SsD

architecture + urbanism

Jinhee Park wins Marie Claire Award

Jinhee Park has just won Marie Claire's prominent 'Women on Top' award and is featured in the November issue of Marie Claire.  As the only architect of the group, the issue features 16 women who are leaders in their profession.  Katie Holmes presented the awards at the top of the Hearst Tower.

"Starting out with just a game-changing idea, a bulletproof business plan, or an electrifying design, these women are reinventing their industries and demolishing boys' clubs from the ranks of the military to Silicon Valley. They're all under 40, but those aren't stars in their eyes: They're planning a revolution."  – Sophia Moura, Marie Claire

Jinhee Park wins 5 under 40

"New England Home's 5 Under 40 awards spotlight the hottest emerging talent in New England… Selected by an all-star committee of regional design leaders, 5 Under 40 winners are the people to watch…" Each winner designed a custom rug produced and auctioned by sponsor Landry & Arcari – proceeds were donated to Barakat, a charity promoting educational opportunities for women and children in central and south Asia. Jinhee's 'pond' rug (photo right) is a space-saving design meant to fit in a corner – it is part of the 'sustainable minimal living' series of projects being designed by SsD.

Please join us for the celebration on September 15, 2011 at The Galleria at 333 Stuart Street / Boston / 6:30-9:30pm.

SsD at Modern Atlanta

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SsD's video 'Bicycle Ride' is an animated survey of our recent work and is on exhibit at the Modern Atlanta Museum.  A special thanks to Manifesto Architecture who curated and designed the exhibit.  Also thanks to the 'inep+ 93nii' at xarrier for creating the original music – more collaborations with them in the near future…

The idea that architecture is beyond what can be represented in still images has haunted our recent work.  We have recently explored animation as a means to describe the passage of time: the changes brought on by people inhabiting the spaces, the impact of natural elements, the idea of process. But the question remains -  how does one communicate  transformation, experience, and phenomenon, in a globalizing economy where the exchange value of pure imagery remains a driving force?  In fact, even with the promise of the internet and 'multi-media,' the iconic still-frame still drives (and limits) how architecture is represented – perhaps even more so today.  Our own work however is moving from three dimensions to incorporating the fourth dimension of time:  How can the sequence of moving through the spaces be part of the everyday existense of the building? How can the architecture itself be abstract enough, not for abstraction's sake, but in the service of allowing multiple readings and uses? Instead of a series of still images, perhaps our portfolio should become a flip-book.

Clover Restaurant is completed

The first of the Clover Restaurants is open at Harvard Square at 7 Holyoke.  Not only was it a privilege collaborating with Clover on a new concept for fast food, it was also a privilege working in the Holyoke Center, the Harvard owned building designed by Josep Lluís Sert.  Our approach was to combine the minimum-footprint-aesthetic of the Clover brand with the abstract spatial concepts of Sert’s space:  Like a minimalist art installation, fluorescent ‘cloud canopies’ are suspended below the original waffle ceiling.  A void cut into the existing mezzanine brings natural light from a skylight above while a wire trellis will allow climbing ivy to eventually reach this light source.  The idea of transparency is both literal and figural: The boundary between ‘kitchen’ and ‘customer’ is dissolved to reveal the workings of the food-making while the use of glass railings also allows visual communication between spaces while reflecting and multiplying the light.

Clover is part of a larger concept for tasty, vegetarian fast food. Their (and our) mission is to revolutionize the way food is produced, distributed, and ultimately consumed - because if we can do so, it will have an enormously positive impact on the environment.  This is not just ‘greenwash,’ in fact if you look at modern food systems you will notice enormous dysfunction on many interrelated levels.  Because of the sheer scale of our current state of affairs, a slight shift will make revolutionary change.  The clover food trucks which rolled out earlier last year are part of this larger network.  Also check out Clover on the web.

SsD featured in ‘The New Modern House’

The Big Dig House was recently featured in Jonathan Bell’s and Ellie Stathaki’s The New Modern House: Redefining Functionalism.

 

The Center for Arts at the Armory is completed

In terms of preservation strategies, armories are truly a difficult urban building type.  Once a place for military training, they are now becoming almost wholly obsolete:  Their vast interior drill hall and their monumental footprint makes them difficult to convert to any other urban program including housing.  Meanwhile, many of them appear on highly restrictive state or national historic registers.  This confounds developers further as surrounding land costs and thus development intensity has multiplied around these buildings but the restrictions placed on renovating them makes it impossible to increase their density and make the numbers work.

