Top Banner
PORTFOLIO Paramesh Maxwell Hutachinda
82

Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Jul 29, 2016

Download

Documents

Bachelor - Architecture
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

PO

RT

FO

LIO

ParameshMaxwellHutachinda

Page 2: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

(+66)093-4499544

WORK EXPERIENCE

Professor Assistant - Employer: Vera Marina Press, Saul Appelbaum Website: http://www.veramaurinapress.org/ Jan 2014 - Jan 2015 Schedule, Contact, & Communicate with Manufacturers.Assist in producing and painting artwork/modelsMeasure and Draw Building Plans, Gallery Installation

Tennis Coach Assistant - Employer: Pai Klomkleaw, Chulalongkorn University Jan 2014 - June 2016

Demonstrate to the athletes the skill you require them to perform. Advising athletes on the training, suitable equipment, stretchingProvide motivation to exercise and to maintain well-being. Be a role model especially during practice sessions.Practice with individual or group of athletes in drill sets and conditioning routines. Tennis Court Maintenance Teacher Assistant (TA) - Employer: Chulalongkorn University August 2015 – June 2016

Guiding and grading a group (10-20 students) of first year students through workshops on a weekly basis that focus on software design skills - Rhinoceros, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Indesign, Adobe After Effects and Maxwell. Sourcing materials for workshops/Collecting & documenting student work

Intern - Employer: Langdon & Seah May 2016 –

Real Estate Consulting

EDUCATIONArchitecture (B.Sci) Sept 2012 - June 2016Chulalongkorn University

PARAMESH MAX HUTACHINDA [email protected]

Page 3: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

WORK EXPERIENCE

Professor Assistant - Employer: Vera Marina Press, Saul Appelbaum Website: http://www.veramaurinapress.org/ Jan 2014 - Jan 2015 Schedule, Contact, & Communicate with Manufacturers.Assist in producing and painting artwork/modelsMeasure and Draw Building Plans, Gallery Installation

Tennis Coach Assistant - Employer: Pai Klomkleaw, Chulalongkorn University Jan 2014 - June 2016

Demonstrate to the athletes the skill you require them to perform. Advising athletes on the training, suitable equipment, stretchingProvide motivation to exercise and to maintain well-being. Be a role model especially during practice sessions.Practice with individual or group of athletes in drill sets and conditioning routines. Tennis Court Maintenance Teacher Assistant (TA) - Employer: Chulalongkorn University August 2015 – June 2016

Guiding and grading a group (10-20 students) of first year students through workshops on a weekly basis that focus on software design skills - Rhinoceros, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Indesign, Adobe After Effects and Maxwell. Sourcing materials for workshops/Collecting & documenting student work

Intern - Employer: Langdon & Seah May 2016 –

Real Estate Consulting

EDUCATIONArchitecture (B.Sci) Sept 2012 - June 2016Chulalongkorn University

“Office of Small and Medium Enterprises Promotion” Product Design WorkshopHost: Preechaya Sittipunt & Lalita WongbusarakhumDate: July 26-28, 2014 Location: Khon Kaen, TH//==============================================“Rifting Social Landscapes” Design Experimentation WorkshopHost: Mond Qu (Melbourne University) & Fredrik Hellberg (INDA)Location: Chulalongkorn University, BKK, TH//==============================================“Design between Tradition and Innovation: Beyond Borders” New-Olds Transcultural Design Workshop Host: Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations (ifa) and the Goethe-Institut Thailand together with TCDCDate: October 10 - 12, 2014Location: Thailand Creative & Design Center, BKK, TH//==============================================“Ambivalent Adaptation: a juxtaposition of ruins and realities” PAUU 03 WorkshopHost: Silpakorn University,Tunghai University, Kamla Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute for Architecture & Environmental StudiesChulalongkorn UniversityDate: December 11 – 18, 2015Location: Silapakorn University and Ayutthaya, TH//==============================================Alisa Andrasek’s Advanced Design Workshop on Pattern RecognitionHost: University College London & King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonbu-ri Location: SOA+D (Bang Khun Thian Campus), Bangkok//==============================================Design & Construction Project “Nongkhai School Canteen"Sponsor: Chulalongkorn UniversityDate: June - November 2014Location: Bueng Kan, TH//==============================================Design & Construction Project - “Hop Learning Center”Sponsor: Chulalongkorn UniversityDate: June - November 2015Location: Nong Khai, TH

