DESIGN STUDIOS - Melbourne School of Design - SEMESTER 2, 2016
DESIGN STUDIOS - Melbourne School of Design - SEMESTER 2, 2016
DESIGN
STUDIOS
Master of Architecture B
Master of Architecture C, D, E
Master of Architecture Thesis
Master of Landscape Architecture
Master of Urban Design
Master of Urban Planning
MSD International Travelling Studios
Melbourne
School of Design
DEANS
LECTURE
SERIES
2016
MATERIAL
PRACTICES IN THE
ANTHROPOCENE AGE
John Wood
Jing Liu
Karen MCloskey
+
Keith VanDerSys
Judith Innes
7:00pm
Theatre B117, Basement
Melbourne School of Design
Register at msd.unimelb.edu.au/events
FOREWORD
DARYL LE GREW
Dean
FOREWORD
ALAN PERT
Director MSD
Correct at the time of printing. Please check the handbook prior to classes.
Monday
12:00 - 13:00
Monday
18:15 - 21:15
PAR-MSD-140, 142
Thursday
18:15 - 21:15
PAR-MSD-140, 142
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/1
Monday
12:00
15:00
PAR-MSD-213 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/1
Thursday
12:00
15:00
PAR-MSD-140 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/4
Monday
17:15
20:15
PAR-MSD-141 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/4
Wednesday
17:15
20:15
PAR-MSD-146 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/5
Monday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-213 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/5
Thursday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-238 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/7
Wednesday
17:00
20:00
NH Architecture
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/7
Friday
14:00
17:00
NH Architecture
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/8
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-139 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/8
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-139 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/9
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-124 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/9
Thursday
13:00
16:00
PAR-MSD-139 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/10
Monday
10:00
13:00
PAR-MSD-448 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/10
Thursday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-137 (Studio)
Yui Uchomura +
Jang Yun Kim
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/13
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-213 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/13
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-241 (Studio)
STUDIO 14
Virginia Mannering +
Yvonne Meng
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/14
Monday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/14
Thursday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
STUDIO 15
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/15
Monday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-241 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/15
Thursday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-241 (Studio)
STUDIO 16
Joel Benichou
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/16
Monday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-237 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/16
Thursday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-236 (Studio)
STUDIO 17
Daniela Mitterberger +
Tiziano Derme
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/17
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-238 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/17
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-238 (Studio)
STUDIO 19
Ben Waters
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/19
Tuesday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-146 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/19
Thursday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-142 (Studio)
STUDIO 25
Michael Trudgeon
ABPL90111
Thursday
9:30
16:30
PAR-MSD-215 (Studio)
STUDIO 26
Colby Vexler +
Pricilla Heung
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/26
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/26
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
STUDIO 27
Peter Hogg
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/27
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-244 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/27
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-118 (Studio)
STUDIO 29
Anna Nervegna
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/29
Monday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-244 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/29
Thursday
17:15
20:15
PAR-MSD-239 (Studio)
STUDIO 30
Gideon Aschwanden
ABPL90260
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-138 (Studio)
ABPL90260
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-138 (Studio)
STUDIO 32
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/32
Thursday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-141 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/32
Thursday
17:15
20:15
PAR-MSD-141 (Studio)
STUDIO 01
Rebecca McLaughlan +
Stephanie Liddicoat
STUDIO 04
Laura Martires
STUDIO 05
Stanislav Roudavski +
Alex Holland
STUDIO 07
Martin Heide + NH
Architecture
STUDIO 08
Scott Woods
STUDIO 09
STUDIO 10
Dominik Holzer
STUDIO 13
Correct at the time of printing. Please check the handbook prior to classes.
Amanda Achmadi
STUDIO 02
Christina Bozsan
STUDIO 03
Graham Brawn
STUDIO 04
Katherine Sundermann +
Andy Fergus
STUDIO 05
Qinghua Guo
STUDIO 06
Janet McGaw
STUDIO 07
Jeremy Mcleod
STUDIO 08
Toby Reed
STUDIO 09
STUDIO 10
Anna Tweeddale +
Kris Green
STUDIO 11
Paul Walker
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/01
Thursday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-140 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/01
Thursday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/02
Monday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-236 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/02
Monday
13:00
16:00
PAR-MSD-240 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/03
Thursday
9:00
12:00
PAR-MSD-216 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/03
Thursday
16:15
19:15
PAR-MSD-227 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/04
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-241 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/04
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-236 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/05
Tuesday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-227 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/05
Friday
13:00
16:00
PAR-MSD-215 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/06
Friday
10:00
13:00
PAR-MSD-236 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/06
Friday
13:00
16:00
PAR-MSD-244 (Studio)
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/07
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-125 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/07
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-117 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/08
Thursday
15:15
18:15
PAR-MSD-228 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/08
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-244 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/09
Thursday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-213 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/09
Thursday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-213 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/10
Monday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-118 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/10
Wednesday
18:15
21:15
PAR-MSD-144 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/11
Tuesday
14:15
17:15
PAR-MSD-118 (Studio)
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/11
Thursday
12:00
15:00
PAR-MSD-239 (Studio)
Studio 04
Strategies
Siqing Chen +
Christopher Newman
Landscape
Architecture
Thesis
ABPL90176/U/1/SM2/ST1/01
Monday
10:00
13:00
ABPL90176/U/1/SM2/ST2/01
Monday
13:15
16:15
13:15
16:15
16:15
19:15
10:00
13:00
ABPL90170/U/1/SM2/ST1/01
ABPL90170/U/1/SM2/ST2/01
Thursday
ABPL90375/U/1/SM2/ST1
Monday
ABPL90375/U/1/SM2/ST2
13:00
16:00
Katherine Sundermann +
Andy Fergus
Urban Design
Thesis
Robyn Pollock
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST1/04
Monday
18:15
21:15
ABPL90169/U/1/SM2/ST2/04
Thursday
18:15
21:15
ABPL90376/U/1/SM2/ST1/1
Tuesday
17:15
21;15
ABPL90376/U/1/SM2/ST2/1
Friday
09:00
11:00
Yina Sima
Studio 03
Tom Alves
ABPL90384/U/1/SM2/ST1/1
Monday
17:15
20:15
ABPL90384/U/1/SM2/ST2/1
Tuesday
17:15
20:15
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST1/9
Monday
18:15
21;15
ABPL90115/U/1/SM2/ST2/9
Thursday
13:00
16:00
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
STUDIO B
DISCIPLINE
/dIs plIn/
c,d
PROF. DONALD L. BATES
10
d,e
The constant return to the question of the status of the real in
architecture, goes beyond the artificial division between school
and not-school, between education and professional practice.
