These are a selection of drawings and a rendering I presented at our final review. The project was to design a house on a particular site in upstate New York. I chose to make my house a home for 8 children in foster care. Their bedrooms are on wheels, allowing for the children to decide where they want to place them and providing them with the chance to begin to negotiate the boundaries of their own environment. The supporting structure of the floor above is transformed into a climbing net as it descends below into the children's realm. (Click on each photo to zoom in)
Keep checking back for updates on our new current project; a library!
who would you like to design something for… an ideal project? a home for the elderly because I don't think we have questioned enough how we end our lives. for me it would be very depressing to be taken out of my home, and into a retirement home, or hospital and that's the end of your life. I'd like to create something that helps commemorate a lifetime and celebrates the knowledge old people have. from rojkind's interview with designboom on december 8th, 2009
Can architecture create a harmonious coexistence among people? That's what architects Rami Kopty and Joe Nashashibi are proposing in their project - Uni-Diversity - for the city of Nazareth.