Friday, October 16, 2015

The Sweetest Housing Development

Yesterday, I had the pleasure of visiting the Sugar Hill affordable housing development with my studio. From its saw-tooth plan, attention to pre-cast details, and transparency of spaces, this project was not at all what I envisioned when the project architect (David Adjaye Architects) told us that it was for the lowest 10% of AMI households! (Around $15,000/year for a household of 4.)

There are many restrictions for affordable housing projects, which is why they typically look like this:


(View from the roof of Sugar Hill Development) 
Depressing! And check that huge shadow cast by the Greek-cross extrusion of the plan! It'd suck to have no light entering your window!

But David Adjaye's project looks like this:



I mean, what? At first glance, you might think...is this contextual at all?


But from the scale, subtle rose-detailing on the pre-cast concrete facade (which glimmers in just the right way!), and play in transparencies, the project is actually very rooted in its neighborhood (the junction between West Harlem and Washington Heights). There's a pre-school and large (78,000 SF) children's museum, which is rare up on 155th street. The project architect also talked about deriving certain datum lines from the surrounding context, but that's probably more to satisfy zoning than for the users...



A really nice lightwell condition on the ground floor, looking down into a double-height space of the museum.


From the museum, looking up.



A multipurpose space adjacent to the museum. Imagine playing a concert here! (Which my band might just pitch to them!)


Kiddie toilet in the pre-school classroom...pretty cool!



Almost Corbusian roof details...


That unobstructed roof view though.

If you want to learn more about the project, check out Broadway Housing Communities' website: http://www.bhc.org/housing/sugarhill/












October web shopping

I read somewhere that geminis have obsessive compulsive shopping tendencies? Maybe if I post these I won't feel the need to buy them. 


I just waded in a lake of navy blue paint, nbd.


Sick. Details. The proportion of the block heel isn't overwhelming, and the loose ankle cuff at the top gives it balance. 


Sold out, but at $425, I couldn't afford it anyway. (Thinking about making this because of the simple cut...but I'd have to be really careful about construction.)


Polar bear time.


Printed flannel shirts all the way!


I like the cut on this! Not too long, and streamlined.

Sci-arc professor and architect turned 3d printed jewelry designer. How very sci-arc. (40% off right now!)

Bracelets aren't usually my thing because I play piano and the weight difference on my wrists is annoying, but these are super cool and can stack in different ways!


Extended neck cage, Chromat (for the days I don't feel like talking to anyone)
Another architect-turned-fashion designer led brand.



I will never buy full-priced designer items as long as I'm in school...

Oh, and by the way, these are what I actually bought recently:



Lesson: If form follows function, then $$, not $$$$$, will be spent