Showing posts with label Site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Site. Show all posts

20110917

More writing...Site Analysis.


Site_My Bathroom, Rolleston, Canterbury

Site analysis.

My bathroom at my parent’s house in Rolleston is a 1750 mm by 3500 mm room in their 2009 Stonewood Eco home. We selected our house from a variety of pre-drawn generic house plans at a Stonewood showroom in Rolleston and had them altered slightly by one of the architects at Stonewood.

Image 2, Stonewood. (2009). Site Plan. Rolleston, Canterbury; New Zealand. Photocopy (NTS).

The alterations we made to the bathroom were only slight; we asked to have a sliding door between the bathroom and my sister’s bedroom. The door means that she has the freedom to walk between bathroom and bedroom during the touchy teenage years (she is not even a teenager yet). We selected out bathroom ‘products’ from one of the recommended bathroom product stores, upgraded the shower head and tubing, chose the colour of the faucets – chrome or matte, and voila, the bathroom.

The bathroom was to be ‘Spanish White’ courtesy of Resene and painted over the AquaLine Jib, required in wet-areas of the home. The floor was to have grey marbled 500 x 500 tiles that enclosed the bathtub and it’s surrounding wet-areas. The bathtub, sink and shower cubicle (products) were a pristine white with chrome faucets, taps and drains (sub-products). There was to be a large mirror about the sink with chrome and matte glass light fittings above it. The doors – swing and sliding – were to be ‘V-groove’ and painted the same ‘Spanish White’ and span from floor to ceiling and to be possible one of my favourite features of the house. Behind the swing door, mounted on the Spanish White wall, is the heated towel rail – chrome with 4 rails to hang our towels. On the ceiling sits the heat lamp, and on either side of the heat lamp sat a standard light, all enclosed in an oval fixture. All in all the bathroom was plain and simple, nothing fancy, affordable and gave us a place to perform our bathroom rituals, routines and daily actions. In December of 2009 – just before Christmas – we moved into our shiny new Stonewood home[xx1] 

MORE PHOTOS HERE INC DESCRIPTION OF B/R THROUGH PICTURES.



Analysis of My Bathroom

           Modelling My Bathroom

Image 3. Lorna Smith. (2011). Modelling my Bathroom. Rolleston, Canterbury; New Zealand. Sketchup[xx2] .

In order to understand my bathroom more, I modelled it digitally using Google Sketchup[xx3]  – a brilliant tool for quickly sketch-modelling 3D. Modelling the existing bathroom space quickly helped me understand the space I was dealing with – drawing the concrete slab, Damp Proof Membrane (DPM), studs, dwangs, lintels and jib create an impenetrable shell (with the exception of doorways and windows) for design to occur within.

Image 4. Lorna Smith. (2011). Modelling my Bathroom. Rolleston, Canterbury; New Zealand. Sketchup.

The final Sketchup model of the bathroom allows the reader to visualize the room in which I bathe, shower, wash, clean and admire myself. It demonstrates the bathroom’s rigid structure and layout of the products the room contains. Using this initial model, my next intention was to re-configure the products within the bathroom. It is my belief that the layout, or arrangement of bathroom products, is a result of the room provided to be labelled ‘the bathroom’. I believe the bathroom is not designed for convenience of the use of a product, nor for the logic of the rituals a person performs within the walls of the bathroom – I believe it has this layout simply because the products do not fit into the bathroom any other way.

PEREC is relevant here. “The interest of such an undertaking [as living in an airport for X amount of time] would lie above all in its exoticism: a displacement, more apparent than real, of our habits and rhythms, and a minor problem of adaptation”[1]. We will always adapt to the space or room provided for us. Perec suggests that it is not in fact where we live and perform our daily actions that matter – as humans we will adapt to the environment we inhabit. This to me also speaks to the idea of reconfiguring the bathroom – no matter where products are situated within the confines of the bathroom, we will adapt to that configuration. In short, we will shower wherever the shower is.

The arrangement of the shower, bath, sink, mirror and towel rail within my bathroom is not logical. I set out to see if my bathroom products could be re-arranged another way which was logical, and if my bathroom layout is they way it is due to the simple fact that the products do not fit into the allocated space any other way. Taking Perec’s idea of adaptation into consideration, I decided to visually reconfigure my bathroom. I printed out two plans of my bathroom at scale 1:20, one with the products overlayed red, and another white. I cut out the white products and started to move them around the plan of the space that is my bathroom (below).