WORKSHOP & PROJECTS

Basic

SolidworksSubstance Designer 3

Sketchup 8Modo 701

Houdini FX ProJavascript

VueMari 2.0v2

Daz Studio 4.6Silo 2.2

Microstation V8iCityEngine 2014

ArduinoLogic Pro X

Intermediate

Corel Painter 12Autodesk Mudbox 2013

123 Make 1.0UDK EditorUnity 5.2 1f1

QGIS Desktop 2.6.1Arc GIS 10

Marvelous Designer 4Cinema 4D

Autodesk Simulation CFD 2013Autodesk Maya 2012

Paracloud GEM 4Marmoset Toolbag 2

Poser Pro 2012

Advance

Ecotect Analysis 2011Meshlab

ProcessingPepakura

Zbrush 4R7Silhouette CAMEO

Realflow 2014Speedtree Cinema V6

Autodesk Showcase 2014

Fluent

AutoCad 2013KeyShot 6

3ds Max 20133D PrintingLumion 3.0.1

Revit Architecture 2014

Adobe Indesign CS6Adobe Photoshop CS6Adobe Illustrator CS6

Adobe Media Encoder CS6Adobe After Effects CS6

Adobe Premiere Pro

Rhinoceros 5Grasshopper 0.9

SKILLS & PROGRAMS

Page 4: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

CONTENTS

Flagship Store4

Architectural Elements5

Digital StereotomyTools for Architecture

Case StudyFarnsworth HouseLloyd’s Building

Big Fish CityUrban Planning

1

Collective Habitat Din Daeng Community Housing

2

Social Housing Habitat3

01

14

21

Parametric Design

33

35

9

6

Domestic HousingHouse Schism

7

8

40

51

58

72

River Craft & TerminalFluvial Infrastructure

First Year Drawing9 74

Page 5: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

1

Aquaculture has been a part of Thai communites for centures, up until now; as a means for food resource and commercial. Mekong River, Chao Phraya River, and their tributary systems contain as many diversity of fish species as the Great Amazon River.

Best still, many rare species of fish have their scientific nams after these unique river systems; such as Hymantura Chaophraya (Giant Fresh Water Stingray), Catlocarpio Siamensis (Siamese Giant Carp) and Mekaong Giant Catfishetc. Exporting both fresh and saltwater species to the global & local markets brought billions annually to Thailand's economic sector. HOwever, without proper understanding and sustainable management, many species will go extinct in a few years. Worst still, many suburban fishing communi-ties are now selling their properties for a higher price to the real estate developers; to take over and turn those flourished fish ponds into another mundane suburban gated communities. In the near future, not only we'l lose most of our fishing industries, Thailand's identity as a 'water-borne' community will be lost forever; along with many fish species.

The three phases of the studio comprise a broad range of operation scales to examine the larger context of regional and global issues that have shaped the recent history of local & global fishing indus-try.

The studio will operate between the design orientation of architec-ture, Urban design discourse, and the policy making practice of Urban Planning.

Big Fish CityUrban Planning

1

Page 6: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

2

Page 7: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

11

Page 8: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

4

Page 9: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

5

Page 10: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Kunchorn Waree CityParamesh Hutachinda

Komthat Syamananda

Erosion is a constant in ecosystems as well as architecture. Buildings will erode and new construction will take place, however this is not the same with our biological ecosystem. Nature is irreplacable when gone. Therefore, the study encompasses how to restore mangrove forests in Bangkhunthian District and also discover how to economically sustain tourism, the major GDP factor in Thailand. Throughout the project, fisheries, crabcultures, and other techniques to preserve agroculture is studied to curb the drastic e�ects shrimp farms have on the environment.

For these farms to harvest,a 3 year turnover is required for mass production, but it does not need to be intermittent when there is mangrove forests. In the second phase, alongside mangrove reforestation, a sport such as tennis is introduced to this fishery district. As fish natural gut can be made into the finest of tennis strings, a city is born among two local communities. Once a year on a random date, a Thai mythical beast proclaims the start of a tennis tournament played on all three courts, grass, hard, and clay. Thus, a physical and spiritual connection is ignited. In the final phase, the development of a facade that merges a delicate relationship between fireflys, light, and mangroves spurs and excites the birth of a new city in Bangkhunthian District. As tennis is played in the sun, the night soothes and calms the city with its firefly lullaby. Let it be known that this city is called ‘Khunchorn Waree City’.