Paradoxically, the very possibility of architecture emerging as
a real human consequence, as a particular achievement, is
by means of a process that by its nature is defiantly not real:
abstraction.
For a discipline so fixated on being part of the real world, it is a
shock and bewilderment to discover that architectural thoughts
and ideas are at their most generative, their most fecund when
they operate by means of abstraction and abstract mechanisms
and processes. Plans, sections and elevations are machines of
abstraction, measurable and precise but not the real thing.
The practice of architecture is almost always undertaken by
non-direct, non-linear processes that involve multiple levels of
abstraction and ideation.
Drawing by hand or drawing by computer both actions are
fundamentally analogue, in that the graphic production (the
drawing) provides an analogy of something else to come (the
building). This necessary condition of a remove, a stepin-between, a translational passage is possible because of
abstraction. Abstraction and the process of abstraction allows for
the transfer between different realms of reality, between different
forms of materiality.
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
STUDIOS CDE
11
CDE SCHEDULE
JULY
Moderation
09
17
18
02
12
08
Exhibition
17 Nov - 02 Dec (tbc)
SEPTEMBER
07
0105 07
06
OCTOBER
10
11
12
31
05
19 26 - 02 03 10 11 21 2428
SWOT VAC
04
12
Deans Lecture Series: Judith Innes
03
05
Non-Instruction Period
02
08 15 22 29 - 03
01 02
01
AUGUST
WEEK
23
22
22
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
CLUSTERS
LEGEND
PAGE
STUDIO 01
14
STUDIO 04
15
STUDIO 05
16
STUDIO 07
17
STUDIO 08
18
STUDIO 09
19
STUDIO 10
20
STUDIO 13
21
STUDIO 14
22
STUDIO 15
23
STUDIO 16
24
STUDIO 17
25
STUDIO 19
26
STUDIO 25
27
STUDIO 26
Colby Vexler + Priscilla Heung: Critical Centres: For wasting time on the internet
28
STUDIO 27
29
STUDIO 29
30
STUDIO 30
31
STUDIO 32
32
Civic
Senses
Technologies
Cities
Living
Process
13
CDE STUDIO 01
14
CDE STUDIO 03
Laura Matires
LX
assembled
15
CDE STUDIO 05
Wind Architecture
Participants of this studio design, make and put to use fly stateof-the-art kites and others experimental inflatable structures.
The studio begins with kite-flying lessons and an intensive prototyping workshop led by a world-leading kite designer Peter Lynn in
collaboration with a maker and writer Simon Feidin. It continues by using generative and parametric design, physical and digital simulation,
hand crafting and digital fabrication to design and build speculative
prototypes of architectural structures that can be supported or animated by air. Selected designs are produced at full scale and used on
location with real publics. The resulting performances are documented
and exhibited as moving images.
Past and emerging examples of air-supported structures take form
of personal garments, individual shelters, mobile guerrilla installations, large-scale building skins, power-generating installations and
means of transportation. Their uses can range from emergency rescue
shelters to dance performances and their sites span the broad range
from indoor environments to stratosphere. The broad blend of skills
16
CDE STUDIO 07
MAGIC
MOUNTAIN
THE PROPOSITION
Melbournes Arts Centre precinct is the
cornerstone of the citys cultural life and
part of its evolution from Victorian past
to contemporary global city. It holds
a symbolic resonance as a Melbourne
place represented by its white spire that
can be seen from all points of the city.
The Arts Centre also belongs to a network
of public spaces and civic buildings
dotted along the Yarra River corridor, from
cultural to sporting, transport to tourism
and it plays host to an annual calendar of
acclaimed performers and visiting artists,
all of whom contribute to Melbournes
International identity.
However, much of the Arts Centres
current identity, activity and energy are
hidden from the daily life of Melburnians
behind concrete facades and deep interiors.
THE STUDIO
The format for the studio will be practice
based, with NH Architecture as the host.
Students will operate from the NH Studio
in Flinders Lane and become part of the
working rhythm of the office.
Design reviews will also be held in the
NH design studio.
STUDIO LEADERS
Hamish Lyon
Dean Boothroyd
Martin Heide
Helen Duong
TIME Wednesday 17:00 20:00
Friday 14:00 17:00
LOCATION NH Architecture Studio
Level 7, Cannons House,
1220 Flinders Lane, Melbourne
CDE STUDIO 08
Scott Woods
Gift to the City VII And Barcelona. You should see Barcelona.
And
Barcelona.
You
should
see
Barcelona.
How
is
it?
It
is
still
comic
opera.
First
it
was
the
paradise
of
the
crackpots
and
the
romantic
revolutionists.
Now
it
is
the
paradise
of
the
fake
soldier.
The
soldiers
who
like
to
wear
uniforms,
who
like
to
strut
and
swagger
and
wear
red-and-black
scarves.
Who
like
everything
about
war
except
to
fight.
Valencia
makes
you
sick
and
Barcelona
makes
you
laugh.
Ernest
Hemingway,
For
Whom
the
Bell
Tolls.
1941.
th
Gift
to
the
City
VI
students:
Carl
Areskoug,
Ben
Quilty
Gallery.