Image 5. Lorna Smith. (2011).  Reconfiguring the Bathroom. Rolleston, Canterbury; New Zealand. Paper cut out.



[1] PEREC CITE


 [xx1]Much of this section could be done in a photo essay with notes.

 [xx2]I desire more context- sun direction. Or rather, you decide how much context it includes such as the view to the neighbours or the sea or the mountains, the distance to the laundry room, toilet etc.

 [xx3]OK, you do not need to tell us this but what I do want to know is what you learned from modelling it, how that differs or parallels the actual, and how modelling it in cad allows you to explore it further.

20110905

Reflection // Process





Product & Action from Bathroom 1 text

Product / Action
Beginning to move things around in the digital version of my bathroom - this has limitations, of course, because of the walls and structure that surround the products within the bathroom.
In image 1, I have pulled the shower out from the wall 500mm, and rotated the sink so it is parallel with what represents the shower door.

 Image 2 is the joining of the sink and the shower, doubling up the partition between the shower water and the rest of the bathroom with the mirror behind the sink.

 In image 3 I have rotated the attached shower and sink so that the sink is at a right-angle with the existing walls. This is so that the sink is the first product you come across when entering this bathroom.

 In image 4, the sink and shower have been brought closer to the main entrance to the bathroom - the doorway at the top of the image is the recessed sliding-door into my sister's bedroom, the main entrance is on the opposite wall. The progression as you enter the room is from sink to shower to bath.

This relates to my recordings in the bathroom diary I have been keeping - and duration - the sink was the most used [for brushing teeth, putting things on top of, - but mostly for the mirror behind it], followed by the shower [used for showeringwashing my hair and cleaning mostly] and lastly the bath [which was only used once in 3 weeks for bathing].

 Image 5 is a plan view of the new bathroom showing the progression again. I have centered the sink, shower and bath, which look onto the window of the bathroom.

Image 6 shows the new layout of the bathroom. The shower and sink have been moved closer to the main entrance (seen on the right-bottom of the image) and the bath has had it's skirting removed and placed to the side, and moved to touch the far wall under the window.

Image 7 is a plan view of the new bathroom, Bathroom 1, which shows the progression nicely from sink (used a lot) to bath (used little). Note that the shower-drain and the sink-drain have lined up and all drains are in one straight line.

It is interesting to note that this progression - sink, shower, bath - also takes into account duration of use of product unintentionally. The sink is used in short bursts throughout the day, the shower in longer bursts once a day and the bath taking the longest time, and used seldom.

20110901

The Apartment - Georges Perec [+ Lorna's notes]









Scans of Georges Perec's The Apartment in Species of Spaces... I tried to scan in my post-it notes of comments but it wasnt working so I've re-typed them on top.

20110829

Tuesday_Sketchup model

 Starting to construct the sink with drawer underneath
 Side view of construction and handle (adjusted later on)
 Tap, mirror and drain hole
 Over all plan of my bathroom from Sketchup today
 Closer view of my bathroom
Perspective view of the bathroom showing over all layout. Includes towel rail and improved drawer and door handles. Yet to add individual tiles and lighting.
Plan of my bathroom.

Shower also needs shower head, hose and shelving. 

Sketchup model shower progress

 
 Detail of the glass structure, door hinge and drain
 Close up of the drain
 Over all view of the shower in progress
More detailed still...
Including the faucet and door handles

Sketchup model cont...

 Over all above view of my bathroom
 Detailing up the bath
 Beginning on the shower
Playing with curving the shower floor

20110823

Exploded structure

Diagrammatic image of the structural components
 Labelled structural exploded structural diagram
 Plan view of exploded components
And once again, in relation to the rest of the house.

Exposing structure perspectives

 N-W Elevation
S-E Elevation
 S-W Elevation
 N-E Elevation
South-facing Perspective

Just some images exposing the structure in the bathroom. Needs to be detailed up more and include tiles etc. I've also included the existing floor slab which shows the relationship between the rest of the house and the bathroom. The bathroom is in the center of the house.