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Page 1: Edwin Hans Portfolio

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Edwin HansPortfolio

Page 2: Edwin Hans Portfolio

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addressHofdijk 3473032 CGRotterdamThe Netherlands

tel +31 (0)630140917@ [email protected] www.edwinhans.net

EDWIN HANS

PORTFOLIO

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TABLE OF CONTENT

01. VISIBLE CITIES - HOME IN THE CITY PAGE 03A collaboratively programmed and configured environment, pulsating public life in Rotterdam.

02. PROJECT MAIN STREET PAGE 05A route of public display where urban and rural elements meet people and interchange at the city’s lifeline.

03. PROJECT ACCESS STREET PAGE 07A continuous slow network and presenting a thematized recreational area.

04. OPEN LIBRARY PAGE 09A decentralized library placed on a urban carpet, unifying the public space.

05. HAARLEM DUNES&WATER PAGE 11Emphasizing the difference in a Dual City to strengthen the qualities and characteristics.

06. HAARLEM DUNES&WATER - WAARDERPOLDER PAGE 13Introducing new Haarlem urban landscape typologies for a work&living environment.

07. SHUTTER HOUSE PAGE 15A residence that embodies the nomadic lifestyle of its inhabitant.

08. BLOCK 100 PAGE 16A free form build composition of residential units.

09. ŚWIĘTEGO FILIPA PAGE 17An apartment interior design for in Cracow city center.

10. COPENHAGEN SLOW RING PAGE 19Healing the urban frame in an West-East direction and connecting the city with its sea and landscape.

11.SPLIT-HOUSE PAGE 21Programmatic villa research and design.

NOTEThe eleven projects represented in this portfolio vary from urbanism, architecture and interior design. The order of emergence is mixed because I strongly believe in an interrelation off all levels in designing.

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Social clusters

Rotterdam’s waterfront, recreational network Involvement of thirdyparties and citizens can render Rotterdam visible

City rooms at De Boompjes

Social centre Dispositioned communities

VISIBLE CITIES‘HOME IN THE CITY’

PROJECT SUMMARY

Visible Cities – Home in the city- is a research and design project about the interrelation between mobile technologies and public space. Mobile technologies are the starting point of an increased urban transparency between people, and ‘User Generated Content’ is causing an urban transparency. Besides that, mobile technologies also enable citizens to programme and configure their public spaces.

Project Public space designArea Rotterdam, NLType TuDelft, Graduation projectYear 2012Tutors Francisco Colombo Luisa Calabrese

A project that is exploring a public space in which digital media application leads to a collaboratively programmed and configured environment, pulsating public life in Rotterdam.

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4Plan with city rooms

Browsing the city rooms with De Boompjes app

Impression of the Expo room

This project investigates the possibility of programming public space in a bottom-up matter and investigates what this will imply for Rotterdam’s urban life. Public resources such as wifi, electricity and water give an impulse to the public spaces if these are being used for activities. Setting up bottom-up ‘situations’ (such as meetings, events, performances etc,) will be triggered and brought into acceleration through mobile technologies.

Rotterdam has a variety of social clusters. Instead of setting out to unite everyone in one public sphere I design multiple city rooms in the line of the leisure network that can be appropriated by multiple social groups. These city rooms are aligned at Rotterdam’s waterfront De Boompjes and are physically demarcated by ‘boompjes’, which means trees in Dutch. The municipality is responsible for the basic urban infill and third parties can furthermore establish a sponsorship with a certain city room by proving resources. The city rooms become thematized city experiences when citizens appropriate the city rooms and activate them with activities. The raised city’s water embankment connects all city rooms and walking on it can be experienced as window-shopping all kinds of people’s creative manifestations. This is Rotterdam’s business card and it here where Rotterdam as a whole becomes visible.

