Category Archives for Design Village

Design Village 2016

Design Village 2016 was a success! You can read about my project inTENTse here. I wanted to share some of my classmates’ work as well. Everyone had such different and interesting solutions to the same design problem: How do you build a structure for five people that is light enough to carry into the canyon but sturdy enough to support you through the night?

This project was right next to mine and it was lovingly called the hamster ball. The group rolled it up the hill and made a circular bed out of saran wrap in the center. To everyone’s surprise, it held up beautifully through the night.
Another rolling project, this one had hammocks in the center. You can see the permanent architectural structures in Poly Canyon in the background of this image. 

There were so many different solutions, with materials from balloons to bamboo, but each embodied the certain things that team of students had, to borrow Cal Poly’s motto, “learned by doing.”
This event happens every year at Cal Poly’s open house weekend and I’d encourage everyone to go and check out the projects.

If walls could dream… they’d dream of being the walls of Poly Canyon on Design Village weekend.

Design Village 2016: inTENTse

“You have three weeks to design and construct a structure for you and four other people to sleep in for a night outside.”

That’s what our professors told us at the start of winter quarter. It was time for the biggest project of our freshman year architecture studio: Design Village.
I saw Design Village last year at Cal Poly’s Open House but this year I got to participate in it.
Design Village is an annual event put on by the College of Architecture and Environmental Design during Open House in which teams of students sleep in projects they designed and constructed in Poly Canyon. The event has two parts, the official competition which is open to any group of college or community college students and the first year architecture studio project which is required for every first year Architecture and Architectural Engineering major.


I worked with four other girls and we started by analyzing the site. We looked at the slope of the hill and the direction of the sun and wind. 
 
Using study models and drawings, we developed a design that would use steel beams to support hammocks. Once we finalized our design, we modeled the structure in a computer drafting software called Rhino, prepared construction documents for our professors to review, and got started on construction.

Our main projects were to drill holes in the steel beams to bolt them together and to weld the axles for the wheels on. We drilled a lot of holes so that the structure could be adjusted to the slope more accurately. We set up pieces of it a few times to be sure it would work and support our weight.
Finally, it was the morning of install day. We transported our project into Poly Canyon. Four of us wheeled the steel beams and one of us carried a backpack with the other tools and supplies we needed. When we got to the canyon, we set up our project and although we had a few challenges along the way, we got it up fairly quickly and were able to enjoy the day. 
We spent the night in our structure and it held up perfectly. It was a memorable experience and definitely a highlight of our first year studio experience. In a few years when we’re all architects and engineers, we’ll look back on this project as our first real taste of designing and building a space to dwell in and remember that bittersweet feeling as the sun rose and you realized that your project stood up all night but that the project was over. All that was left was to lug it back down the hill.
This project was a once in a lifetime opportunity and definitely a dream come true.

The biggest lesson I learned: I learned more of what I don’t know. I had no idea how to figure out what type of steel would support all five of us in this configuration and if it was going to fall down in the middle of the night or not, but with the help of my teammates and our professors, our project worked out. I’m learning how to identify what I don’t know and who to ask to find those answers.

One thing I wish I did differently: I wish I had stuck around in the afternoon to talk to more people about my project. We all kind of abandoned it after set-up to shower and eat lunch before returning in the evening, but I wish I would’ve stayed there a little longer to talk to people who came by to see the projects.

My best advice for future design villagers: Trust your design instincts. Pick a team you’ll get along with. Finish your project. The most disappointing thing is to put all this work in and then not get to live in your project. Focus on the big structure first so you’ll have something to sleep in and worry about the details later because this is a really fast project. Don’t just copy another project you’ve seen somewhere else, but be sure it’ll work at some level. Oh, and rent a GoPro if you don’t already have one. They’re tons of fun. We made a time lapse of our project set-up and it was super cool.

 If walls could dream… they’d dream of spending a night in Poly Canyon.

Cal Poly Open House 2015

Last weekend, I visited San Luis Obispo for Cal Poly’s Open House.

I went to Farmer’s Market Thursday evening and checked out the Cal Poly club booths as well as the fruit stands. Friday morning, I got checked in at the College of Architecture & Environmental Design table.

I went to information sessions, saw Vellum projects (Cal Poly’s furniture design competition) such as the concrete chair below, toured the Solar Decathlon House, and even went to a rodeo!

Saturday, I visited more club booths (and got lots of cool free stuff!!) and then headed out to Design Village in Poly Canyon.

On the bottom of the hill were projects by other colleges (from community colleges, to four-year universities, to other colleges within Cal Poly).

The top half of the hill was all first year architecture studio students from Cal Poly.

I was so impressed by the variety of concepts and materials, and the amazing view! I can’t wait to be a part of it next year!

If walls could dream… they’d dream of spending a night in Poly Canyon.