Ruofan
Lei,
Composition
3:
Balance.
Melany
Hayes,
The
4
Other.
Melany
Hayes,
Sammulung
Boros
Art
Museum.
(background)
(overview)
Gift to the City promotes experimental, speculative and gestural forms of resistance to the hegemony of the white-walled
Art Gallery and Art Museum. How to be more White Cube than White Cube?
Gift to the City INTERVIEW ARCHIVE is an ongoing project to develop and record a body of knowledge around the
contemporary ART MUSEUM. Each semester students interview artists, curators and architects of art institutions to direct
their projects. Students also explore past interviews from the ARCHIVE which include: Odile Decq (Paris), Tatiana Bilbao
(Mexico City), Liam Gillick (NY), Javier Peres (Berlin), Marja Sakari (Helsinki), Assume Vivid Astro Focus (So Paulo)
18
CDE STUDIO 09
Public housing in Victoria is set for sweeping change. New residential precinct mixes of community,
commercial with other functional uses, together with a range of accommodation markets are being
considered to support diverse neighbourhoods with activities for more optimal land use to meet
current and future needs.
Atherton Gardens Liveability Studio will focus on urban living quality by re-thinking planning and
design for social, affordable, and mixed-market housing at precinct, neighbourhood and
architectural scale. Atherton Gardens Housing Estate (AHE) Fitzroy is a 4.8 ha, residential
community, bounded by Brunswick, Gertrude, Napier Streets containing 4x20 storey towers, with
large, surrounding open space. Each tower is constructed from pre-fabricated concrete panels
consisting of approximately 200 apartments, providing a total 793 dwellings, with very modest
housing quality. The studio will examine site typologies, site context and planning issues for
opportunities to provide transformative housing and hybrid solutions for socially engaged, culturally
mixed communities with site responsive planning and design.
This studio is being offered as an interdisciplinary studio with both Masters of Architecture and
Urban Planning collaborating together with complementary programs.
Site and Studio Design and Planning Objectives : The studio will . . .
I. Analyse how to plan for and design for a sustainable community with a vibrant neighbourhood:
Consider a diverse range of new social, private and affordable housing, where design does not
differentiate forms of ownership, residents are proud to call home and people want to visit.
II. Investigate provision of well-designed housing, with facilities and outdoor spaces that:
maximise amenity and liveability, improve safety, support social interaction, with a range of
shared facilities and outdoor spaces for residents and visitors.
III. Re-integrate neighbouring areas: blurring site boundaries, re-connecting road, bike and
pedestrian networks, re-introduce community, retail or commercial (hybrid) spaces to activate
sites and create amenity.
IV. Incorporate sustainable design that promotes health and quality of life.
Studio Leaders: Rob Polglase and Hing-wah Chau will lead Masters of Architecture with Tom
Alves leading the Masters of Urban Planning. Each studio leader has extensive experience leading
design studios, design teams and urban scale planning and architecture, including residential and
mixed use precincts in Australia and Asia. Site stakeholders and industry specialists will present a
range of topics to inform students planning and design briefs.
Studio Times: Monday: 6:15pm-9:15pm + Thursday: 1:00pm-4:00pm.
19
CDE STUDIO 10
SQUEEZE
Dominik Holzer
Studio Outline:
CDE Studio SQUEEZE will search for radical new proposals
for medium-density residential developments in the inner
fringe of Melbourne. Only few projects currently ll the gap
in the market between high-rise residential towers and the
single (or double) storey terrace typology. Those projects
that get realised often fail to promote place-making and
the establishment of a strong identity. Too often design responses cater for a developer-driven market where squeezing out the last bit of rentable oor space takes priority.
Learning Outcomes:
Students delve deeply into the design of medium-density housing precinct with great sensitivity towards the
surrounding urban context. Students will learn how to
use digital tools to analyse key environmental factors
that inuence their projects typology and ultimately
impacts on the layout of each residential unit. They will
learn how to advance their design thinking with multiple
performance criteria in mind. In class we will discuss optimisation techniques and their interface with geometry
manipulation.
Process:
The semester will kick off with group-research about the
site, its urban context, and mixed-use options for its development. Digital tools and associated tool-ecologies
will be introduced that help to analyse the environmental factors that impact on the projects morphology. Following an intensive workshop in week 4 students will
individually develop speculative responses to the design
challenges at hand.
Studio Leader:
CDE STUDIO 13
SMALL
Y U I U CHIM U RA + JA N G Y U N KIM
21
CDE STUDIO 14
DIG.
To look forward, we might need to first look
back... Lets look down before we build up...
How can architects use an exploration of
archaeological and heritage sites to inform
their reading of the city?
This studio will use Melbournes
archaeological and historical sites as
catalysts for an architectural proposition.
Together the class will explore the sites
around the Little Lon archaeological
site (Little Lonsdale St/Casselden Place).
Students will research, and respond to,
the cultural, historical and archaeological
aspects of the sites, focussing on their
vibrant and complex lives; firstly as
indigenous landscapes, then, in the case
of as a slum, a migrant centre, a place
of larrikinism and disrepute, and finally
commerce.
Students will be asked to examine the
relationships between architecture and
archaeology, viewing these sites as layered
and dynamic - not stale - and marked by
processes of construction, excavation,
agitation, and erasure. They will be asked
to view the sites from the micro (tectonic) to
the macro (urban) scales.
Studio themes include: archaeology,
architectural heritage, materiality,
colonialism, landscape, feminism, the
unseemly and the dirty.
22
STUDIO TIMES
TBA
TUTORS
YVONNE MENG is an architect practicing
in Melbourne. In 2015, Yvonne launched
her own practice, Von Atelier. Prior to this,
she spent several years at the City of
Melbourne where she was Project Architect
for a variety of community buildings across
a range of different scales. Yvonne is
interested in the role of public buildings
in Melbourne, and believes that healthy
social spaces are centred around a strong
engagement with its users.
