Tuesday, 25 January 2011

Bachelor works

  •  Architectural Synthesis II
  • Academic year 2004
this project involves the development of a multiplex building close to the coastal area of Patras. The topographic scheme is shown bellow. The drawing was taken  from Autocad and modified in Illustrator












































Front view created in Autocad 2002


  First floor layout designed in Autodesk 2002
The arrangement of the three flat floor is shown above, the same arrangement applies to the remaining levels.

3D horizontal section of the first floor created in Autocad Cadware 2002

  • Module: Architectural History II
    Subject: City Monuments
  • Academic year 2003 
 
    Aim of the project was to find and provide basic information for a monument of the city I live. The sketches that illustrate a church are hand drawings made in aquarelles.
    This edifice is in Kifisia, a suburban area in the northern part of Athens, a former Andreas Syngros property. It was build around 1880,  and nowadays belongs to the school I have graduated named “Experimental School of Anavryta”.

    That church belongs to a part of o greater in hectares green area, full of pinecones and evergreen trees. The edifice is unified with it’s surroundings, the roman rhythm that has in combination with the prevailing tall trees, travels the observer to a scene of another era. 

    Monument characteristics

    A masonry wall basically made of adobe in a timber frame structure. Timber holds the double-pitched roof, covered by black tiles. The doors and windows are made of wood with anaglyphs and an additional external marble framing that is placed around each one of the openings, indicating a typical element of the Romanic era.
    A zone with marble tiles, embraces the lower part of the church. A pair of piles can be found in the front entrance and  the back side of the church, those are formed in pentagonal shape. All four piles have in their endings truncated cones.
    The building has influences from Romanic  and Byzantine rhythm.



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