Nick Oxendale | Thomas & Denzinger | Week 8 of the Semester

This week was an untraditional week in the office, I was off on Monday and Tuesday for fall break so I decided to work Wed-Friday. Last week I had almost finished the set of renderings for the Oyster Catcher Beach house, a clubhouse for the Seabrook island community. Last week I only had to photoshop one more rendering before I re-presented them all to my principal, Joel (who is also the PM for the project). Joel gave me a few more changes to make based off the client’s feedback from the previous meeting so my duty this week entailed going back into our Revit model, adding  a few things and making some adjustments here and there… then exporting the file back to Lumion for quality renderings.

Here is a more formal breakdown of my tasks this week:

Wednesday: Oyster Catcher Photoshop Renderings – here I finished the renderings from last week, printed them all out on 8.5×11, and left them for Joel to review.

Thursday: Oyster Catcher Revit file changes (adjusted things in the Revit model such as: the roof deck, added planters, different parapet roof, adjusted some vegetation, and added an ADA ramp that takes users to the roof deck form the 2nd level.

Friday: Oyster Catcher Lumion adjustments (brought the Revit file back into Lumion with the updated adjustments and made changes to planting and entourage.

In total, there are 12 renderings, since some of them are placed around vegetation, the existing neighboring buildings do not need to be photoshopped into the images. Therefor, about 3 images are complete and don’t need to be taken into Photoshop with exception of some hue/saturation changes. Here are the 3 images below.

Here is the back side of the Oyster Catcher clubhouse. The concept is to be surrounding within vegetation, oriented towards the ocean with a strong connection to nature while keeping a sense of privacy from neighboring residents. In this image you can see some of the major changes that occurred including: the parapet roof w/ added vegetation, the ADA lift on the building to the left, along with changes to the landscape and entourage.

 

 

 

Here you can see the front side of the buildings and how vegetation cerates a natural barrier between the users and the neighboring buildings + parking. The pool is oriented towards the ocean creating an infinity pool were water falls down into the fountain below. One may also be able to see the changes to the roofline and how vegetation is added to the roof edge.

 

 

Lastly, here is the beach walk view, it hasn’t changed much since some of the previous iterations due to the angle of the view, but entourage and vegetation has changed.

 

By early next week I’ll have all the renderings finished. I’ve already got my next task assigned once I complete these final renderings. Until next time… Cheers!

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