Tuesday, 30 April 2013

It's May. May we all do our best next week? May we have some positive feedback? May I stop dreaming of contours, plans, sections, sketches please?....

Ticking off the items on my 'to do' list is a bit addictive. Now I'm underway I might even say I'm enjoying it. But I don't think I'll manage absolutely everything. Here's the list of completed sheets in a nice welcoming golden glow colour, followed by the 'awaiting attention' in rather an alarming red:

Concept Sections for 1:500 stage (2 sheets)
Development Site Plan at 1:200
Development sections  for 1:200 stage (2 sheets)
Planting Plan at 1:200
Lighting Concept Plan at 1:200
Site Plan at 1:50
Supporting sketches for 1:50 stage (well, the sheet is done but needs improving if there's time)
Supporting sequential sketches for 1:500 stage

Concept Masterplan at 1:2000
Selected Site Plan at 1:500 (I might have to resort to the original unless someone slips an extra couple of days into the week - I need one of those time-turning devices)
Hardworks Key Plan at 1:200
Planting Plan - structural, for 1:200 stage
Hardworks Plan for 1:50 stage
Setting Out Plan for 1:50 stage
Supporting Sections for 1:50 stage (3 sheets)


I'm really pleased with three of my golden glowing sheets: the 1:50 plan; the planting plan and one sheet of sequentials. That leaves 7 sheets that I know could be improved. It's a bit annoying that I now feel I have adequate skills to present things in a more effective way... but not the time to re-do the sheets.

Here's the 1:50 finished plan, the lighting concept sheet and the finished planting plan:























May Day will see me doing some sections. Then I will move on to the hardworks etc. etc. etc..
Then I will stock up with drawing pins ready for the hanging. Hopefully I won't need the rope. If I do, I'll make sure it's an appropriate plaited one.

Here's the Oscar speech: thank you Russell for the gentle guidance and for carrying me around in your pocket. Thank you Dom for the thing I should probably not mention. Thank you Newcome for Tommy Walsh and your unique humour - oh and your business card which is filed in a safe place. Thank you hugely to Karin and Heidi for being in this together. Thank you to the whole group for the bonding that has gradually formed. And thank you Pierre for those Union Jack pants...

And sorry to my family for ignoring them for four years.









Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Countdown...

Sorry blog, life is a little busy.

We have just two weeks until the final crit. and presentation at  Hadlow. We are told by last  year's students that this is the BIG DAY - we are marked but then have one month to improve everything.

Yesterday we were given the 'To Do' list. Just the 20 A1 sheets to present to the firing squad 
on 7 May.
Oh yea.
I feel a little rhyme coming on...
So much to do and not very long,
Will we make it, I rather wonder...
without making a terrible blunder.

OK, I think that's enough of that.

Here's an update on what I've been doing lately:
Rendering the 1:50 design plan (just one third approx. for comments). Here it is.


I have annotated but not shown here. Comments yesterday were sort of OK. Julia said it's too fussy. When I continue the rendering I will attempt to blend some of the planting on the bank together rather than showing all the textures. Jamie said to lose the 'billard ball' effect on the Buxus balls. Actually I've just noticed this was the slightly older plan, there is now another hard surface at the top of the stramp, and a Magnolia - it will connect to the Main Avenue.  As Julia said, we don't want our park users to trample their muddy feet all over the lovely clean lines of my steps. There are also people in the later plan.

Here are two sequentials - didn't manage the other six. These show spring and late summer looking north from the bottom of the perennial 'meadow' bank.
Feeling somewhat behind schedule. I've done one section but not the other two for 1-50 scale.

I have just finished the planting plan. Here it is (it took me about 22 hours, OMG):


I have added a schedule and the title block, plus some grey shading to make some of the grasses a bit easier to identify. I will also need to do the specification... if only I could remember what is meant to go on it.

