Despite my best efforts, I failed to put up a post last week because I have been devoting my spare time to another architecture competition. Unlike my last contest experience, this one had a much shorter timeframe, and I was in quite a rush to get it done.
KCRW is a public radio station in Los Angeles. I have listened, as podcasts, to many of their programs over the years, including Good Food, Morning Becomes Eclectic, and DnA. I was visiting my old favorite BLDGBLOG the other day and came across one of Geoff's periodic link roundups, which included a number of upcoming contests. One was for Sonic Trace, designing and constructing a mobile sound booth for KCRW to use to collect stories from around California.
I couldn't resist. This one hit all of my architectural obsessions: design/build, small-scale, mobile, sustainable, and engaged in the telling of stories. It has a tight budget, and includes some video on DIY soundproofing, a boot-strapping approach with which I am quite familiar. Coincidentally, I had just been looking at a teardrop trailer on Instructables, and thinking, as I often do, about the nomadism that has brought me here to Chicago.
While the brief doesn't specifically call for a structure that is on wheels (dis-assemble-able is fine), I thought a trailer-based solution would be ideal, as it requires no set-up and break-down. I based my design on a 4' x 8' flatbed, off-the-shelf utility trailer (the same footprint that began this very blog), which can be had for a grand or two new. A half-dozen or so iterations later, I landed on a sort of barrel-vaulted form that references gypsy wagons, Airstreams, Vanagons, VW buses, and even old-school radio mics. A cedar rain screen keeps that hot L.A. sun at bay, weathering to a streamlined gray over time. Inside, an intimate carpeted space is well-soundproofed with foam insulation and Homasote. The two end walls are light boxes for station identity and recording status.
Architectural competitions have a long history in design, especially in design education, and I keep searching for ones that investigate my interests. They allow me to spend some time engaged in research and design, while gaining a measure of publicity for my work and possibly the chance to build something, all while keeping my design chops up since I'm not always using those skills on a daily basis. Already, (no offense, Rabbit Island), I think these renderings came out better than my last work, and hopefully the next ones will be even better . . . Big thanks to the lady for her killer graphic design skills, which really made the presentation tight.
KCRW is a public radio station in Los Angeles. I have listened, as podcasts, to many of their programs over the years, including Good Food, Morning Becomes Eclectic, and DnA. I was visiting my old favorite BLDGBLOG the other day and came across one of Geoff's periodic link roundups, which included a number of upcoming contests. One was for Sonic Trace, designing and constructing a mobile sound booth for KCRW to use to collect stories from around California.
I couldn't resist. This one hit all of my architectural obsessions: design/build, small-scale, mobile, sustainable, and engaged in the telling of stories. It has a tight budget, and includes some video on DIY soundproofing, a boot-strapping approach with which I am quite familiar. Coincidentally, I had just been looking at a teardrop trailer on Instructables, and thinking, as I often do, about the nomadism that has brought me here to Chicago.
I built a model in SketchUp, printed it, traced layers, re-scanned those layers, and composited the result in Photoshop. |
I wanted those sweet Prismacolor markers, but there was no time. |
There is darkness everywhere. Shadows, if you will. |
Put together, to the best of my ability. |
The Echo Chamber. A little cheesy, I know, but hey, I was pressed for time. How am I expected to perform under those conditions? |
The rear panel would be red acrylic with laser-etched panels, so that it can light up when people are inside recording. |
The technical bits. |
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