Thematic city rooms

Thematic programme

Embankment detail

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mixed typology

village typologymixed housing

greenhouse typologyliving and working

orchard typologycommunity housing

garden typologysemi-detached

rural office typology

urban farm typology

urban farm typology

ISLAND TYPOLOGY

barn typologyrow houses

lent (develop)

kaswijk(transform)

oosterhout

N. oosterhout

kantorenveld(develop)

schurenveld(new)

nijmegen center

bemmel

Commercial zo

ne

Cultu

ral zone

Spo

rt zone

Forrest zo

ne

busin

ess zone

PROJECT MAIN STREET

PROJECT INTRODUCTION

The Dutch landscape is under a constant threat of urbanization. In urban regions like the Southernwing, Amsterdam metropolitan area and Eindhoven-Helmond many of the differences of the urban and the landscape are disappearing. The Arnhem-Nijmegen region is also one of them.The attempt of the municipality of Nijmegen to ‘Embrace the Waal,’ an ambitious plan to extend the city beyond the water’s periphery, is an understandable plan proposal when seen within a broader perspective of the Dutch Vinex policy. This is a policy from 1995 which states that from then on approximately 800.000 new houses have the to be build in the Netherlands at strategic places and the Arnhem-Nijmegen area is one of them.This area is historically defined by small villages and an agricultural and horticultural landscape. The ‘Embrace the Waal’ project is vastly urbanizing this area without sufficient respect for the existing physical and non-physical character of the place.Project Main street is about how the new housing program can catalyze a synergy between on one hand the existing productive landscape and on the other, the possibility for a recreative landscape, while strengthening the unique character of the landscape and surrounding villages.

Project Regional PlanArea Nijmegen, NLType TuDelft, MSc UrbanismYear 2010Tutors Peter Smit, Alexander Vollebregt

A route of public display where urban and rural elements meet people and interchange at the city’s lifeline.

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CONCEPT Project main street sets the stage for a route of public display where urban and rural elements meet people and interchange at the city’s lifeline (historical road).

ARNHEM-NIJMEGEN STRATEGYProject Main Street shows the potential of its power to prepare the conditions for the occurence of something beneficial to its surroundings and beyond. Namely, the center of gravitation the main street offers for the surrounding villages, the connectivity with Arnhem and Nijmegen and the transformation of parts of productive farmland into open public farmland. While the main street stretches from Arnhem to Nijmegen the project’s focus is the area between the highway A15 and the river the Waal. however, a similar strategy could be transposed to the northern side of the A15 as well.

THEMATIZED LANDSCAPE The landscapes and townscapes are organized along the main street. Area’s of where not to build are indicated froming landscape island in a lager area subject to urban sprawl from existing villages. The lanscape islands are productive landscapes, strengthening the local food identity. where there is no place for growth in food production, simply shrink and transform the remaining entities into landscape and food artifacts manifested as a theme and utilize this accordingly for the growth in public interest in food and landscape. Summarized as selling a ‘landscape experience by means of a themetized rural landscape.’ Themed sites such as kaswijk and fruitveld sit aside local food producers in a dense hybrid landscape.

lent (develop)

kaswijk(transform)

oosterhout

N. oosterhout

kantorenveld(develop)

schurenveld(new)

nijmegen center

bemmel

Commercial zo

ne

Cultu

ral zone

Spo

rt zone

Forrest zo

ne

busin

ess zone

mixed typology

village typologymixed housing

greenhouse typologyliving and working

orchard typologycommunity housing

garden typologysemi-detached

rural office typology

urban farm typology

urban farm typology

ISLAND TYPOLOGY

barn typologyrow houses

Surroundings color the main street, main street as an exhibition route

Introducing site specific architectural typologiesStep three: Utalizing villages and landscape for progam mainly centered along main steet

Adding a secundary network of landscape&village features

Existing villages as starting point for further growth

Step two: Islands of where not to build

perpendicular relations with surroundingsNorth/South main street absorbs surroundingsStep one, existing condition: De Waal river, villages, ponds, motorway, ring road, NS rails

Upgrading the historical road to the region’s Main Street. An Arnhem-Nijmegen ring emerges with a fast and a slow part. The highway through Lent will be downgraded hooking up with the slow historical road. A new road on the east creating the ‘Nijmegen city ring’ will be upgraded to a highway hooking up with the fast road to Arnhem. A parallel connectivity at a fast or slow pace.