Tomorrow I will be earning a little crust, then on Thursday I'll have a go at the Design Plan again. I tried using InDesign for the annotation but got a bit scared at using something unfamiliar at this late stage. 

This is my current process: AutoCAD; into Photoshop for colouring/rendering; into Publisher for annotation. This planting plan was all done in AutoCAD but I've added some greys in Photoshop now. Publisher really doesn't cope well with the large files but it's a familiar old friend.

Just the 15 sheets to go now then.

Toodle pip.

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

Being Green

Today and yesterday were all about Green Engineering, so my font colour has been selected with care. Although it felt a bit tricky to have two days without any progress on the uni. work front, it was all very good. Particularly today, that being SUDS. Sustainable urban drainage systems. As I have a rain garden in my scheme, this is entirely appropriate... except this area isn't actually in my 1-50 portion so it's 'invisible'.

Working in a team, as we did today, is tricky. Perhaps I should be used to it by now. But, particularly when there's such a time constraint, it's all too easy to do one of three things: 

  • argue in a friendly sort of way
  • all talk and no action
  • have the goal in mind but not the strategy to reach it
We (Matt/Dan/Tim/Timothy/Newcome/Ivolena and I) had to incorporate a SUDS scheme into a West London housing development with its adjacent land. The six teams did similar things within their design - after all, we were meant to include swales, filtration ponds, attenuation ponds and oil and petrol interceptors. Most of us included green roofs; some included porous paving; green walls; biodiversity; urban agriculture; community gardening; nature trails; rainwater harvesting, amenity land and more.

What stood out more than anything in the end-of-day presentations was that we needed to have a logical process to show how we worked out what we were going to include in our design... rather than just the final masterplan. Our process was highly enjoyable (mostly) but it was all a bit haphazard. We should have done a simple bubble diagram to start with and followed on from there.

The other annoying thing was that other teams seemed to produce more of a 'grown-up' set of sketches to show at the end of the day. Some were really simple but looked amazingly effective.

The comments, however, were quite kind. A bit like those you might hand out to a small child who is trying his best but he's just not quite mature enough to manage. 
I didn't take photos of our efforts, so here's an ecology-related pair to brighten up the page.


Oh, I might have forgotten to mention that we came joint last. But... it's the journey rather than the destination that matters, so I understand.

Thank you to Peter Wilder for an enjoyable and informative day. And Jamie of course.




Tuesday, 2 April 2013

April antics

It's been a while since my piggy snout rooted around this blogspot.

So, what's been happening?

Well, the crit went pretty well I'm pleased to say. Jamie doesn't like Escalonia ("hates" it in fact ), nor my criss-crossing bridges. He referred to my planting on the perennial terraces as "dog biscuits". But the Escalonia and bridges will stay, as I quite like them both. The dog biscuits will morph into candyfloss or some other delicious treat.

My plan rendering is "verging on overworked" but my model was "more interesting" I was encouraged by the comment "there's a level of strength to it", and I will hang on to that thought as compliments don't come floating by too often. Oh and both he and Julia thought the sequential sketches were OK - just need a similar sky to draw them together.

The section is weak - but I knew this. And the second one is...... missing completely.

So all in all, a good result. Plenty to work on over Easter of course. Especially as we now have our selected portion to develop at a scale of 1-50.

I cast the Easter eggs aside and set to work on the sections first. They took several days. Every single thing takes days. Then I completed the rendering on the plan, apart from some hand-rendering that I will complete when it's been printed.

 Then I revisited the sequentials, added the final one and gave them the suggested sky.

Then I went away for a night in a hotel and had a couple of days walking in the freezing wind but nice bright sunshine... bliss.

Now I'm back and had a look at the 1-50. Must confess, I don't quite know where to start. I really can't remember how I started when I did this for the 1-200. My brain seems to be missing a little portion.

I will sleep on it. Got some work (remember that - the stuff that actually pays you money) to do tomorrow, so I will return to the task later in the week).

Posted below are my latest 'improvements'.