Wanda Katja Liebermann
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Wanda Katja Liebermann
Home Wanda Katja Liebermann DESIGN AND TEACHING PORTFOLIO Built Russell Street Addition Berkeley, California WWORKSHOP, 2010-2012 I was designer and project architect for this 400 square-foot master bedroom addition to a 1937 neo-Tudor house. The traditional gable form is reinterpreted through the use of contemporary materials and detailing. The extruded, zinc-paneled tube, filled in at both ends with a glass storefront system, overhangs the original stucco walls to emphasize its additive nature. Russell Street Addition Berkeley, California WWORKSHOP, 2010-2012 Russell Street Garden Berkeley, California WWORKSHOP, 2014 Currently under construction, the concept was inspired by a small budged and space (made smaller by car storage). The design transforms inexpensive commercial products like permeable concrete pavers and an industrial steel roll-up door to extend the interior into an architectural garden. A two-foot square grid based on the pavers organizes all the elements, including new fence, parking screen, trellis, and ground coverings. steel roll up door at carport wood fence ENTRY wood screen planting stone paver CARPORT paver with gravel infill permeaple paver with grass infill Lovell Avenue Residence Remodel Mill Valley, California WWORKSHOP, 2007-2008 The renovation included a new kitchen, which posed a number of conceptual and technical challenges, including how to integrate new forms that neither mimicked nor conflicted with the clear geometry of the existing house by Daniel Liebermann. The kitchen design emphasizes the horizontal lines of the masonry retaining wall, creating a visual dialog with the tree-like central structure. The resulting parallelogram with cantilevered peninsula appears to float. kitchen Lovell Avenue Residence Remodel Mill Valley, California WWORKSHOP, 2007-2008 de Young Building (Ritz-Carlton) San Francisco, California, 2004-07 OFFICE OF CHARLES F. BLOSZIES ARCHITECTS I managed the construction documents and construction administration for the restoration and addition of this Burnham & Root high-rise, originally built in 1890 for San Francisco’s Chronicle newspaper. In the 1960s it was envelped in a white steel skin. Fifty years later, Ritz-Carlton’s transformation of it into a condominium and timeshare property entailed twelve new floors, new steel core, shotcrete jacket, all new building systems, and historic restoration. de Young Building (Ritz-Carlton) San Francisco, California, 2004-07 OFFICE OF CHARLES F. BLOSZIES ARCHITECTS The three main challenges include providing a structure flexible enough to withstand seismic shocks yet sufficiently rigid to stabilized the existing masonry walls; reconstructing the historic façade, destroyed in the 1960s; and threading new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing through the existing floors. Timeline of construction, destruction, and reconstruction 1890 Burnham and Root original 1906: Earthquake damage 1920 Kearny addition 1990: 1960s steel cladding 2005: Construction scaffold Commercial Interiors 1996-2014 I have designed many commercial interiors in the Bay Area, including a modern furniture showroom and diPietro Todd Salons in San Francisco, Palo Alto, and Walnut Creek. My design approach focuses on expressing the existing shell, maximizing the space, building in flexibility of use, and creating new sociospatial awareness, such as features in the salons that play up the pleasure of watching people. Arkitektura Furniture Showroom in San Francisco; view of main floor with interior kiosk. DiPietro Todd Salon, Fillmore Street, San Francisco salon; view from enty. DiPietro Todd Salon, Walnut Creek; view from mezzanine to reception area. DiPIETRO TODD SALON San Francisco, California WWORKSHOP, 2014 This is one of two identical freestanding reception desks I designed that transforms the traditional reception to a mobile in the round experience, integrating the latest communication, sheduling, and payment technologies in a cutting edge salon. Hand work is an important way to for me to work through and convey my ideas. Here, paper and foam core represent white oak veneer panels and recycled acrylic counter tops. Unbuilt Ribbon Housing Berkeley, California VIGILANTE ARCHITECTURE, 1992 Ribbon Housing, which was exhibited in the New Public Realm Competition, is a proposal for the abandoned Santa Fe Railroad right-of-way that cuts through 18 residential blocks in Berkeley. The eleven-foot wide housing prototype creates a continuous landscaped promenade that connects to the north Berkeley BART station. Bridging elements over the walkway form courtyards and define the passage. I was one of a team of three designers. Ribbon Housing Berkeley, California VIGILANTE ARCHITECTURE, 1992 third floor second floor ground floor Site plan Site model, section model View of existing block condition San Francisco AIDS Life Center Competition VIGILANTE ARCHITECTURE, 1990 The international San Francisco AIDS Life Center Competition called for proposals for a new space for coordinated HIV/AIDS services