land use

farmland

polder forrest

public farmland

fruit garden

landscape typology architectural typology

Site specific architectural typologies are derived from it’s landscape typology

Collage Village: A built program showcase to ex-hibit and empha-size the diverse mix of landscapes at the Main Street

former f

ortif

icatio

n

train

statio

n

lent

fruit

garden

open fa

rmla

nd

pold

er fo

rres

t

farm

land

farm

land

former f

ortif

icatio

n

train

statio

n

lent

fruit

garden

open fa

rmla

nd

pold

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rres

t

farm

land

farm

land

former f

ortif

icatio

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statio

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garden

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farm

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former f

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icatio

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farm

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farm

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lent

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open fa

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pold

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farm

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former f

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open fa

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farm

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farm

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former f

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icatio

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lent

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open fa

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pold

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land

farm

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former f

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n

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lent

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open fa

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pold

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farm

land

farm

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former f

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n

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open fa

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farm

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farm

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open fa

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farm

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Collage Villages structural lay-out

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PROJECT ACCESS STREET

PROJECT SUMMARY

When highways were introduced at IJsselmonde, a vast network of slow roads interconnecting the island disappeared. Project Access Street aims to re-introduce a backbone for slow movement at IJsselmonde and creating a continues path connecting Rotterdam city center with the far end of IJsselmonde and beyond. Project Access Street not only brings the Zeeland experience actually closer to Rotterdam but also acts as a catalyst for development around this street. In terms of accessibility Project Access Street uses an existing road but attempts to upgrade and extend it. The programmatic point of gravitation will be achieved by (sub)Project 50 Lots. The rural parcels separating Barendrecht’s Vinex extensions with the recreational zone at the Oude Maas will be subject to a thematic landscape experience as a mediator. The thematic landscape experience manifests as a patchwork of nature, recreational activities, economic activity and low density country side dwelling typologies. The 50 parcels will be transformed in 50 different programmatic lots, best experienced by moving through on the Strip for a theatrical experience. These lots are spatially defined by ditches. The proximity and relationship between them makes them permeable, allowing program to mutate and flow. Eventually Project 50 Lots generates a parallel system to IJsselmonde’s recreational network at the Oude Maas’ waterfront.

Project Regional PlanArea IJsselmonde, NLType TuDelft, MSc UrbanismYear 2010Tutors Daan Zandbelt, Qu Lei

A continuous slow network and presenting a thematized recreational area.

ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCES STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET ACCESS STREET

THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

RIP

THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

RIP

THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

RIP

THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

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THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

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THE

STRI

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THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

RIP

THE

STRI

P TH

E ST

RIP

THE

Diagnoses: Disconnected slow network

Project 50 Lots: Bird eye view on The Strip (A)

Strategy: A continues Acces Street

Access street’s yield. Within 30 minutes from the Erasmus bridge to Southern part of IJsselmonde

Intervention: Programmatic (A) and Accessibility (B)

B1: Accessibility: Passageway

B2: Accessibility: Pedestrian bridge

A: Programatic: Project 50 Lots

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P

Polder Estates

Farm Land

Farm Land

Water Houses

Allotm

ent Gardens

Allotm

ent Gardens

Electricity StationCam

ping Site

Beach/Park

Beach/Park

Fishing Pond

Anim

al Field

Farm Field

Farm Field

Farm Field

Linear Forrest

Country Living

Golf Track

Flower Field

Skate Track

Park

Soccer Fields

Green H

ouses

Cemetery

Access LineAccess Line

Botantic Garden

Anim

al Farm

Sculpture Garden

Scouting movem

ent

Cemetery Park

Ice Skating Track

Green H

ouse Campus

Outdoor Sw

imm

ing

Garden EstatesGreen HousesFruit Field

50 parcels: 50 different programs

Programmatic: Project 50 Lots Accessibility: Posthumalaan passageway (B1) Accessibility: 4e Barendrechtseweg pedestrian bridge (B2)

The strip: Theatrical movement

Scattered bridges: Informal route

Large objects: Thematic dwelling

Page 10: Edwin Hans Portfolio

PROJECT SUMARY

The library as a centralized knowledge institute does not have a place in our new knowlegdge society anymore because it’s foundations are not sufficient for the new ‘social information age.’ Most libraries are organized as book management spaces while the management of social space is the least what is necessarily to level up with the technical developments. Libraries should only function as a medium and be as clear as possible in this.

