Waterloo Architecture undergraduate student Simon McKenzie is a winner of the American Society of Architectural Illustrators Juror Student Award for his atmospheric renderings. The project, entitled Proteus Moves, was completed in Professor Dereck Revington’s 3B Option Studio in the fall of 2012. Simon’s work will be exhibited alongside that of graduate student Chanel Dehond at the twenty-ninth annual Architecture in Perspective exhibition beginning October 15 in Dallas, Texas. Design statement from Simon McKenzie This studio explores the art of architecture imagined through space, time, and motion. Focusing...
Increasingly, Waterloo Architecture students and graduates are employing their extensive skills towards alternative design, fabrication, and technological initiatives that deviate from the conventional realms of architecture. Take, for example, Interluude, an interface which crowd sources free time, or Hot Pop Factory which designs, fabricates and educates using 3D-printing – both are initiatives spawned from the fringes of architecture school. M’ling is the newest creature, brought to life by graduate student Chanel Dehond. By injecting a little...
The uniquely independent masters program here at the Waterloo School of Architecture continues to grow, and each term brings new graduate students accompanied by their diverse thesis objectives. Over the next few weeks we will be profiling these future masters and their work in hopes of shedding light on the breadth of research and design happening within the school. This week features masters students who are at various stages of developing their thesis work. Immersed in their...
The uniquely independent masters program here at the Waterloo School of Architecture continues to grow, and each term brings new graduate students accompanied by their diverse thesis objectives. Over the next few weeks we will be profiling these future masters and their work in hopes of shedding light on the breadth of research and design happening within the school. This week features masters students who are at various stages of developing their thesis work. Immersed in their...
The uniquely independent masters program here at the Waterloo School of Architecture continues to grow and each term brings new graduate students accompanied by their diverse thesis objectives. Over the next few weeks we will be profiling these future masters and their work in hopes of shedding light on the breadth of research and design happening within the school. This week features the current M2 students and their work presented at the M1 Open Studio...
The uniquely independent masters program here at the Waterloo School of Architecture continues to grow, and each term brings new graduate students accompanied by their diverse thesis objectives. Over the next few weeks we will be profiling these future masters and their work in hopes of shedding light on the breadth of research and design happening within the school. This week features masters students who are at various stages of developing their thesis work. Immersed in their...
The uniquely independent masters program here at the Waterloo School of Architecture continues to grow, and each term brings new graduate students accompanied by their diverse thesis objectives. Over the next few weeks we will be profiling these future masters and their work in hopes of shedding light on the breadth of research and design happening within the school. This week features the current M2 students and their work presented at the M1 Open Studio...
For nearly thirty incoming graduate students, the fall term meant the beginning of their masters degree, when they initiated their pursuit of an independent architectural thesis. The Waterloo Architecture graduate program is increasingly drawing students from across the country, with applicants from Dalhousie, Ryerson, and Carleton Universities, as well as internationally, from Asia and the Middle East, to pursue academic research and design here in Cambridge. This past term, Associate Professor Val Rynnimeri and new Associate...
Monday and Thursday are studio days. On these days in particular, the third floor undergraduate studio is filled with a frenetic energy of design, research and exploration. Students can usually be found talking excitedly with design professors and classmates in a habitat saturated with trace sketches, study models and empty coffee cups. Every Monday we’ll share a completed project, churned out from this energetic studio environment. Arch 292 / Adrian Blackwell studio coordinator The Great Domestic Revolution ...
Monday and Thursday are studio days. On these days in particular, the third floor undergraduate studio is filled with a frenetic energy of design, research and exploration. Students can usually be found talking excitedly with design professors and classmates in a habitat saturated with trace sketches, study models and empty coffee cups. Every Monday we’ll share a completed project, churned out from this energetic studio environment. Arch 493 / Andrew Levitt studio coordinator Comprehensive Design Studio Project...