Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Stone Brewery

Today, I met up with an old friend and we went to Stone Brewery in Escondido.  It was an amazing building, and had tons of interesting and unique materials that I couldn't help but stare at through most of our conversations.  A lot of the building was actually made of...you guessed it, stone.  But the way the color scheme and material choices in the room were able to compliment it was really beautiful.  If you are remotely interested in beer, I would highly recommend you check this place out.


  

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Fun with 2x4 and 4x4s!

After a couple hours, a Sketchup crash and a few cups of decaf, the first floor of the Globe is finally complete...at least, the major construction.  There are tons of details I will go back and do later, but right now, the shapes are all in place.

2x4s and 4x4s played a big part today.  making the supports for the second floor, the fence, and the Tudor style all needed one (or both) of the standard sizes, and it worked out well.  

On behalf of the Sketchup Exporter, sorry for the smudged lines

As you can see, I used a lot of offsets to create the benches.  Each bench is 1', and the space between the benches is 2'.  At this point, the model was ready to be extruded!

Here are a couple comparisons between the First Globe, and the Second One.



Globe One
Globe Two

Besides the stage, the second model is much cleaner and simple than the first (the missing half of the stairs on the first doesn't help its cause much either).  It is also more accurate!  The benches in the first model had backs on them, which was quite a luxury I decided to include in the budget.  However, that luxury got axed in the second model, but in the original, I highly doubt the First Floor Gallery had benches with backs.  

The next step will be to finish up the Tudor detailing on the first floor, and start the second floor.

In other news, I am starting to plan sketches around different paintings.  One of my favorite paintings is by Van Gogh, called "The Yellow House".  I think it would be interesting to try to sketch a building that has the same kind of movement and style as the picture.  

The Yellow House

Until tomorrow,

Robert.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Project: The Globe Theater


When I studied abroad in London, I had the fortune of going to the Globe Theater three times.  Twice to see a play (The Comedy of Errors and Antony and Cleopatra), and once to have a behind the scenes look at the theater.  Although the behind the scenes tour was amazing to see, it also killed the sense of magic the Globe Theater has on its own.  While they told us a lot about how they mimicked the construction of the first Globe, they also showed us the high tech features built in and around the theater, which deprives the structure of its identity:  A building that defies time, as ageless as the stories that are told inside of it.

A Midsummer's Night Dream in 1599


For my project, I looked at tons of pictures of the new Globe Theater, the Old Globe Theater (in San Diego), and sketches and ideas of what the first Globe Theater may have looked like.  There is very little evidence or reports of the theater's specifications, so fortunately, a lot of elements were able to be smudged, such as the number of exits, or the height of the stage.







I started a basic globe theater a couple of months ago, but it is very sloppy, and I am restarting it from the ground up, knowing much more about BIM drawing than I did at the outset.  This is what I have for my first Globe:
My original Globe Theater (First Floor Only)

However, I think it is time for a restart, to create a more unified and cleaner Globe, and give it the dues it deserves in a BIM model.  It will also allow me to provide a step by step process on how I came about designing the structure.  

The first thing I did was make a blueprint similar to an A-sheet.  This picture isn't rotated to the traditional x-y axis, but it symmetric nonetheless.  The diameter of this theater is 100', and the stage is 40' x 20'.  I took the following steps to make this layout:

  • The outside walls are 1' thick
  • The distance from the back of the outside wall to the interior is 15'4".
  • The fence of the first floor compartments is 4" thick.
  • The exits are in the form of a pentagon, and measure 6' wide, with the remainder of the section used as stairs.
  • The center of the circle is the front and middle of the stage.
First Floor Plan (rotated)
Tomorrow I will add the benches to the layout, and add some more details to the floor plan.  Even though it's tempting to drag the whole floor plan up to make it 3D, it is really important NOT TO DO IT.  It will make things MUCH more complicated than they need to be.  Until tomorrow,

Robert.