The library paradox

Concept of library reformation

Boullee1784 1809 1843 1854 1913 1927 1924 1963 1967 1978 2010

Durand vertic.layered

Closed book archive types

horz.layered centr.archive Leonidov Asplund Aalto Stirling Weeber

Supermarket type Decentralized library

Hans

Parametric design rules

From precedents to a new library typology

9

OPEN LIBRARY

Project Library designArea Amsterdam, NLType TuDelft, Pre-MasterYear 2010Tutors Maarten Tuijl, Eugène Dumoulin, Sjap Holst

A decentralized library placed on a urban carpet, unifying the public space.

Bird eye view on Javaplein, Amsterdam

Page 11: Edwin Hans Portfolio

Leespaviljoen - west facade

Leespaviljoen - zuid facade

A A

Kitchen

Bar

160m2

160m2

Studio I Studio II

180m2

Podium

Seats

A A

Kitchen

Bar

160m2

160m2

Studio I Studio II

180m2

Podium

Seats

Readers are reclaiming the street with their booksReading pavilion exterior

Reading pavilion floorplan

Media pavilion floorplan

Auditorium pavilion floorplan

Parking pavilion floorplan

Reading pavilion - West elevation

Reading pavilion - Cross-section

Reading pavilion - South elevation

Reading pavilion interior10

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PROJECT SUMMARY

The municipality of Haarlem gives a strong message of the need to Densify within the borders of its region (2005). The ambition to house 7000 dwellings and further 260.000m2 of offices is needed if Haarlem want to hold and moreover improve its overall position within the Randstad. To visualize the programme a box of 100 x 100 x 500 metres is made next to Haarlem’s St. Bavo church.

HAARLEMDUNES

& WATER

Current structure 2010

Regional plan for the dual city

Project strategy

Built program

Regional plan sketch

Interventions in spatial structure

Project City development planArea Haarlem, NLType TuDelft, MSc UrbanismYear 2010Tutor Jing ZhouTeam Jasper Nijveldt Sang Hyun Lee Andre Kroese

Emphasizing the difference in a Dual City to strengthen the qualities and characteristics.

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With no further qualitative space to expand the city we have to look for the city’s inner qualities.Spatial and social statistics give a first clear and factual insight of the city. The city can be charaterized with the term ‘Dual City’. On a nationwide scale Haarlem is one of densest and richest cities, but statistics show a huge duality within the city. Both spatially and socially. These differences can be traced back in history, landscape morphology and urban form.

The West and East side of the river Spaarne, which flows through Haarlem, do have a different living pattern, income, mobility and household and moreover a different physical layout. We deal with this duality not by equalizing the differences but yet by emphasizing the qualities of these differences. By strenghtening the infrastructural

LANDSCAPE MORPHOLOGYHaarlem developed parallel to the coastline following the higher sand parts. This characterizes the spatial North-West orientation of the city up to this day. After the WOII the city expanded eastwards at the peat landscape.

INFRASTRUCTURAL FRAMEThe frame shows a north-south orientation resulting form the historical city development. A sufficient east-west infrastructure is lacking, hence a strategy for introducing one emerges.

Landscape relationHaarlem is surrounded by a diverse mix of landscape typologies. West of the river is characterized by the dunelandscape and is strongly connected. However, the area east of the river is not well connected with the polder landscape. Key is to connect the east with its surrounding polder.

