Browsing by Author "Moore, Anil"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Owen Brown Village Center(Partnership for Action Learning in Sustainability (PALS), 2016) Cunningham, Peter; Kilian, Joshua K.; Knudsen, Aren Kurt; Machado, Christiane Jones; McKenley, Joseph Stephen; Moore, Anil; Boun, Sandra Oh; Southard, Renata; Vogtman, John Calvin; Winter, Abby Joy; Thornton, Arica L.; VanderGoot, JanaStudents in the Master of Architecture program worked with representatives from the Howard County Department of Planning, the Columbia Association, and the Owen Brown Village board to come up with redevelopment schemes for Owen Brown Village Center. The semester began with the production of a series of base maps, which analyzed demographics, issues hydrology and the historical vision of James Rouse for the city of Columbia. Students also researched a series of built case study projects from around the world that provided inspiration and metrics for their design proposals at Owen Brown. Finally, each design team worked closely with a student from the Real Estate Development Capstone course to come up with program, square footages, and adjacencies for their design schemes.Item Solar Decathlon 2017 D-5: Architectural Renderings(2016-12-15) Team reACT; Johnson-Williams, Malik; Southard, Renata; Moore, Anil; Rockcastle, Garth C; Binder, Michael PImages, with exterior, interior, and birds-eye views, includes a .docx file with photographer credits.Item When Nature Shrugs: Placemaking after Natural Disasters(2018) Moore, Anil; Simon, Madlen; Architecture; Digital Repository at the University of Maryland; University of Maryland (College Park, Md.)When the built environment experiences a catastrophic event, architects are offered a unique opportunity. Catastrophes—both natural or manmade—can decimate a place. In the rush to rebuild, what role can architecture/the architect play in restoring a place, accounting for the trauma of what occurred while also preserving a place’s uniqueness? In failing to respond appropriately, the trauma of a catastrophe can be prolonged. In responding appropriately, architects/the architect can help restore, preserve, and move a community or place forward. This thesis will analyze what creates place and explore how architectural interventions can recapture, preserve, and address shortcomings that a catastrophic event has revealed. A literature survey will be conducted on what creates place and condensed into a list that will then be tested by applying it to a real-world application.