VIRGINIA MANNERING is a graduate
architect working in small practice, a
teacher and writer. She has a long-standing
interest in issues of phenomenology and
human occupation/experience, which she
explores through design and the production
of related texts and publications.
CDE STUDIO 15
Tutors:
Paul Loh, David Leggett & Josh Russo-Batterham
Studio time: http://powertomake.tumblr.com
Agenda:
Studio 15 continues to question the future of making. This semester, we return to making at 1:1 scale; examining
making through technology and design as an self-referential workflow. We are interested in the perpetual ability of
machine to generate iterative material output from which as architects, we can abstract and interpret as door, window,
wall, floor, roof and stairs. We invite you to radically re-image the fundamental language of architectural components.
This semester, we ask: How can technology facilitate social and climatic interaction? Studio 15 will design a responsive
pavilion that acts as social incubator, an urban lounge, a playground, a cinema, a place to rest and work. Working in
teams, students will design an architectural intervention that has potential to be environmentally and socially responsive.
Successful projects will develop strategies to deal with dynamic changes of events through material and/or technological
media as well as articulating the relationship between ground and envelope.
Studio Structure:
The studio is divided in two phase. The studio will commence with a series of intensive tooling workshops on robotics and
Arduino, the first robotic tooling session will take place on Saturday 30th July. Phase 1 brief is to design a machine that
fabricates architecture. We will explore through precedent study as well as digital input and output procedures to design
and make a machine (quasi or actual) that has potential to fabricate architectural components (parts or whole). The
component will start to articulate a particular understanding of ground and envelope. By mid-semester, design teams
will present their first proposals for a reactive pavilion.
In Phase 2, we will put your machine to the test. Working in group, students will design a pavilion based on the brief
for the annual NGV pavilion. The pavilion will be environmentally and socially responsive using your fabricated parts.
In addition, the design will need to satisfy the brief and criteria for the Laka competition which each design team will
submit on Monday 1st November.
1:25 model, prototypes, axonometric drawings, plans and sections together with rendered images will be key deliverables
as group work. Each student will have their own individual journal documenting and reflecting their progress of the
semester. This studio requires students to be able to use Rhino and have a basic understanding of Grasshopper. Teamwork
is compulsory and collaborative design will form part of studio assessment.
Students who are offered a place in the studio must email a 5 page (max) PDF of your portfolio containing mostly
academic work to the studio leader: [email protected] by Monday, 25th July _11am. Studio E students may
apply to continue their thesis as independent candidate. Readings for our first day seminar is available on the studio blog
site:
http://powertomake.tumblr.com
23
CDE STUDIO 16
Joel Benichou
COMPACT HOUSE
The topic of housing in Australia regularly sparks strong discussion.
A desire exists amongst home owners to live close to the attractions of
the city, while holding on to the benets of the suburban lifestyle. This
inexhaustible demand for land and houses has led to prices of the
inner suburbs reaching record prices, while the cheaper alternatives
continue to sprawl further into the outer reaches of the city.
STUDIO 16
24
leave a 20mm top margin for header information - to be included by dept at booklet lay out stage
CDE STUDIO 17
The semester will be dedicated to design an architectural artefact within different existing festivals. This process
will follow two streams of research : festivals and anthropological studies, Design and Fabrication research.
Each student will be studying a given festival ( Giant Kites
of Sagami Festival, Mask festival in Burkina Faso,..) trying
to indicate main spatial elements and their relationship
within a social context. This analysis will be used to identify a design intervention within the hypothetical framework. The second phase will follow a material driven
logic, students through a series of workshops and seminars, will learn how to create feedback from the digital
to the analogue using innovative fabrication techniques
and software(i.e. algorithmic design and robotic fabrication). Students will conceptualize, design and construct
a new notion of ritual-space re-associating the notion of
context with festivals and carnival imaginary.
*****
Im no longer as I was before, I am swept away by a becoming other, carried beyond my familiar existential territories (F. Guattari)
FEST[val.]
leave a 20mm bottom margin for footer information - to be included by dept at booklet lay out stage
25
25
AMAL.GAM
CDE STUDIO 19
Ben Waters
26
CDE STUDIO 25
Michael Trudgeon
Urban
Eco Acupuncture
Netherlands: 2016
Travelling studio
MSD VEIL ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN TRAVELLING STUDIO
Semester 2 2016. Studio Leaders: Michael Trudgeon, Chris Ryan
IMPORTANT DATES
Applications Close: Friday 08 July
Pre-Trip teaching dates: Thursdays 04, 11, 18, 25 August, 01, 08, and 15 September 2016
Occupational, Health and Safety Information Session: 25 August
Overseas Travel dates: 24 September 09 October 2016
Post-Trip teaching dates: Thursdays 13, 20 and 27 October 2016
First Submission/Presentation: 11 August
Final Submission/Presentation: 3 November 201
SUBJECT OUTLINE
Students will take part in an international studio in the Dutch city of Leeuwarden in collaboration with students and academics from the
Technical University of Delft and Aalborg University. The studio will develop design projects for the European Cultural Capital program
for 2018, a year long program of intense artistic and cultural activity in Leeuwarden. We will focus on 2-3 urban sites. These sites
have been selected by the city as key sites for the European Cultural Capital program and now require design development with the
intention of realising projects on these sites for 2018.
The design projects include:
Pop up modular small scale accommodation
3D printing labs to explore new manufacturing possibilities for the northern Netherlands
Light weight, high performance pavilions for an Energy park and expo showcasing new resilient energy technologies
Refurbishing and repurposing existing urban infrastructure
The projects take in the disciplinary expertise of architectural, landscape and urban planning strategies along with wayfinding and
service design. Students will develop design interventions to transform the existing built environment and systems of provision (energy,
water, food, transport, information) for a sustainable, low carbon, resilient future What steps must be taken today to get there?