Urban patternThe densest parts are build on the old dunes. Thus in a north-south direction. The strategy is densifying in east-west direction and around main public spaces like the central park and the water. The result of al these interventions is a new spatial structure for Haarlem.

1670: City on the Spaarne 1870: City on the Dunes 1940: City between sea and polder 2010: City between the sea and Amsterdam

North-south oriented Strengthening East-West connections Tweaking the frame Haarlem city ring

West has a strong relationship with landscape, East doesn’t

Relate the east to polder and water qualitiesand make a front to the river Spaarne

Water as forming element Haarlem re-orientated at its surrounding landscape typologies

Gradual density Densify east-west and around interestingpublic spaces

New dense public spaces A guideline for new haarlem urban landscape typologies

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The orange box implicates the volume needed for 260.000 m2 office space and is hovering above the Waarderpolder. As an indication of how much space it will occupy two scenario’s will follow.

Existing haarlem typologies

Scenaro 1. Max spread, typology needs to seize the surrounding landscape

Scenario 2. Max dense, only occupies one already empy plot but will result in towers80m high.

HAARLEMDUNES

& WATER

-WAARDERPOLDER

Project Summary

The municipality of Haarlem gives a strong message of the need to Densify within the borders of it’s region (2005). The ambition to house 7000 dwellings and further 260.000m2 of offices is needed if Haarlem want to hold and moreover improve its overall position within the Randstad. To visualize the programme a box of 100 x 100 x 500 metres is made next to Haarlem’s St. Bavo church. This project illustrates how to incorporate the office programe within the Regional Vision of Haarlem Dunes&Water as described in the previous project.

Desired office space in orange

Current condition

Drawing in landscape qualities

Haarlem Waarderpolder 2040

Tuning infrastructural frame

Urbanize periphery of the new landscape

Project MasterplanArea Haarlem, NLType TuDelft, MSc UrbanismYear 2010Tutor Jing Zhou

Introducting new Haarlem urban landscape typologies for a work&living environment.

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Programmatic result of the Polder Park design:

Existing offices before the transformation: 146.785 m2Total amount of offices after the transformation: 340.416 m2Gained extra floor surface is 193.631 m2 (232%)

If the 260.000m2 will also be spread at the other Polder Park up north there will even be room left for 850 dwellings. This makes up for a balance of working and living of 66 and respectivly 33 percent.

Iconic Architecture Park PavilionsLandscape Casbah Bird-eye view from the West

Polderpark Masterplan

Waarderpolder is a neglected business area but located at a prime location between the river the Spaarne and the polder (recreation) landscape as well as connected to regional infrastructure.This area can be transformed into a better place with working and living quality next to and within the landscape. For this to happen new landscape and infrastructural connections need to be made with waalderpolder’s surroundings.

The polder park functions as a structural element around which densification of buildings will take place. This will create a sharp urban border around the polder park and a few buildings within the park will highlight its function within. These buildings within the park are mainly creative work studios and other small offices. Around the egdes of the parks are dwellings and a combination of small offices within a housing block. Together creating a work&living environment within the polder.

This work&living environment within the polder can not be build in the way Haarlem used to make buildings. The current housing typologies found in Haarlem indicate a low density not adequate for a new dense district. New, denser, typologies will have to be designed to be able to house all the respectivly 260.000m2 offices and many dwellings. New Haarlem Urban Landscape Typologies will have to emerge.

Page 16: Edwin Hans Portfolio

spatial configuration

spatial configuration

spatial configuration variations

West elevation Cross-section A-A1 Cross-section B-B1

Basement Level

Intermediate Level

Ground floor level

15

SHUTTERHOUSE

PROJECT SUMMARY

This house is inspired by shutters because of the regular absence of its inhabitant, a travelling journalist.To be ‘there’ or not to be, that is the question here. The house embodies the nomadic lifestyle and the temporariness surrounded by this existence. Facade shutters can regulate the transparancy from totally closed to totally open. The building can literary open-up when used. Temporariness is also to be found with functions of the house. A kichen is not always used neither a guest room or stairs. Here the possibility has been offered to close off partitions by floor shutters. By not using a certain fixed setting, possibilities for something else to occur emerges.The building exists of three layers. A Top level, Intermedate level and the basement. Entrace is at the toplevel were a big open space manifests. Beneath this is a system of spaces accesible from the top level by floor shutters. It is in here a floor shutter can also be found consealing the stairs leading to the basement. It is in here where a more fixed interior of master bedroom, bathroom and service utilities.