Site

Ana

lysi

s of

Ban

gkun

thia

n D

istr

ict -

Sec

tion

New

Urb

an a

nd R

ural

Pro

posa

l for

Ban

gkhu

ntha

in D

istr

ict

- Pla

n

Res

earc

h D

iagr

ams

of F

ishe

ry, M

angr

ove,

and

Aqu

acul

ture

Mas

ter

Pla

n - S

cale

1:5

]]

Pers

pect

ive

of C

omm

erci

al A

rea,

Hot

el, a

nd T

enni

s Sp

ort C

ompl

ex

Gen

erat

ive

Des

ign

for

Faca

de to

att

ract

Fir

efly

- Bas

ed o

n Fo

rear

m

Ele

vati

on M

odel

Pro

posa

l- S

cale

1:1

0000

, Sca

le 1

:500

Pers

pect

ive

of F

inal

Pro

posa

l for

‘Khu

ncho

rn W

aree

Cit

y’

40-60% 70-80% >80%Productivity (kg/ha/year) 171 181 355 414

Wild Shrimp Production in Brackish Pond

Parameters Without MangroveWith Mangrove Cover

Khunchorn Waree City

6

Page 11: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

7

Page 12: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

8

Page 13: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

“Office of Small and Medium Enterprises Promotion” Product Design WorkshopHost: Preechaya Sittipunt & Lalita WongbusarakhumDate: July 26-28, 2014 Location: Khon Kaen, TH//==============================================“Rifting Social Landscapes” Design Experimentation WorkshopHost: Mond Qu (Melbourne University) & Fredrik Hellberg (INDA)Location: Chulalongkorn University, BKK, TH//==============================================“Design between Tradition and Innovation: Beyond Borders” New-Olds Transcultural Design Workshop Host: Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations (ifa) and the Goethe-Institut Thailand together with TCDCDate: October 10 - 12, 2014Location: Thailand Creative & Design Center, BKK, TH//==============================================“Ambivalent Adaptation: a juxtaposition of ruins and realities” PAUU 03 WorkshopHost: Silpakorn University,Tunghai University, Kamla Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute for Architecture & Environmental StudiesChulalongkorn UniversityDate: December 11 – 18, 2015Location: Silapakorn University and Ayutthaya, TH//==============================================Alisa Andrasek’s Advanced Design Workshop on Pattern RecognitionHost: University College London & King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonbu-ri Location: SOA+D (Bang Khun Thian Campus), Bangkok//==============================================Design & Construction Project “Nongkhai School Canteen"Sponsor: Chulalongkorn UniversityDate: June - November 2014Location: Bueng Kan, TH//==============================================Design & Construction Project - “Hop Learning Center”Sponsor: Chulalongkorn UniversityDate: June - November 2015Location: Nong Khai, TH

Basic

SolidworksSubstance Designer 3

Sketchup 8Modo 701

Houdini FX ProJavascript

VueMari 2.0v2

Daz Studio 4.6Silo 2.2

Microstation V8iCityEngine 2014

ArduinoLogic Pro X

Intermediate

Corel Painter 12Autodesk Mudbox 2013

123 Make 1.0UDK EditorUnity 5.2 1f1

QGIS Desktop 2.6.1Arc GIS 10

Marvelous Designer 4Cinema 4D

Autodesk Simulation CFD 2013Autodesk Maya 2012

Paracloud GEM 4Marmoset Toolbag 2

Poser Pro 2012

Advance

Ecotect Analysis 2011Meshlab

ProcessingPepakura

Zbrush 4R7Silhouette CAMEO

Realflow 2014Speedtree Cinema V6

Autodesk Showcase 2014

Fluent

AutoCad 2013KeyShot 6

3ds Max 20133D PrintingLumion 3.0.1

Revit Architecture 2014

Adobe Indesign CS6Adobe Photoshop CS6Adobe Illustrator CS6

Adobe Media Encoder CS6Adobe After Effects CS6

Adobe Premiere Pro

Rhinoceros 5Grasshopper 0.9

Page 14: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

10

Page 15: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

11

Aquaculture has been a part of Thai communites for centures, up until now; as a means for food resource and commercial. Mekong River, Chao Phraya River, and their tributary systems contain as many diversity of fish species as the Great Amazon River.

