2008: Audubon Viewing Platform

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 2008 student s constructed a viewing platform at the Helen Carlson Wildl ife Sanctuary and Cranberry Bog named SplitFrame. It is a wildlife-viewing structure designed and constructed to maximize environmental exposure while minimizing impact. At the core of the project are two integral pieces – a floating Observatio n Deck and an elevated Viewing Station – connected via a hinged staircase, allowing the Observation Deck to rise and fall with the seasonal change in water levels. The project is situated at the end of a long berm, a vestige of the wildlife sanctuary’s former use as a commercial cranberry bog. This exis ting berm was integrated into the project as an access path, drawing visitors out over the water, under the Viewing Station, and onto a ramp to the Observation Deck.

Informed by research on sustainable construction technologies and building materials, design precedents, and the project’s 19-acre site, SplitFrame was

undertaken as a collaborative research/design/build project involving 15 undergraduate architecture students, the design studio instructor, two ornithology research scientists, and the Audubon Society client. Students learned ways to focus and apply design research, manage a limited budget, limited materials, and limited site access, while the client regained access to the sanctuary.

Listen to the professor’s own reflections on the project:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pSKQyGypdcg[/youtube]

Read more about the project in the Wesleyan Connection:

“Students Create Innovative Structure for Audubon Society” (9/23/08)

“Architectural Design, Creation by Students Draws Interest” (10/20/08)

“Student-Created ‘SplitFrame’ Wins National AIA Award” (8/03/10)