Project Boat-HouseArea Amsterdam, NLType Hogeschool van AmsterdamYear 2008Tutor Rene Leene

A residence that embodies the nomadic lifestyle of its inhabitant.

Page 17: Edwin Hans Portfolio

South elevation from spatial unit North elevation from spatial unit

Cross-section A-ASpatial concept Spatial concept

Ground floor plan First floor plan Second floor plan

Cross-section B-B1

West elevation South elevation East elevation North elevation

16

BLOCK100

PROJECT SUMMARY

With no further surrounding’s restrictions a site from 100 by 100 meters has been shaped freely. A Self-retaining Complex idea was born. Different dwelling types and program. A cheerful play of surfaces, lines and planes which makes it looks like the complex exists out of more elements than it is actually built in. One component keeps repeating itself while climbing up till it is climbing over a totally other looking volume. This large volume functions as its counter opponent and houses all the services on the ground floor and some of them on the second floor while the rest is reserved for dwelling types.

Project Muliti-residential buildingArea GenericType Politechnika KrakowskaYear 2009Tutor Prof. Dariusz Kozłowski

A free form build composition of residential units.

Page 18: Edwin Hans Portfolio

0 1m 2.5m

N

1.510

1.790

0.780

1.790

1.790

0.400

0.457

0.307

0.600

2.440

0.6000.845

1.500

0.300

1.445

3.850

0.350

0.500

0.350

1.360

1.360

2.800

0.621

1.538

1.399

0.6214.660

5.430

1.400

0.500

0.200

0.900

1.600

1.600

0.550

1.700

0.250

0.330

0.320

4.060

0.600

0.400

1.166

0.388

1.600

2.000 4.990

2.990 0.800

0.374

0.750

1.770

0.790

0.200

1.536

1.736

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0.900

0.495

0.900

0.255

1.411

0.800

1.000

0.9001.1900.710

3.530

0.680

1.190

0.150

0.610

0.900

0.800 1.320 1.342 0.599

0.300 4.060 0.300

1.480 0.980

1.700

2.110

Sypialnia3

A: 21.286 m2

H: 3.250 m

Lazienka

4

A: 4.625 m2

H: 2.800 m

Salon

1

A: 26.361 m2

H: 3.300 m

Kuchnia

2

A: 10.277 m2

H: 3.000 m

Korytarz5

A: 10.716 m2

H: 3.000 m

Hol

8

A: 3.667 m2

Garderoba

9

A: 1.561 m2

Sypiaznia7

A: 3.994 m2

H: 3.000 m

Sypiaznia6

A: 10.914 m2

H: 2.800 m

Toaleta

10

A: 1.258 m2 Balkon

11A: 2.193 m2

1.6

60

3.8

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1.0

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75

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0.0

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1.4

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ArchiBud 17-01-2009 Propozycja projektu A

