Thursday, November 18, 2010

Site Analysis


The site I chose for this project is located at the intersection of the freedom trail and the greenway in downtown Boston; designated by the Boston Redevelopment Authority as ‘Greenway Parcel 9.’ This parcel also is located with the center of a matrix of nodes created by popular locations within Boston: The Boston Common, Government Center, Quincy Marketplace, TD North, The Aquarium, Paul Revere House, and Chinatown. These destinations mark circulatory ‘hot spots’ where people of different cultures and traditions will intersect. The greenway acts as a boundary between some of these locations and creates a separation between the old and new fabric of Boston’s urban context. In turn the greenway creates a new secondary path circulating from North to South. The Freedom Trail is also a major destination in downtown Boston. It is where the Freedom Trail and the Greenway meet where parcel 9 is located, making it a perfect location for a culture center.

The site is centrally located within the matrix of traffic circulation within the urban context. The site is also within a 5-10 minute walk from maybe popular public transit stations and businesses. At the moment, the site is trash filled and blocked by traffic barriers, yet should be put to better use being so centrally located within the urban fabric of downtown Boston. Two previous projects have been approved for this site, a museum and a residential building, but eventually fell through due to financial struggles. At the moment the site is in ‘limbo’ with no uses being designated. The site is 43,139 square feet (0.99 Acres) and has a maximum building height of 55 feet. These restrictions I feel work in favor of the design process, allowing for site specificity. The excitement for this site is the possibility of what this project can become. The use for this site in relation to my thesis is sound, and the possibility of competitions for this site in the near future opens many possibilities of how far this project can go. 

Building on this site also creates an opportunity to clean up and organize the stands at Haymarket. It is a very dirty site, and by simply designating a space on the ground floor for ‘Haymarket waste handling and storage’, it would easily turn one of the last eyesores within downtown Boston into a beautiful addition along the greenway and the Boston urban fabric.






Coming soon will be a generative model 're-presenting' this analysis. 




Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Clarity

Before moving on with this thesis study, I felt it was very important to clarify exactly what my intentions are. Feedback has show me there is still much confusion with this project, and I do admit at times I myself have wondered where I am going with this? My study is 'Culture within the Urban Fabric' and I plan to design a culture center. With this three questions come to mind:

1.    What exactly is a culture center?
A Cultural Center is an organization, building or complex that promotes culture and arts. They provide a place of identity and distinguish different functions that promote manifestations of human intellectual achievement, and create a refined understanding and appreciation of particular nations and people of the world.

2.    Why are culture centers important/ why do we need a CC?
Culture centers foster religious and cultural tolerance, knowledge, and community ethics. Especially in America, we harbor prejudices and suppositions planted by ignorance; this gives a sense of ‘American’ patriotism. However what is ideally ‘American’ is religious and cultural tolerance, it is what our country was founded on. We need cultural centers to promote and remind us of this.


3.    How does the urban fabric affect the use and success of a CC?
An urban fabric creates an opportunity to increase the likelihood of connecting with people of different cultures, orientations, and faiths. When we interact with different perspectives within our own culture, our interactions are connected by social and cultural frameworks, in which we live and behave. Yet when we interact with different cultures, our interactions are not just connected by the frameworks of both cultures but also the intersection of their cultural meanings. Where the cultures overlap, our interactions may also overlap. Sharing many common experiences and learning from our differences is the perspective that is connecting our observed reality and our observed actuality. The experience of an urban fabric allows for this.

So after answering these questions, it suggests an understanding of what my thesis is, what am I trying to claim? My research has shown me that the urban landscape provides a destination that appeal to multiple cultures. My claim is:

Cultural interactions more often successfully occur within an urban context.




Finally, I am including diagrams that initially create a foundation of what the cultural center's program may be. I expect these to slightly alter and become concrete over the next week as a site is finalized. The site I feel will dictate much of what the center's program may or may not be.