The Somerville Armory is one such building.  Nestled in an otherwise dense residential zone, it sat underutilized for years, slowly deteriorating.  After the building was courageously acquired by the Highland Avenue Trust, we worked with them, the Arts at the Armory, the City of Somerville, and the Massachusetts State Historical Commission to adaptively re-use the structure into a  regional, 30,000 sf non-profit arts center that houses a multitude of community oriented programs including NGO’s, artists, dance, and music studios and offices, galleries, arts education and after school programs, and a cafe/performance space.  The building’s anchor is the former drill hall which now serves as a multi-use space that host a variety of community programs, concerts, and educational venues.

Braver House completed

The Braver House  is an alternative for older suburbs where houses are being built to the setback line creating buildings much too big for their lots.  Instead we designed a small footprint house but built a screen to the maximum setback line.  This allows indoor spaces to extend to the exterior and also allows us to drastically reduce potable water use by eliminating a good portion of the suburban grass lawn.

Convergent Flux, Korea opens at the Korea Society

Please join us for the opening reception and roundtable for the NY installation of the exhibit, Convergent Flux, Korea first shown at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.

Opening Reception and Panel Discussion
Panel: Taewook Cha, Felipe Correa, Mark Rakatansky, and Soo-In Yang, moderated by Jinhee Park and John Hong
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
6:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. (panel at 7:00 p.m.)
The Korea Society
950 Third Avenue, 8th Floor

A special thanks to the Harvard GSD, The Korea Society, and The Architectural League of New York for collaborating in sponsoring this event. 

Photo above:  Interactive electronics are being installed by Peter Ortner and Juho Lee of SsD who worked long hours over the weekend to install the exhibit.  Natalee Newcombe (Program Officer of Contemporary Issues at the Korea Society) and Joe Watson also provided crucial help and coordination in the installation.

Bean Residence completed

The bean residence is a 2400 sf gut renovation in Manhattan. The existing layout fragmented public areas and did not take advantage of natural light.  Through the reconfiguration of the plan and introducing a restrained palette of materials, underutilized spaces become connective zones.  Where the deep floorplate limited the amount of daylight, LED lighting in conjunction with frosted mirrored surfaces emit daylight rendered tones from the side as well as above giving continuity with adjacent sunlit areas.

SsD is selected as a finalist in the Incheon City Design Competition

SsD has been selected as a finalist in an international competition in Incheon, Korea. We propose recovering Incheon’s lost maritime history by recreating an inland sea around its Ahamdo island - now threatened to be infilled by adjacent urban development – allowing it to be an island once again. This sea will incorporate artificial reefs to shelter a delicate wetland ecosystem with an urban wilderness park running through it. A floating pedestrian bridge, reminiscent of the historical path to Ahamdo, will be the new destination that connects Incheon to its new waterfront district.

Clover Food Trucks are on the roll

In the last year, we’ve been working with Clover on their food trucks and their new restaurant in Harvard Square.  Boston area residents may have already visited one of the two Clover Food Lab Trucks that are on the roll, one in Kendall Square and the other in Dewey Square near South Station.  For those of you that don’t know Clover, they are an amazing innovation in (dare we say it) ‘fast food.’  But don’t let the connotations fool you:  First of all, the owner, Ayr, is very modest about the little revolution he is starting.  In working through the design with him, we decided early on that there will be nothing in the architecture or marketing materials that screams that Clover is vegeterian, locally sourced, and organic whenever it can be.  What matters here is not making these distinctions (which are too quickly becoming marketing buzzwords), but instead to simply serve up delicious, healthy (and fast) food. 

Starting by recycling decommissioned cargo trucks, the Clover Trucks have been designed to be efficient, low-energy, passively cooled, and abstractly minimal – like a white-board on wheels ready to be written on.  Despite their simple appearance, they are a small small feat of engineering that spans very compact kitchen and storage design to the integration of an i-phone driven POS system spearheaded by Ayr with his affinity for cutting-edge and user-friendly technology. As we refine the design for future trucks, they will be converted to bio-diesel and include solar hot water and photovoltaic panels.  And as we zoom out and think about the larger picture, we hope to not only contribute to the design of the spaces, but also to the rethinking of the larger environmental predicament of our food systems:  how it is distributed, prepared, and consumed.

SsD teams with Parkkim and Jegong Architects: wins 2nd place in major urban design competition

SsD focused on sustainable low-rise / high-density urbanism for this new waterfront city south of Seoul.  Although the design of the new urban parcels are strategically individualzed and limited in scale, as a whole they work in conjunction with each other in contributing to an overall energy and resource strategy:  By working as a single entity rather than a fragmented whole,  solar energy is harnessed, water runoff controlled, prevailing winds captured for passive cooling, and public space aggregated into a larger cohesive network that links surrounding topographies.

In keeping with this theme that the ’whole is greater than the sum of its parts,’ the 2nd place win against four of the largest firms in Korea is  ’partial confirmation’ that a collaborative of smaller firms can form a strong interdisciplinary team able to compete on an international level.