0 1m 2.5m

N

1.510

1.7

90

0.780

1.7

90

1.7

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0.4

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0.457

0.3

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0.600

2.440

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1.4

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0.320

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0.7

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0.8

00

1.000

1.7001.0000.100

1.700

2.110

0.750

2.386

0.550

0.2

50

0.800 1.320 1.940

2.960

1.680 1.350 1.630

0.5

71

1.400

0.8

00

0.6

21

1.0

00

0.5

29

0.8

50

0.5

30

Lazienka4

A: 4.625 m2H: 2.800 m

Salon1

A: 26.361 m2H: 3.300 m

Kuchnia2

A: 10.277 m2H: 3.000 m

Korytarz5

A: 10.716 m2H: 3.000 m

Hol8

A: 3.667 m2

Garderoba9

A: 1.561 m2

Sypiaznia7

A: 3.994 m2H: 3.000 m

Sypiaznia6

A: 10.914 m2H: 2.800 m

Toaleta

10A: 1.258 m2 Balkon

11A: 2.193 m2

Sypiaznia3

A: 21.286 m2

5.180

5.4

30

1.6

97

3.8

50

2.2

55

1.0

00

0.4

75

1.1

90

0.0

70

0.6

21

1.0

00

1.3

79

0.5

00

0.2

30

1.1

90

3.6

70

0.2

20

0.7

90

1.3

77

1.4

63

0.160

2.800

ArchiBud 17-01-2009 Propozycja projektu C

OPTION II

OPTION I

17

ŚWIĘTEGO FILIPA

PROJECT SUMMARY

Work consisted of measuring up the whole building, making floorplans and designing one of the apartments for the building’s owners. Illustrated here are two a design proposals.

Project Interior designArea Cracow, PLType CommissionYear 2009Employer A. Kozieł

An apartment interior design for in Cracow city center.

Page 19: Edwin Hans Portfolio

I. Living room

II. Living room II. Kitchen

I. Kitchen

II. Master bedroom

I. Master bedroom

II. Bathroom

I. Bathroom

18

Page 20: Edwin Hans Portfolio

19

When analyzing the urban frame depending on the major bridges, one will see that one main north-south axes appears. This line can be regarded as the lifeline of Copenhagen.

When projecting Orestad to this lifeline, one will see that Orestad is badly connected to this lifeline of Copenhagen. Orestad is only connected by a metro to the city centre, but it doesn't interact with the rest of the city. North south axes are strong, but East-West connections are weak

beach

historical lineØrestad

harbor

beach

main city line

city center

shopping line

Five different anchor lines emerge when analysing the best connected roads than the five roads indicated by the Copenhagen Finger plan.

The main roads East of Copenhagen, the Amager part, one sees that these roads are not well interconnected. North-South movement is dominant.

Vertical lines

Improving the mental map

Horizontal lines

These disconnected main roads are not only the case at Amager. Everywhere in Copenhangen the main roads are not well interconnected, creating geographical islands.

The accessibility yield of Copenhagen’s main landscape features are not remarkeble. Suprisingly however is a total disconnection from the city center while it is in close proximity.

The metro system of Örestad however creates a vast connection with the whole city. Public transport is seeminly dominant in terms of connectivity in Örestad.

As a result of these analysis a City ring is proposed. This road is partly existing already and hooks up with the main roads of Copenhagen.

COPENHAGENSLOW RING

PROJECT SUMMARY

For this workshop research was conducted on Copenhagen’s infrastructural frame, regarding to the New Town Örestad, by the use of the 1,2,3 step method (P. de Bois & K. Buurmans, TuDelft). This method shows how well a specific place is anchored in its urban frame by the first three continuous road branches measured from that specific point. This method showed that the New Town is badly connected to its surroundings and the city center. In general at Amager, the East part of Copenhagen, the North-South axes are strong but the East-West connections are weak. The Copenhagen Slow Ring attempts to unite city fragments which were previously isolated from eachother. This Slow Ring connects Amager in an West-East direction and improves the accessibility to the sea and landscape.

Project City development planArea Copenhagen, DEType Københavns Tekniske SkoleYear 2010Tutor Peter G. de BoisTeam P.F Ortiz Sander Bakker Glen den Besten Rubben Duipmans C.P. López-Torres M. Spasiewiecz Maarten de Werk Jasper Nijveldt

Healing the urban frame in an West-East direction and connecting the city with its sea and landscape.

Page 21: Edwin Hans Portfolio

20

New structure map of Copenhagen, with stronger East-West con-nections. The city turns its face to the sea and landschape and Örestad will be part of a strong urban frame.