Best still, many rare species of fish have their scientific nams after these unique river systems; such as Hymantura Chaophraya (Giant Fresh Water Stingray), Catlocarpio Siamensis (Siamese Giant Carp) and Mekaong Giant Catfishetc. Exporting both fresh and saltwater species to the global & local markets brought billions annually to Thailand's economic sector. HOwever, without proper understanding and sustainable management, many species will go extinct in a few years. Worst still, many suburban fishing communi-ties are now selling their properties for a higher price to the real estate developers; to take over and turn those flourished fish ponds into another mundane suburban gated communities. In the near future, not only we'l lose most of our fishing industries, Thailand's identity as a 'water-borne' community will be lost forever; along with many fish species.

The three phases of the studio comprise a broad range of operation scales to examine the larger context of regional and global issues that have shaped the recent history of local & global fishing indus-try.

The studio will operate between the design orientation of architec-ture, Urban design discourse, and the policy making practice of Urban Planning.

Page 16: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

12

Page 17: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

13

1

Page 18: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

14

Collective HabitatDin Daeng Community Housing

2

Page 19: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 20: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Kunchorn Waree CityParamesh Hutachinda

Komthat Syamananda

Erosion is a constant in ecosystems as well as architecture. Buildings will erode and new construction will take place, however this is not the same with our biological ecosystem. Nature is irreplacable when gone. Therefore, the study encompasses how to restore mangrove forests in Bangkhunthian District and also discover how to economically sustain tourism, the major GDP factor in Thailand. Throughout the project, fisheries, crabcultures, and other techniques to preserve agroculture is studied to curb the drastic e�ects shrimp farms have on the environment.

For these farms to harvest,a 3 year turnover is required for mass production, but it does not need to be intermittent when there is mangrove forests. In the second phase, alongside mangrove reforestation, a sport such as tennis is introduced to this fishery district. As fish natural gut can be made into the finest of tennis strings, a city is born among two local communities. Once a year on a random date, a Thai mythical beast proclaims the start of a tennis tournament played on all three courts, grass, hard, and clay. Thus, a physical and spiritual connection is ignited. In the final phase, the development of a facade that merges a delicate relationship between fireflys, light, and mangroves spurs and excites the birth of a new city in Bangkhunthian District. As tennis is played in the sun, the night soothes and calms the city with its firefly lullaby. Let it be known that this city is called ‘Khunchorn Waree City’.

Site

Ana

lysi

s of

Ban

gkun

thia

n D

istr

ict -

Sec

tion

New

Urb

an a

nd R

ural

Pro

posa

l for

Ban

gkhu

ntha

in D

istr

ict

- Pla

n

Res

earc

h D

iagr

ams

of F

ishe

ry, M

angr

ove,

and

Aqu

acul

ture

Mas

ter

Pla

n - S

cale

1:5

]]

Pers

pect

ive

of C

omm

erci

al A

rea,

Hot

el, a

nd T

enni

s Sp

ort C

ompl

ex

Gen

erat

ive

Des

ign

for

Faca

de to

att

ract

Fir

efly

- Bas

ed o

n Fo

rear

m

Ele

vati

on M

odel

Pro

posa

l- S

cale

1:1

0000

, Sca

le 1

:500

Pers

pect

ive

of F

inal

Pro

posa

l for

‘Khu

ncho

rn W

aree

Cit

y’

40-60% 70-80% >80%Productivity (kg/ha/year) 171 181 355 414

Wild Shrimp Production in Brackish Pond

Parameters Without MangroveWith Mangrove Cover

16

Page 21: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 22: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

18

Page 23: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

19

Page 24: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

20

Page 25: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

21

Social Housing HabitatParametric Design

3

Page 26: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 27: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 28: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 29: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 30: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

26

Page 31: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

27

Page 32: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

28

Page 33: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

29

Page 34: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

30

Page 35: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

31

Page 36: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

32

Page 37: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Flagship Store4

33

Page 38: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

34

Page 39: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Architectural Elements

The project involves rigorous investiga-tions into elemental structural components of architecture such as columns, beams and walls that together form space. Experimen-tal model making and testing will lead to a discrete and comprehensive structural and spatial unit to be used in the creation of a modular system for a public housing build-ing.

5

35

Page 40: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

36

Page 41: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

37

Page 42: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

38

Page 43: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

39

Page 44: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

River Craft & TerminalFluvial Infrastructure

6

40

Page 45: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

41

Page 46: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

The project aims to develop a visionsfor the future of fluvial transportation of people and goods on the Chao Phraya River in Bangkok.