and a memorial space to exhibit the NAMES Project quilt. This design imagined a central skylit, floating exhibit space, suspended by surrounding rectangular bars, which house service organization offices. I was one of a team of three designers. Urban Shelter, SOMA San Francisco, California MASTER’S THESIS, 1996 Growing homelessness and gentrification of this formerly light industrial neighborhood has made the South of Market Area of San Francisco a critical arena of public-private conflicts. My thesis was an exploration of these social and functional overlaps. I developed four different approaches to “street furniture,” using found urban features to create different models of urban shelter/use that explore the idea of different users appropriating them as their needs dictate. SITE 1: Public Swimming Pool An Olympic-sized outdoor public swimming pool occupies an excavated with wraparound sub-sidewalk basements as locker rooms. SITE 2: Parking Garden Two interlocking zones--a tree garden and car-parking court--meet along a zig-zag infrastructure, which cars plug into. SITE 4: Urban Farm and Market Bounded by the I-80 freeway, an arcade offers seating, water spigots, and sales stands. Master of Architecture Studio Projects UC Berkeley, California SANCTUARY, 1995 Tucked along the banks of Strawberry Creek, this contemplative space on the UC Berkeley Campus brings awareness to the experiences of self and community, in relationship to the landscape. MEXICAN MUSEUM, 1995 This proposal for a space celebrating the arts and culture of Mexico and the Americasin San Francisco reinterprets Luis Barragan’s monolithic rectangular forms, intersected with transluscent horizontal light tubes. Teaching Wentworth Institute of Technology Architecture 517, 2010 FRIENDS SCHOOL, JAMAICO POND, BOSTON, MA was the final project in a studio focused on integrating environmental sustainability with Quaker traditions. As a section instructor with a lot of autonomy, my goal was to foster formal speculation grounded in research of Quaker teaching and spiritual practices, and structural, material, and environmental systems. Than Denduong The starting point was to create an educational experience that literally bridged a site depression within a copse of trees. His idea was to engage students with the experiences of inside and above the earth by making spaces that juxtaposed a cave and a treehouse. Wentworth Institute of Technology Architecture 517, 2010 FRIENDS SCHOOL, JAMAICO POND, BOSTON, MA Brian Wood The goal was to create a protective yet visually porous buffer between the public space of park and city and the elementary school. Using the existing landscape to cradle the courtyard allowed him to incorporate a terraced wetlands wastewater treatment system. Kyle Gagne Kyle’s idea was to amplify the existing bluff by creating converging inhabitable vertical gardens as central organizational and circulation elements. The green walls also teach the elementary school students about biological lifecycles, water reclamation systems, and land stewarship. UC Berkeley Architecture 100B, 2001 THEOLOGICAL UNION ANNEX & HOUSING The Berkeley Divinity School was the site of this semester-long project that explored different approaches to student housing and other transient users. “Holy Hill” is a complex site: sloped, and comprising multiple buildings styles, ranging from neo-Gothic to modernist. The program asked students to develop an innovative interpretation of local housing needs based on in-depth site and programmatic research. ADAM DAVIDSON The project explores designing for people who are visually impaired, who use cues of light and dark to guide their movements. He created a formal arrangement that enabled the easy internalization of a mental map from the predictability of repeated forms and shadow patterns cast by the buildings. UC Berkeley Architecture 100B, 2002 ALAMEDA ISLAND FERRY TERMINAL This was the final project in a series sited on a jetty of Alameda Island. It required students to design for bodies that are, in various ways, in transit. As part of the revitalization of the shoreline, the program included commercial and public program elements related to a new ferry terminal. I gave students leeway to interpret the program as part of a critical exercise in defining meaningful contextual uses. NICHOLAS MEDRANO The idea was to create a museum procession entwining two educational strands: the history of the former naval base on Alameda Island and the relationship of the tidal movements to the landscape. The result was a series of stepped galleries hovering over the flat verge of the bay. BENNY HO This student combined the kinetics and culture of driving with shopping. He based the design of driving aisles, parking and exits on studies of major view corridors, inspired by unobstructed views of the city, Alcatraz and Yerba Buena Islands from this jetty into San Francisco Bay.
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paper and foam core represent a bent recangular form made of white oak veneer panels and recycled acrylic counter tops.
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