to a structure based on the idea of a textile. The threads of this textile are then lifted in certain spots to reveal the underground and integrate the interior into the surrounding context through fenestration on both the facade and roof.

Site research and analysis, schematic design, production of architectural documents, tile analysis diagram, rendering exterior and interior Individual Contributions

11
12

EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC

SURFACE TILING OF MULTIPLE FUNCTIONS

GLULAM WOOD BEAMS

WINDOW POROSITY OF ROOF

GLULAM WOOD COLUMNS

NEGATIVE CARBON FOOTPRINT

FLEXIBILITY OF SHAPE AND SIZE

WINDOW POROSITY OF ROOF

13

LONGITUDINAL SECTION

01. 02. 03. 04. 05. PRIMARY ENTRANCE FOOTPATH SECONDARY EXIT SECONDARY EXIT SEATING AREA 01. 02. 03. 04. 05. 06. GARDEN ROOM GARDEN ROOM POOL ROOM CENTRAL GATHERING POOL ROOM LOCKER ROOMS GARDENS LIT BY UV LIGHTING POWERED BY PV PANELS AQUATIC AREA FOR COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES GROUND LEVEL FLOOR PLAN UNDERGROUND LEVEL FLOOR PLAN 01 02 03 04 05 01 02 03 04 05 06 14

PHOTOVOLTAIC PANELS ON HIGHER POINTS TO OPTIMIZE SUNLIGHT

GLASS FENESTRATION ALLOWS LIGHT TO ENTER UNDERGROUND

PLANTERS HOLD SHALLOW ROOT MEDITERRANEAN PLANTS

FUNCTIONALITY OF TILING
CATALAN CERAMIC TILING
15
16

03 FRAGMENTED REALITY

GALVESTON JUNETEENTH MEMORIAL PARK AND MUSEUM

305

Located in Galveston, Texas, the proposed project was a Juneteenth memorial, museum, and bell tower. Meant to be incorporated into the Freedom Walk, which is a series of sites integral to Juneteenth and Emancipation, the project needed to encompass the history and legacy of Juneteenth as well as create a space that the community can utilize. The design concept that guided our project is the idea Fragmented Reality, referring to the different realities, perspectives, and histories and how the pieces come together to illustrate the narrative of Juneteenth. History is not linear, but rather a timeline that is fractured by people’s differing perspectives and experiences. The idea of fragmented pieces coming together to complete a whole is directly reflected in the assembly of the project, and how the two main buildings are split, but connected through a central space. This central space defining the building is meant to be filled with people, which serve as the connective tissue between the fracture.

Individual Contributions

Site research and analysis, schematic design, production of architectural documents, rendering, physical model production, including 3D printing, laser cutting, and CNC

17

BUILDING 2 RENDER

BUILDING 1 RENDER
18
CHUNK STUDY
10’ 30’ 60’ SCALE 3/64” = 1’ 10’ 30’ 60’ SCALE 3/64” = 1’ SITE PLAN 19

FLOOR PLANS - BUILDING 1

FLOOR PLANS - BUILDING 1

FLOOR PLANS - BUILDING 2

FLOOR PLANS - BUILDING 2

01 FLOOR 02 - A FLOOR 02 - B
FLOOR
01 - A FLOOR 02
03
01 - B 10’ 30’ 60’ SCALE 1/8” = 1’
FLOOR
FLOOR
FLOOR
20
SECTION - BUILDING 1 5’ 15’ SCALE 3/16” = 1’ 30’ 10’ 30’ 60’ SCALE 1/16” = 1’
- EAST 21
ELEVATION

PHYSICAL MODEL

22

04 LINES OF COMMUNITY

CARTER LAKE COMMUNITY CENTER

The objective of this studio was to create a community center for a private neighborhood located in College Station. Not disrupting the surrounding site, populated by trees surrounding a lake, was a primary focus. Continuity of line and form was the driving force for the development of this project, connecting all planes throughout. The assembly of arcs become a path that is not just a 2D experience, but one that translates into a physical progression throughout the community room, library, studio, and exercise room. We explored how the continuity of line can translate to the human experience.

Individual

Contributions

Site research and analysis, schematic design, production of architectural documents, physical model production

23
Lorem ipsum CARTER LAKE COMMUNITY CENTER LEVEL 01 LEVEL -01 LEVEL 00 LEVEL 01 LEVEL 02
- BACK
LEFT 1
2 24
SECTION
SECTION -
SECTION - LEFT

ELEVATION - BACK

PHYSICAL

PHYSICAL MODEL

ELEVATION
- RIGHT
MODEL 25

05

KNOWLES-ROWLAND CENTER

RECORDING STUDIO FOR YOUNG ARTISTS

205 Professor:

This recording facility, located in Houston, Texas, is dedicated to young black artists and is meant to add to the Knowles-Rowland Center for Youth. We began designing this recording studio by extracting interior walls from preexisting houses. We then intersected, rotated, and scaled these walls, as well as created our own. Our main source of inspiration was Kurt Schwitters, a German artist who designed interiors. He did installation art, which is an artistic genre of three-dimensional works that are often site-specific and designed to transform the perception of a space. His faceted geometries are intersected with dense columns, creating a complex and textured articulation of the surface. Our final building has contrast between smooth surfaces and these jagged geometries, creating a parts to parts relationship. Perhaps the most crucial element that demonstrates this is the diagonal void slicing through our building vertically. This datum organizes, but also disrupts, the system of the building which shifts the arrangement of the plan.

Site research and analysis, schematic design, production of architectural documents, rendering Individual Contributions

26
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 FLOOR PLAN LEVEL 1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. AUDITORIUM CLOSET SOUND LOCK PROJECTION ROOM AUDITORIUM BALCONY RECORDING RESTROOM LOUNGE OFFICE CONTROL ROOM MUSIC LIBRARY FLOOR PLAN LEVEL -1 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. BACKSTAGE AREA RECORDING STUDIO SOUND LOCK CONTROL ROOM RESTROOM REHEARSING ROOM CHANGING ROOM RECORDING STUDIO CHANGING ROOM CHANGING ROOM SOUND LOCK STORAGE ROOM CONTROL ROOM OUTDOOR STAGE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 FLOOR PLAN LEVEL 0 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. PLAZA OFFICE OFFICE OFFICE AUDITORIUM OFFICE RESTROOM LOBBY RESTROOM CAFETERIA COAT ROOM OFFICE OFFICE PRODUCTION OUTDOOR 1 2 3 FLOOR PLAN LEVEL 2 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. SOUND LOCK SOUND LOCK RECORDING STUDIO CONTROL ROOM RECORDING STUDIO CONTROL ROOM RESTROOM SOUND LOCK BAR TERRACE RECORDING STUDIO CONTROL ROOM 27
EXTERIOR RENDERS INTERIOR RENDER 28

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