The site starts from Bhumibol bridge to Rat Burana district where the build-ings are mostly residential (70%), high rise buildings such as Kasikorn tower, and warehouses.

In the second phase, the site is analzed on an urban level in order to under-stand the activity on the river and its connectivityto the city.Eventually, a specific and strategic location is chosen for atransportation hub linking the river with the city.

Throughout the project, each team member will be exploring a range of differ-ent scales both in the form of research and design and will design their own fluvial vehicles (River Craft) eventually leading to the design of a terminal building containing all the necessary functions to serve as a transportation hub containing additional programs. Later on, students will develop infrastructural strategies that will links the terminal with the rest of the city on an urban level.

42

Page 47: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

43

Page 48: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

44

Page 49: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

45

Page 50: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

46

Page 51: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

47

Page 52: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

48

Page 53: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

49

Page 54: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

50

Page 55: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Domestic Housing7

HOUSE SCHISM

Housing Development Project, about a Family whose Religion is Sikhism.

As many trees are cut down every day, this house shelters my client in the shape of a cut down tree. In other words, a tree stump. This symbolizes the family’s value of preserving nature. As the family continues to live in this house, they sym-bolize the new growth within the tree.

The Programs within this tree house are designed to bond family relationships, stimulate tradition in an ever changing era, and replant “Sikh” Virtues in Adolescents. 51

Page 56: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

52

Page 57: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

53

Page 58: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

54

Page 59: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

55

Page 60: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

56

Page 61: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

57

Page 62: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Digital Stereotomy, Tools for Architecture is an experimental design studio which will this term ex-plore the use of block construction -aka stereoto-my- as a construction system for the future. The use of blocks in architecture has historically been domi-nated by stones and clay based materials such as bricks but as innovation in construction materials in the last century have advanced to much moreso-phisticated levels, block construction has been left out of the construction site, deemed inefficient and costly. This studio believes that if block construc-tion reunites with material innovation and is al-lowed beyond the history books, the science of ste-reotomy can be revived and once more create ad-vanced structures in which geometry plays a key role and where the engineering of each part is as im-portant as that of the whole.

Digital StereotomyTools for Architecture

8

58

Page 63: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

59

Page 64: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

The studio will begin with an introduction to the

past and present of stereotomy through a series of

lectures and software tutorials. Students will then

select materials, structural types and context and

begin the looping journey between research and

design that will conclude in the design of a tool

to generate structures. The purpose of the structure

will be speculated on possible outcomes that

can be generated with the tool. The result will be a

research+tools package defining a new structural

system for block construction -aka stereotomy.

60

Page 65: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

61

Page 66: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

The aim of this studio is to learn how to read and

understand masonry structures of the past, such

as the great cathedrals of Europe and the temples of Egypt.

The use of virtual and physical simulation methods,

using parametric and analytical software to generate

functioning digital models for testing will aid digital fabrication methods, such as 3D-printing, CNCing,

mould making, etc., for analogue testing.

62

Page 67: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

63

Page 68: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

64

Page 69: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

65

Page 70: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Digital Stereotomy, Tools for Architecture is an experimental design studio which will this term ex-plore the use of block construction -aka stereoto-my- as a construction system for the future. The use of blocks in architecture has historically been domi-nated by stones and clay based materials such as bricks but as innovation in construction materials in the last century have advanced to much moreso-phisticated levels, block construction has been left out of the construction site, deemed inefficient and costly. This studio believes that if block construc-tion reunites with material innovation and is al-lowed beyond the history books, the science of ste-reotomy can be revived and once more create ad-vanced structures in which geometry plays a key role and where the engineering of each part is as im-portant as that of the whole.

66

Page 71: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

67

Page 72: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

68

Page 73: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

69

Page 74: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

The aim of this studio is to learn how to read and

understand masonry structures of the past, such

as the great cathedrals of Europe and the temples of Egypt.

The use of virtual and physical simulation methods,

using parametric and analytical software to generate

functioning digital models for testing will aid digital fabrication methods, such as 3D-printing, CNCing,

mould making, etc., for analogue testing.

70

Page 75: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

71

Page 76: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

Case StudyFarnsworth House

Lloyd’s Building

9

72

Page 77: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 78: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

First Year Drawing10

74

Page 79: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

76

Page 80: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

77

Page 81: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio
Page 82: Paramesh Hutachinda's Undergraduate Portofolio

(+66)093-4499544

PARAMESH MAX HUTACHINDA [email protected]