a blog for fans of sport and architecture

Monday, October 24, 2011

Stadium Design Update 2

This post updates some of visual and conceptual ideas for the exterior of the stadium.

Structurally, the roof will slide off and on the stadium in sections.  This will cover the fans during games as one would expect, but will also float outside the stadium to protect shoppers and visitors during non-game days.

Visually, the skin of the building will use light up panels to provide Exposition Park visitors with time, weather forecasts, retail advertisements, bus schedules, and other valuable information.  This will engage the site from distances outside the structural boundaries of stadium.

Below are some progress renderings:

South Central Park rendering

North student entrance approach


Stadium interior

Concessions corridor

-f#

Friday, October 21, 2011

Stadium Design Update

We are now working on the stadium design portion of this project.  Below are my current plans and a section of the bowl of the stadium.  The structure overhangs the stadium and would tie into surrounding buildings in Expo Park.






-f#

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

One Third Review - Master Plan Vignettes

These are the corresponding vignettes to the numbered site plan in Monday's post:

1. Soccer Plaza
2. Athletic Offices
3. Fitness Center and Intramural Field
4. South Central Park and Coliseum
5. Champions Plaza and Coliseum
6. Vendors Plaza

-f#

Monday, September 26, 2011

One Third Review - Master Plan

The following images are from my master plan for Expo Park.  Most of the big ideas discussed in previous posts were maintained and refined for this review (i.e. the entertainment north corridor, athletic northwest corner, separate soccer stadium, South Central Park, etc.).

While this wraps up master planning, it will be imperative that these ideas help drive the Coliseums overall redesign and exterior relationships.
Master Plan and photo samples
Aerial perspective

Circulation Diagram:
red - pedestrian
green - bicycle paths
blue - automobile

Parti Diagram:
purple - athletics
yellow - museum
blue - retail/commercial
green - hotel
white - stadiums
-f#

Field Trip - Clemson's Death Valley

This past weekend I headed back to South Carolina for a college football game in Clemson's Memorial Stadium.  Even though the experience was more or less the same as the 30 or so I went to during my undergraduate career, I tried to evaluate the differences in other venues I've attended.  More specifically, I wanted to find the positives and negatives that could be applied to my own design this semester.


One difference is setting of the two stadiums.  Death Valley is located on Clemson's campus and surround mostly by grassy intramural fields and a couple parking lots.  The Coliseum is roughly the opposite, on a large city owned site off campus with a large amount of the open space paved and designated for parking.





Inside, the two differences in bowl design are based on the history of each stadiums use and needs.  The Coliseum was constructed for the Olympics and thus is designed for track and field events and left untouched even when college football became its primary function.  Memorial Stadium was built in sections, with luxury boxes and athletic offices added as needed.



Overall, it was a good trip back to my alma mater, topped off with a Clemson W.



-f#

Monday, September 19, 2011

Starting the Process

On gamedays Exposition Park is bustling with football fans, tourists, and street merchants.  Unfortunately, this is only 6 or 7 days a year.

Clearly, Expo Park is in need of revitalization.

My first decision was to diagram circulation throughout the site.  This was to understand how the current flow of pedestrians and automobiles presents opportunities for enhancement.
Red - Existing Vehicular
Blue - Existing Pedestrian
Orange - New Circulation

Below is my current progression in masterplanning.  The north side of the stadium should create an entertainment district that would allow easy access for students from USC's campus. This starts on the northwest corner with a new USC fitness center, intramural fields, and finally athletic offices and training which ties into the stadiums structure.  This plan requires the relocation of the California Science Center, which currently blocks the flow of pedestrian traffic north/south while also hindering views of the Coliseum during approach.

The south side of the site is proposed as reclaimed open park space and water retention lake, much like the English Garden examples from earlier.  Bordering the park to the east and anchoring the southeast corner of Expo Park is a new soccer stadium proposal.  This would be home to Chivas USA, who has been mentioned to be looking for a new home away from the Home Depot Center.  Just north of the stadium is a hotel and retail center to enclose a large plaza.

Site sections


Existing Buidlings
Proposed Buildings
New Site


Site perspective from southeast
New approach idea to stadium

-f#

Monday, September 12, 2011

Case Studies - Places

So after our attempt to find good sports facilities examples, the professors asked we look for good places too.  These examples need to be destinations; places that consistently attract visitors for whatever reason.  Our own designs need to have similar concepts so that when no games or events are taking place (which currently is the majority of time), their is still a valuable experience that keeps visitors coming.

My contributions to the wall:

1. Bourbon Street (New Orleans, LA): great example of an entertainment district that consistently attracts tourists and visitors.
Bourbon Street architecture.
Bourbon Street crowded

2. English Garden [Englicsher Garten] (Munich, Germany): similar to Central Park in New York City for its attractive landscapes and relaxing atmosphere in an urban environment.
English Garden
Man-made wave and surfers in English Garden

3. Grand Place (Brussels, Belgium): beautiful buildings surround a famous plaza made up of retail, commercial, civic, and entertainment.
Grand Place
Grand Place


-f#