Showing posts with label schindler shed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label schindler shed. Show all posts

9.05.2015

schindler shed: potential design


With the summer sun upon us, the Schindler Shed has taken a back seat. However, I stole some time last weekend, downloaded the latest version of Sketch-Up, and set about designing a shed Schindler might have designed. The designed is closely inspired by Steven Mannell's Rudy Cabana (photos in this post), itself inspired by Schindler's designs and the Schindler frame.

front elevation

south elevation

view of the rear

north elevation

NSA view

the long shadow of Schindler...


Window Liquidators



5.03.2015

the schindler shed project


Part of the grand plan is to build a garden shed to (1) house the lawnmower, (2) house the tools of gardening, (3) house an air compressor, and (4) get all this stuff out of the garage. Given how much I enjoyed the deck project and how much I enjoy R.M. Schindler's architecture, building a Schindler-inspired shed would be a good project.

There are several resources to assist. One is that Schindler published two articles about his framing method: "Reference Frames in Space" in Architect and Engineer in 1946 and "The Schindler Frame" in the Architectural Record in 1947. Another resource to help is documented in Steven Mannell's "Architectural Reenactments at 1:1 Scale" published in the Journal of Architectural Education in 2006. Yet another is Steve Wallet's blog posts on the Schindler Frame.

In Schindler's two papers, he describes how he framed his houses to allow for the various cantilevers, clerestory windows, and inside and outside articulation.

The Schindler Frame

The reenactment paper is about an architectural class building a Schindler-inspired structure ("Rudi's Cabana") based on the Schindler Frame:

Rudi's Cabana

test model of the Schindler Frame

interior of Rudi's Cabana

Not too shabby...

And Wallet's posts are about unraveling the secrets of Schindler's framing techniques.

What I've gained from these resources as well as others is this: Schindler's framing method is architectural jazz: it allows a great deal of improvisation as the space comes together, especially with respect to the ceiling.

We don't need anything too fancy for a shed, but I like the idea of clerestory windows. And the shed won't be that large, maybe 4 feet by 8 to 10 feet, which doesn't give too much room for architectural fanciness.

Let the Schindler sheddiness begin!