• About
    • Info & Team
    • Support
    • Storefront
  • Work
    • Undergraduate Work
    • Graduate Work
    • Alumni Work
    • Faculty Work
    • Co-op
  • Community
    • Exhibition
    • Event
    • Initiatives
  • Articles
bridge@waterlooarchitecture.com
BridgeBridge
  • About
    • Info & Team
    • Support
    • Storefront
  • Work
    • Undergraduate Work
    • Graduate Work
    • Alumni Work
    • Faculty Work
    • Co-op
  • Community
    • Exhibition
    • Event
    • Initiatives
  • Articles

THESIS: Cauldron of Forces: Designing a Lightning Observatory on Lake Maracaibo

May 12, 2018 Posted by Samuel Ganton Defence, Event, Graduate Work, Thesis

sg_Cauldron_of_Forces_Approach

Cauldron of Forces

Designing a Lightning Observatory on Lake Maracaibo

Samuel Ganton

There are storms in the world, and the world is a storm, and we ourselves are weather. Earth and the universe are continually emerging and dissolving: geological, meteorological, and biological forces interact to create planets, storms, and living creatures, which cycle from one form to another. What seems static is simply moving slowly. Everything is weather.

As an example, take the Maracaibo Basin in western Venezuela, a 50,000 km2 valley where wind, water, oil, and mountains are fused in a single turbulent system. The Catatumbo Lightning burns overhead, dominating the scene. Nearly every night for centuries there has been a thunderstorm over Lake Maracaibo – a persistent, recurring weatherform that has shaped cultural memory and mythology in the region. Below, the lake is the centre of Venezuela’s oil extraction operation. Wellheads dot the surface of the lake, threaded by a labyrinth of leaky underwater pipelines. All these phenomena have their genesis in the geological processes that shaped the basin. The uplift of surrounding mountain ranges has depressed the valley, freeing deep reservoirs of oil and trapping them close to the surface. The same mountains funnel low-level winds sweeping south from the Caribbean and create favourable conditions for thunderstorms.

This thesis wrestles with the complexity of the Maracaibo Basin through storytelling and design. Part One is a cosmic history, tracking the spatial and cultural metamorphosis of the valley. Part Two is a design investigation into architecture’s capacity to frame an encounter with wild weather. Through the speculative design of a thunderstorm observatory sited near the epicentre of the Catatumbo Lightning, it asks: what kind of architecture might participate in cycles of transience and change, rather than obscuring them? How might architecture extend sensory perception and become an instrument for connecting humans more completely to the storm that is our world?

Supervisor
Dereck Revington, University of Waterloo

Committee Members
Andrew Levitt, University of Waterloo
Jane Hutton, University of Waterloo

External Reader
Jonathan Tyrrell

The Defence Examination will take place
May 15, 2018 6:00 PM ARC 1001  (Main Lecture Hall)

Maracaibo_Map

Maracaibo_Basin_Section

95

Samuel Ganton
+ postsBio

Samuel Ganton is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. His thesis research focuses on designing a thunderstorm observatory on a lake in Venezuela.

  • Samuel Ganton
    http://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/sganton/
    Treaty Lands, Global Stories – Research Paper
  • Samuel Ganton
    http://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/sganton/
    What Binds Us – Installation at OAA MOVE Party
  • Samuel Ganton
    http://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/sganton/
    On Empathy Recording: Poverty and Homelessness in Cambridge – with Philip Mills
  • Samuel Ganton
    http://waterlooarchitecture.com/bridge/blog/author/sganton/
    History Here is The Story of Somewhere Else
Tags: architecturedefenceeventGraduate Workthesis

About Samuel Ganton

Samuel Ganton is a graduate student at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture. His thesis research focuses on designing a thunderstorm observatory on a lake in Venezuela.

You also might be interested in

FAVORITE PLACES: In a Crowd
A commonly liked building. Florence, Italy

FAVORITE PLACES: In a Crowd

Jan 29, 2018

Poorna seeks to find a friend’s favorite place. (more…) Poorna[...]

THESIS: Three Minutes to Midnight
“By its very efficiency, the high-rise took over the task of maintaining the social structure that supported them all. For the first time it removed the need to repress every kind of anti-social behaviour, and left them free to explore any deviant or wayward impulses. It was precisely in these areas that the most important and most interesting aspects of their lives would take place. Secure within the shell of the high-rise like passengers on board an automatically piloted air-liner, they were free to behave in any way they wished, explore the darkest corners they could find. In many ways, the high-rise was a model of all that technology had done to make possible the expression of a truly ‘free’ psychopathology.” (p. 43) -J.G. Ballard, High-Rise (1975)

THESIS: Three Minutes to Midnight

Sep 6, 2016

Amanda Ghantous will be defending her thesis titled "Three Minutes to Midnight" on Wednesday September 7th at 12:30pm at the BRIDGE Centre for Architecture+Design. Her thesis is an exploration of the disconnection between the idealistic presentation of the world as depicted by utopian-fueled architecture and the everyday reality of human behaviour.

Friday Docs with TLGS

Friday Docs with TLGS

Nov 2, 2017

Treaty Lands, Global Stories has always operated on the premise[...]

Leave a Reply Cancel Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search

BRIDGE

Center for Architecture + Design

7 Melville St. S, Cambridge, ON

  • bridge@waterlooarchitecture.com

© 2025 — BRIDGE.