Building on the master planning achieved by the 2015 VEIL studio we will develop detail designs for the identified sites to shift the path
of innovation on a new trajectory: towards sustainable, resilient conditions. There will be an emphasis on physical model making in this
studio and we will hold an introductory session in the Fab Lab at MSD. The studio will travel to Copenhagen for a 2 day architectural
and design study tour. There will be opportunities to visit and explore Rotterdam, one of the worlds pre-eminent architectural and
design laboratories.
27
CDE STUDIO 26
Critical Centres:
28
CDE STUDIO 27
Peter Hogg
29
STUDIO 29
30
CDE STUDIO 30
JAVA-TRAVELING STUDIO
SEM | 2 | 2016
Limited to 16 places
For Master of Architecture; Master of Landscape Architecture; Master of Urban Design; Master of Urban Planning students
How does tourism in South East Asia influence the urban fabric? What does travel mean for
architects? How does travel inform our perception? How can we link seemingly discontinuous phenomena, and how can we tie together and represent issues of architecture, urbanism, economy, landscape, the past, the present and the future?
Application to Dr Gideon Aschwanden [email protected]
MELBOURNE BANDUNG
ERFURT
ZRICH
CDE STUDIO 32
Architecture as
Memory
32
Union
House
We see this departure from the insular, centrally
positioned old heart to be an exciting opportunity to
rethink the relevance of the Union House in today and
future contexts.
Its history as one of the oldest occupied sites on campus
and it connections to some of the most prominent
persons in the Universitys 163 year lifespan needs
to be considered when looking at its numerable
transformations (both physical as programmatic) over
that same time, its questionable architectural significance
and its incapability of adapting to future needs.
The importance of Union House as a cultural institution,
its political activism and its social relevance to
generations of students as a meeting space needs to be
considered against future ideas of campus housing, the
current Master Plan, food and retail strategy, the new
Student Precinct and the Melbourne Metro Parkville
Station.
The current relationship with the surrounding open
spaces such as Union Lawn, Deakin Court etc., needs to
be considered against new interpretations and scenarios
for Tin Alley and Professors Walk.
33
thes
THESIS SEMESTER 2 STUDIOS
34
Page
STUDIO 01
36
STUDIO 02
37
STUDIO 03
38
STUDIO 04
Andy Fergus + Katherine Sundermann: Opportunistic Urbanism (Studio with travel component)
39
STUDIO 05
40
STUDIO 06
41
STUDIO 07
42
STUDIO 08
43
STUDIO 09
44
STUDIO 10
45
STUDIO 11
46
22
22
03
SEPTEMBER
05
12
19
26 - 02 03 10 11 17 24 - 28 31 - 04
08
17
18
02
06
09
Exhibition
17 Nov - 02 Dec (tbc)
SWOT VAC
05
08
Moderation
04
07
Non-Instruction Period
02
08 15 22 29 - 3
01 02
01
AUGUST
WEEK
25
sis
MASTER OF ARCHITECTURE
DESIGN THESIS STUDIOS
OCTOBER
10
11
12
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
35
THESIS STUDIO 01
Amanda Achmadi
Insertion/
Juxtaposition/
Reinvention/
Adaptive Reuse of the Old Jakarta Post Office Building by Andra Matin Architect
Key questions
Urban context
The urban historical environment explored in this studio is the old town district of Jakarta, the capital city of Indonesia and the largest megacities
in the Southeast Asia region. The citys long history, dating back to 1527, entails contestation between diverse indigenous states and their
subsequent encounters with the Portuguese, Dutch, English colonialism. Today, the sprawling metropolitan Jakarta is a home of a socially and
ethnically diverse population of around 22 million people. The old town district is in a stage of decay for most of part of the contemporary era and
a site dominated by urban informality. Since 2014, the district has been subjected to a collaborative design intervention involving leading
international architects such as MVRDV and OMA and leading Indonesian architects, such as Andra Matin and Han Awal & Partners.
Site
The site is situated on the north-western corner of the Fatahilah Square in North Jakarta (previously the Town Square of Batavia) on the southern
side of Kali Besar Timur 4 Street. CAD drawings of the urban setting and the heritage building will be made available in week 1 studio.
Studio Leader
Dr. Amanda Achmadi is a lecturer in architectural design at the Faculty of Architecture, Building and Planning. She holds a Bachelor degree in
Architecture and a PhD in Architectural history and Asian Studies. Amanda has worked as practicing architect in Indonesia, China, and Germany.
Her research works explore the interaction between identity politics and architectural discourses with a particular focus on postcolonial Southeast
Asia. Her reviews of contemporary architectural designs from Southeast Asia region have been published in Architecture Asia, T+A, and
Architectural Review. She is one of the contributors to Houses for the 21st Century (edited by Geoffrey London), New Directions in Tropical Asian
Architecture (edited by Philip Goad and Anoma Pieris), and The Past in the Present: Architecture in Indonesia (edited by Peter Nas). She has also
published her research works in academic journals such as Fabrication (Journal of the Societies of Architectural Historians, Australia and New
Zealand), JSEAA (Journal of Southeast Asian Architecture) and RIMA (Reviews of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs).
36
A comprehensive list of readings as well as site-specific visual data and drawings has been compiled for this studio to ensure that you can make a grounded and
informed start in undertaking your research and design exploration. More references will be introduced in Week 1
Key texts for the studio include:
Beynon, D. (2010) Architecture, Identity and Cultural Sustainability in Southeast Asian Cities, in RIMA (Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs), Vol 44. No. 2,
Association for the Publication of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies Inc.
Kusno, A. (2010) The Appearances of Memory: Mnemonic Practices of Architecture and Urbanism in Indonesia, Durham: Duke University Press.
Labadi, S. and Long, C. (2010) Heritage and Globalisation, Oxon and New York: Routledge.