Phase 1

Phase 2

Phase 3

Phase 4

Phase 5

Accessibility map before the Slow Ring

Accessibility map after the Slow Ring

Commercial pattern before the Slow Ring Expected commercial pattern after the Slow Ring

Page 22: Edwin Hans Portfolio

Kitchen impression

Step 1: Cubic

Step 2. Splitting cubic, two volumes for multiple future usage

Step 3. Adding flexible boxes in the atrium to connect the two volumes

Splitting concept

West elevation

North elevation

East elevation

South elevation

N

A B C D E F

D5

-0.300peil = 00.300

2.940

5.980

8.920

12.200

123456

D3

D4

2.940

peil = 0

5.980

8.920

12.200

DEFINITIEF ONTWERP

Hansson Architecture

Project

Split-House te Woerden

Omschrijving

Doorsneden

datum

30-07-2009

schaal

1: 100

formaat

A3

tekeningnr

1-A.

Afstudeerproject

Hogeschool van Amsterdam

Doorsnede A-A1 Doorsnede B-B1Doornsede B-B1

21

SPLIT-HOUSE

PROJECT SUMMARY

The aim of researching a selection of villa designs was to get an insight in the spatial organisation of programs and their interrelation. This has resulted in the discovery of certain programmatic patterns which has been utalized again in a new design. One of these patterns, bedroom-wardrobe-bathroom, is shown here. Note that to further elaborate and to conclude this pattern more villa’s have to be analysed in order to affirm this pattern.The split house is designed with future change and splitting in mind. The house can easiliy be turned into two smaller houses or a studio or practice could be established with a separate entrance.

Project VillaArea Woerden, NLType Hogeschool van AmsterdamYear 2009Tutor Phillipe H. Bosscher

Programmatic villa research and design

Page 23: Edwin Hans Portfolio

N

1

2

3

4

5

6

A B C D E F

D1

2.4

00

2.4

00

2.4

00

2.4

00

2.4

00

2.400 2.400 2.400 2.400 2.400

-0.300peil=0

+0.300

+0.300

-0.300

B B

A

A

Wasruimte4,1m2

Woonkeuken41.4m2

Berging11m2

Entree17,7m2

m.k.

Patio12,5m2

Veranda28,8m2

1

2

3

4

5

6

A B C D E F

B B

A

A

2.4

02

.40

2.4

02

.40

2.4

0

2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40

+2.940

+2.940

Eetkamer20,2m2

Woonkamer25m2

Bibliotheek11,8m2

DEFINITIEF ONTWERP

Hansson Architecture

Project

Split-House te Woerden

Omschrijving

plattegronden

datum

30-07-2009

schaal

1: 100

formaat

A3

tekeningnr

1-A.

Afstudeerproject

Hogeschool van Amsterdam

beganegrond 1e verdieping

N

1

2

3

4

5

6

A B C D E F

B B

A

A

2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40

2.4

02

.40

2.4

02

.40

2.4

0

+5.980

Gastenkamer / Atelier28,6m2

Berging2,2m2

Technische ruimte3,8m2

Kinder speelkamer24,6m2

Badkamer6,8m2

Badkamer9,7m2

1

2

3

4

5

6

A B C D E F

D2

B B

A

A

2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40 2.40

2.4

02

.40

2.4

02

.40

2.4

0

+8.920

Kinder slaapkamer 115,6m2

Kinder slaapkamer 219,3m2

Hoofdslaapkamer27,8m2

Garderobe6,2m2

Badkamer14m2

DEFINITIEF ONTWERP

Hansson Architecture

Project

Split-House te Woerden

Omschrijving

plattegronden

datum

30-07-2009

schaal

1: 100

formaat

A3

tekeningnr

1-A.

Afstudeerproject

Hogeschool van Amsterdam

2e verdieping 3e verdieping

Ground floor planVeranda

Dining room connected to the living room by an interior bridge

Living room connected with the kitchen by a void

Interior bridge

First floor plan

Second floor plan Third floor plan

22

Page 24: Edwin Hans Portfolio

addressHofdijk 3473032 CGRotterdamThe Netherlands

tel +31 (0)630140917@ [email protected] www.edwinhans.net

EDWIN HANS

PORTFOLIO