Architecture

Layer One by Kevin Olsen

​Timber High-Rise in Red Hook, Brooklyn, NY

The inner layer of the timber high-rise is complete and starting to develop quite well.  Converting the outer layer of the stair core to glazed fire-resistant glass made a huge impact on reducing the solid feeling of the overall scheme.​

​The final step is solidifying the structural system on the outer layer and integrating the ventilation units into the skin. Borrowing from the E2 Facade system by Schueco, the HVAC will be condensed into the outer skin and take advantage of the natural convection of air moving up the building and between the two layers of glass.

​E2 Facade System by Schueco

Timber in the City Studio by Kevin Olsen

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This semester of studies I am participating in a competition held by the ACSA called "Timber in the City." Tasked with designing a high-rise mixed used tower in Brooklyn, Red Hook specifically, we'll be exploring how to take Timber and other wood products well beyond their traditional capabilities.

This project will open up some creative options as structural timber in high-rise applications is still very young and looked with much skepticism  Thanks to modern fabrication technology however, there should be an opportunity to either extend the performance of existing systems or develop an entirely new system to meet the design needs.

So far, we've embarked on the task of exploring the properties and origins of wood species, modern timber systems, looking at fabrication techniques and analyzing the small set of precedent buildings using timber in high-rise construction.

New products like CLT (cross laminated timber) and post-tensioned timber seem to be the most promising so far. Combined with 5-axis CNC routing or robotic assembly, this should be possible to produce in small runs with low overhead, opening up the possibility for the industrial space requirements in the competition to become a wood fabrication studio.

Overall, the project is very promising and the studio is excited about getting start on schematic design following our site research presentation next week.

Parametric Wood | Daniel Widlowski | Archinect by Kevin Olsen

Building on the potential of parametric design, this project by Daniel Widlowski works with wood to translate input criteria into usable form. Often overshadowed by metal, plastic and concrete, wood is a great building product that is sustainably harvested and removes carbon dioxide from the environment