TIMES:
13:00
- 16:00
314 and
Thursday
13:00University
- 16:00Press.
MSD Room 140
The Disappearing
AsianMonday
City: Protecting
Asias
Urban MSD
HeritageRoom
in a Globalizing
World
, New York: Oxford
Logan, W. (ed.) (2002)STUDIO
Roy, A. and Ong, A (eds) (2011) Worlding Cities: Asian Experiments and the Art of Being Global, Malden: Wiley-Blackwell.
THESIS STUDIO 02
Christina Bozsan
F L I R T I N G W I T H S PA C E
SPACE TOURISM, ITS ETHICS & THE ROLE OF ARCHITECTURE
37
37
THESIS STUDIO 03
Graham Brawn
Steven Holl
38
THESIS STUDIO 04
OPPORTUNISTIC
URBANISM
THESIS STUDIO 05
Qinghua Guo
http://www.aedes-arc.de/cms/aedes /de/programm?id=
16818836
Studio will be held in Room 227 on Tuesdays 14:15-17:15; Room 244 Fridays 13:00-16:00
Studio leader: Qinghua Guo, Professor in Asian Architecture, Faulty of Architecture, Building and Planning, University of
Melbourne. Room 345, Tel: 8344 0062, Email: [email protected]
40
THESIS STUDIO 06
Janet McGaw
words and rocks contain a language that follows a syntax of splits and ruptures. Look at any word long
enough and you will see it open into a series of faults, into a terrain of particles each containing its own
void.
and proceeded to mine the word dor for its possible meanings:
Jennifer Bloomer, Dor in Beatrice Colomina, (ed.), Sexuality and Space New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 1992, pp. 163-184.
Bio:
Janet is currently Architecture Pathway coordinator in the Bachelor of Environments and subject coordinator of
Design Research in the MSD. She has taught masters and thesis studios in the past, co-coordinating Thesis from
2008-2010. Janet is also an award winning architect.
Contact details: [email protected]; ph. 8344 3038; mob. 0412 659 161
41
THESIS STUDIO 07
Jeremy McLeod
Mondays
6:15pm - 9:15pm
Thursdays 6:15pm - 9:15pm
well-connected, community-driven,
multi-residential architectural
economically sustainable.
42
THESIS STUDIO 08
Toby Reed
WATERSCRAPER
The concept behind this studio is to design a water-scraper, a building on the bay. If our planet is
becoming a drowned world, as in J.G. Ballards novel, then we might as well practice designing
buildings on the water. This studio will explore the possibilities of providing new areas for urban
growth by constructing buildings in Port Phillip Bay. Rapid urban growth around the planet is
forcing us to reconsider architecture and urbanism and devise new fluid strategies for intervening
in the ever expanding modern city.
This project allows for a level of propositional experimentation, depending on each students
inclinations. Students can decide their own brief but most likely brief combinations will include:
apartments, hotel, offices, restaurants, entertainment facilities, floating beach, etc...
This is not an urban design project. Every building is an idea about the city. Students will be
designing a building in the bay with indoor and outdoor space and connection to the land. So the
project will be architectural with urban implications.
Reference:
Rem Koolhaas Whatever Happened to Urbanism / Junkspace
Rem Koolhaas + Hans Ulrich Obrist - Project Japan Metabolism Talks...
Peter Davidson and Donald L Bates Architecture After Geometry
Alejandro Zaera-Polo The Politics of the Envelope
J.G. Ballard The Drowned World (1962)
Bio:
Toby Reed is a director of Nervegna Reed Architecture and PHTR Architects. Recent projects
include large scale urban design for a city in Sichuan province and the recently shortlisted entry
to the National Gallery of Victoria 2016 Summer Pavilion Competition. Reeds work has been
widely published around the world, most recently in Practical Poetics and Nanotecture
(Phaidon), and the Phaidon Atlas of Contemporary World Architecture. The precinct Energy
Project in Dandenong lead the way in Australian architecture for green power solutions, being the
first precinct in Australia to be powered by co-generation. Toby also makes architectural videos,
the most recent being Future Happiness (with Callum Morton) for the Occupied exhibition at
RMIT Design Hub.
43
THESIS STUDIO 09
Boyds error:
Plannings curse.
Reflections
on The Australian
Ugliness.
Ivan Rijavec
The programme for this studio is a mixed use development comprising approximately 250 apartments/maisonettes,
live work, retail, and maker spaces on the Fitzroy Urban Block, bounded by Napier, Kerr, Argyle and Young streets.
44
THESIS STUDIO 10
TOXIC EXUBERANCE
Fossil fuels are the remnants of past vibrant life. Through the age
of extraction, Victorias rich geological history has been mined
as cheap fuel for industrial production and urbanisation, leaving
behind toxic environments. As dialogues around human impacts
on geological and biosphere processes thicken, architecture is
challenged to explore its own complex and messy relations to all
life, rather than exclusively human needs and desires.
Kristin Green
(KGA ARCHITECTURE)
Anna Tweeddale
(STUDIO APPARATUS)
Studio topics:
Aluminium production
Bio-Diversity
Coal mining
Exuberance
Interspecies architecture
Local / global economies
Power generation
Students will develop a building project that responds to the site Regeneration
of the recently decommissioned coal mine and aluminium plant Soil remediation
at Anglesea - along with its complex and biodiverse context - Speculative futures
Toxicity
speculating through design on possible interspecies futures.
45
THESIS STUDIO 11
Paul Walker
This
Master
of
Architecture
Thesis
studio
investigates
the
conversion
of
three
1950s
suburban
brick
&
tile,
double-
and
triple-fronted
houses
in
South
Road,
Moorabbin,
into
a
centre
for
the
exhibition,
conservation,
and
study
of
the
art
works
of
Howard
Arkley.
The
studio
will
offer
opportunities
for
students
to
undertake
individual
investigations
into
such
issues
as
the
transformation
of
the
house
type
through
formal
and
programmatic
operations;
the
history
of
suburban
and
regional
art
museums
in
Victoria;
exhibition
strategies
for
art
works
to
engage
multiple
audiences;
cross-overs
between
art
and
architecture,
particularly
bearing
in
mind
the
range
of
Arkleys
strategies
(arrays;
fields;
iconism;
pop;
hyper-realism;
street
art
&
graffiti);
house
museums
fictional
and
real.
These
investigations
will
occur
in
parallel
with
the
development
of
a
design
strategy
for
the
Art
Ark,
with
the
design
and
investigation
work
mutually
informing
each
other.
The
studio
leader,
Paul
Walker,
is
a
professor
of
architecture
in
the
Melbourne
School
of
Design.
His
research
interests
include
the
history
of
natural
history
museum
architecture
and
contemporary
post-colonial
museums.
Contact
details:
room
426,
MSD
building;
email
[email protected];
phone
83448839.
Jason
Nunn
will
co-teach.
46
urban
design
studios
PAGE
48
49
47
OPPORTUNISTIC
URBANISM
48
urban futures
. . . . campus/neighbourhood
The Proposition
The Studio
Contact
Tuesday 5.15-9.15 and Friday 9-11.
Studio leader
Robyn Pollock is an urban designer and architect.
49
landsc
archite
studio
50
cape
ecture
os
PAGE
52
53
Anna Hooper
54
51
LANDSCAPE STUDIO 2
SITE AND DESIGN
SITE AND DESIGN
The challenge of understanding a site that is presented to the landscape architect
is twofold; how to filter the endless information and variables down to something
that is meaningful without being reductive? and then how to apply that analysis as
a design tool not just a context? In this studio we explore strategies to respond to
these challenges, somewhat unconventionally by exploding the typical sequence
of site assessment followed by design response, instead we will be exploring
feedback loops between assessment and design intervention.
This studio takes a multi-process based approach to exploring the relation between
site and design in landscape architectural practice. Through site exploration,
conceptual approaches to site transformation are introduced, alongside digital
modelling, physical modelling, testing and iteration.
Our site lies at the pointy end of Moonee Ponds Creek, located at the end of
Docklands road, on the northern shore of the Yarra River and beneath the Bolte
Bridge. On the threshold of developed space; programmed for human activity safe and comfortable recreation with designer playgrounds, a sporting field and
fancy street planting, it experiences frequent usage by local inhabitants. Adjacent
lies the Moonee Ponds Creek. Overshadowed by the Bolte Bridge, exposed to the
Yarra and occasionally inhabited by social fringe dwellers, this site does not induce
a call for further human activity yet its atmospheric, geographic and climactic
conditions are compelling.
Which leads us to the conceit of the studio - How do we design when human
usage and habitation do not lead our agenda? Can site conditions, the invisible
physical forces existing in a dynamic site drive a design agenda?
HOW TO DESIGN WITHOUT PROGRAM?
52
Studio 4 Strategies (previously Landscape Planning Studio) introduces a range of GIS techniques
including spatial overlay, watershed analysis, 3D modelling, etc. for data collection and integration,
site inventory and analysis, and scale thinking.
These spatial skills will then be applied to critically analyzing Melbournes urban growth from the
metropolitan scale down to a suburb scale. Based established planning goals aiming at social,
economic and environmental sustainability, a series of spatial overlay tools will be used to identify
the most suitable urban growth areas (UGA). Students will then choose a suburb from their
identified UGA for comprehensive planning at the neighbourhood scale.
The studio is supported by a lecture series which introduces GIS history and development, major
concepts and main theories in landscape planning. Significant national and international
precedents will be carefully examined for students to understand landscape planning processes,
and gain confidence in dealing with broad scale urban issues.
53
54
Before the semester starts, students are required to have spent some time
doing some preliminary research: thinking about an idea/issue/hypothesis
and then preparing an annotated bibliography based on academic work
about this. They will also have to choose a site (or be given a site) and
become familiar with it. In week 1, a thesis statement is formally presented
to their supervisors and peers and, when approved, further research is then
undertaken throughout the semester to build on this initial work. The final
design will have this research embedded within it.
During the course of the semester, students are expected to both visually
demonstrate and orally articulate a comprehensive understanding of the
theoretical and/or philosophical framework of their thesis, the issues being
examined, the design outcomes expected through this process of research
and application, and how this is related to their site (and, site specificity
notwithstanding, whether this has potential applications further afield).
Students will present their research-to-date in the associated design
response to their site at an interim presentation in week 7 (worth 30% of the
total mark) and final presentations (worth 70%) will be held in in week 13 to
an external panel of invited guests.
urban
planning
studios
STUDIO 01
56
STUDIO 03
57
PAGE
55
MUP STUDIO 01
Tom Alves
Public housing in Victoria is set for sweeping change. New residential precinct mixes of community,
commercial with other functional uses, together with a range of accommodation markets are being
considered to support diverse neighbourhoods with activities for more optimal land use to meet
current and future needs.
Atherton Gardens Liveability Studio will focus on urban living quality by re-thinking planning and
design for social, affordable, and mixed-market housing at precinct, neighbourhood and
architectural scale. Atherton Gardens Housing Estate (AHE) Fitzroy is a 4.8 ha, residential
community, bounded by Brunswick, Gertrude, Napier Streets containing 4x20 storey towers, with
large, surrounding open space. Each tower is constructed from pre-fabricated concrete panels
consisting of approximately 200 apartments, providing a total 793 dwellings, with very modest
housing quality. The studio will examine site typologies, site context and planning issues for
opportunities to provide transformative housing and hybrid solutions for socially engaged, culturally
mixed communities with site responsive planning and design.
This studio is being offered as an interdisciplinary studio with both Masters of Architecture and
Urban Planning collaborating together with complementary programs.
Site and Studio Design and Planning Objectives : The studio will . . .
I. Analyse how to plan for and design for a sustainable community with a vibrant neighbourhood:
Consider a diverse range of new social, private and affordable housing, where design does not
differentiate forms of ownership, residents are proud to call home and people want to visit.
II. Investigate provision of well-designed housing, with facilities and outdoor spaces that:
maximise amenity and liveability, improve safety, support social interaction, with a range of
shared facilities and outdoor spaces for residents and visitors.
III. Re-integrate neighbouring areas: blurring site boundaries, re-connecting road, bike and
pedestrian networks, re-introduce community, retail or commercial (hybrid) spaces to activate
sites and create amenity.
IV. Incorporate sustainable design that promotes health and quality of life.
Studio Leaders: Rob Polglase and Hing-wah Chau will lead Masters of Architecture with Tom
Alves leading the Masters of Urban Planning. Each studio leader has extensive experience leading
design studios, design teams and urban scale planning and architecture, including residential and
mixed use precincts in Australia and Asia. Site stakeholders and industry specialists will present a
range of topics to inform students planning and design briefs.
Studio Times: Monday: 6:15pm-9:15pm + Thursday: 1:00pm-4:00pm.
56
MUP STUDIO 03
Yina Sima
The City in
Transformation:
Layers and Strategies
57
internati
travelling
studios
58
ional
g
STUDIO 01
60
STUDIO 02
61
PAGE
59
Urban
Eco Acupuncture
Netherlands: 2016
Travelling studio
MSD VEIL ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN TRAVELLING STUDIO
Semester 2 2016. Studio Leaders: Michael Trudgeon, Chris Ryan
IMPORTANT DATES
Applications Close: Friday 08 July
Pre-Trip teaching dates: Thursdays 04, 11, 18, 25 August, 01, 08, and 15 September 2016
Occupational, Health and Safety Information Session: 25 August
Overseas Travel dates: 24 September 09 October 2016
Post-Trip teaching dates: Thursdays 13, 20 and 27 October 2016
First Submission/Presentation: 11 August
Final Submission/Presentation: 3 November 201
SUBJECT OUTLINE
Students will take part in an international studio in the Dutch city of Leeuwarden in collaboration with students and academics from the
Technical University of Delft and Aalborg University. The studio will develop design projects for the European Cultural Capital program
for 2018, a year long program of intense artistic and cultural activity in Leeuwarden. We will focus on 2-3 urban sites. These sites
have been selected by the city as key sites for the European Cultural Capital program and now require design development with the
intention of realising projects on these sites for 2018.
The design projects include:
Pop up modular small scale accommodation
3D printing labs to explore new manufacturing possibilities for the northern Netherlands
Light weight, high performance pavilions for an Energy park and expo showcasing new resilient energy technologies
Refurbishing and repurposing existing urban infrastructure
60
The projects take in the disciplinary expertise of architectural, landscape and urban planning strategies along with wayfinding and
service design. Students will develop design interventions to transform the existing built environment and systems of provision (energy,
water, food, transport, information) for a sustainable, low carbon, resilient future What steps must be taken today to get there?
Building on the master planning achieved by the 2015 VEIL studio we will develop detail designs for the identified sites to shift the path
of innovation on a new trajectory: towards sustainable, resilient conditions. There will be an emphasis on physical model making in this
studio and we will hold an introductory session in the Fab Lab at MSD. The studio will travel to Copenhagen for a 2 day architectural
and design study tour. There will be opportunities to visit and explore Rotterdam, one of the worlds pre-eminent architectural and
design laboratories.
JAVA-TRAVELING STUDIO
SEM | 2 | 2016
Limited to 16 places
For Master of Architecture; Master of Landscape Architecture; Master of Urban Design; Master of Urban Planning students
How does tourism in South East Asia influence the urban fabric? What does travel mean for
architects? How does travel inform our perception? How can we link seemingly discontinuous phenomena, and how can we tie together and represent issues of architecture, urbanism, economy, landscape, the past, the present and the future?
Application to Dr Gideon Aschwanden [email protected]
MELBOURNE BANDUNG
ERFURT
ZRICH
61
events of note
DEANS LECTURE
SERIES 2016
KAREN MCLUSKEY + KEITH
VANDERSYS
PEG Office of Landscape + Architecture,
Philadelphia
7pm, Tuesday 2 August
SEMESTER 2
EVENTS
PROFESSOR JUDITH INNES
Director, Institute of Urban & Regional
Development, University of California,
Berkeley
7pm, Tuesday 11 October
Dynamic Patterns
Dynamic Patterns will discuss the work
of Philadelphia-based PEG office of
landscape + architecture. MCloskey and
VanDerSys will examine a range of projects
and techniques that enable a multivalent,
multilayered understanding of pattern as
both expression and shaping influence of
environmental processes. The projects
range from small-scale fabrications that
explore the capacity of geometry to
articulate site functions, such as water
collection, to computational modeling and
hydrodynamic simulations. MCloskey and
VanDerSyss work explores the relationship
among digital media, fabrication
technology and construction.
62
https://msd.unimelb.edu.au/fabrication-workshop
FABLAB
MACHINE WORKSHOP
ROBOTICS LAB
Lasercutting
OPEN ACCESS
every afternoon
1 - 4.30pm
Robots
Robots
Consultations
Saws
Planars
Tools
WETWORKS
PRINTROOM
PHOTOGRAPHY
& MEDIA
Printing
Cameras
Binding
Lighting
Scanning
Multimedia facilities
3D Printing
CNC Milling
Robots
Casting
Plastering
Concreting
Refer to:
msd.unimelb.edu.au/equipment
msd.unimelb.edu.au/fablab
Phone Number
Collecting on /
Print finish time
ASKED.
UNIVERSITY OF
FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE
MELBOURNE
MELBOURNE
SCHOOL OF DESIGN
63