Aurora Room,Meeting House with Ground Control Miami present Aurora Room, a collabo-ration between Miami based artist Emmett Moore and experimental archi-tecture laboratory RAD-UM. Stemming from a mutual interest in the inter-section of design and technology RAD-UM and Moore have produced an immersive and responsive installation addressing the psychological e�ects of the built environment. Visitors interact with sensor-controlled projections and color patterns based on a series of films developed in the 40s used to treat di�erent forms of psychosis.
Auroratone films were developed in the 1940s by filmmaker Cecil Stokes using audio waves on crystallizing chemicals and polarized light to produce soothing synesthetic visual e�ects. The films were used to treat trauma-tized soldiers, juvenile delinquents and mental patients. 18 short films ac-companied by music were combined to create a 30 minute long movie, Music in Color. Of the original 18 films, "When the Organ Played Oh Promise Me" is the only surviving film. With the help of The Academy of Arts and Motion Picture Sciences in Los Angeles and Walter Forsberg, an archivist based in New York the film was scanned and digitized for this project.
Emmett Moore is a Miami-based sculptor and designer represented by Gal-lery Diet. His work has been shown institutionally at the RISD Museum, the Frost Art Museum, the Miami Art Museum, and the Bass Museum of Art. In 2014, he was the first Miami-based designer to exhibit a solo project at DesignMiami/ and was commissioned to design the Design Miami Market-place in 2015. Gallery shows include those at Locust Projects (Miami), Pat-rick Parrish Gallery (New York), and OHWOW (Los Angeles). He received his BFA in Furniture Design from the Rhode Island School of Design.
RAD-UM is a laboratory at the University of Miami school of Architecture where Rodolphe el-Khoury and a team lead by Christopher Chung conduct project-based research on the spatial potentials and ramifications of em-bedded technology and ubiquitous computing. RAD-UM’s work has been featured at Design Miami and e-Merge.
Show Dates: 09/22 - 10/21
Gallery Hours:11-7pm 09 /26 - 10/21
by appointment
168 SE 1st Street - Penthouse (Downtown) Miami FL 33131
www.meetinghousemiami.org
Opening09/22
From 7-10pm
Emmet Moore in Collaboration with RAD-UMRAD-UM team: Rodolphe el-Khoury and Christopher Chung with Haochi Zhang, Clarisse Lopez, Samantha Jimenez, & Zhengrong Hu
// Everglades National Park
25,000 acre
// Greenbelt
500 miles of GREENWAYS
// EEL Sites
5,000 acre
// W E S T E R N G R E E N W A Y S5,000 miles of GREENWAYS
//Greenways
1,000 miles of GREENWAYS
// Existing Parkway
296 miles of GREEN
// Proposed Parkway
570 miles of GREEN
// Great Street Parkway
570 miles of GREEN
// Existing Boulevards
470 miles of GREEN
// Propsed Boulevards
57 miles of GREEN
// Existing County Parks
45 PARKS
// Existing Municipal Parks
38 PARKS
// Existing State Parks
38 PARKS
// P A R K S
// Biscayne Bay
MIAMI DADE OPEN SPACE MASTER PLANGREENWAYS
A T L A N T I C O
C E A N
E V
E R
G L A
D E
S
B I S
C A
Y N
E B
A Y
// N A T I O N A L P A R K S
Veruska VasconezLecturerVisual Studies Coordinator - M.Arch.
// Urban Development Boundary// Urban Development Boundary
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Miami-Dade County Parks & RecreationChuck Pezoldt Park Library, is a reflection of integration of the larger view and concept from the OSMP.
Miami-Dade County Parks & Recreation - Greenways Master Plan, can give people options other than driving. Whether it’s going to work or doing a quick errand, the decreased dependence on cars improves air quality, alleviates road congestion, and provides a safe environment for children to walk or bike to school. Studies show that more than half of the population in Miami-Dade County have no access to a park within less then 1/4 mile (5minute walk) or 1/2 mile (10minute walk).
Veruska Vasconez is an architectural and urban designer practicing nationally and internationally. She is a full time
professor and the Visual Studies Coordinator for M.Arch at the University of Miami. She has been teaching at the
University of Miami since 2005 and has created two new courses in Visual Representation in Architecture, and Mapping &
Visualization. She is well known for her expertise in computer graphics and representation; she has worked in collaboration
students, professionals, and advocacy groups on urban historic documentation and analysis projects. She has been a
curator and assistant curator on numerous exhibitions, and is co-founder and curator for Meetinghouse, a not-for-profit art
gallery located in the Penthouse of the historic Huntington Building in downtown Miami. Veruska has a fellowship in the
department of Planning and Design Excellence at Miami-Dade County Parks and Recreation. She has been developing Data
Mapping of demographics, geography, topography, climate, health status, socio-economic status, and urban infrastructure
in relation to MDPROS properties, programs, and strategic planning. Also developing visual representations of OSMP
implementation strategies, market research, and analysis, Veruska assists in identification of health and well-being
disparities, including the categorization and representation of community design elements— buildings, streets, blocks,
neighborhoods, materials, vernacular architecture, native and exotic landscape materials- relevant to MDPROS strategies.
Chuck Pezoldt Park
Ground Floor 14,900sfEntrance / Guest Services2,000sf
Administrative Office Spaces1,200sf
Community Room Space2,000sf
Food and Beverage Spaces 600sfLibrary 4,700sf
Technology Spaces1,800sf
Operations and Public Spaces 2,600sf
Second Floor 9,200sf Flex Spaces1,600sf
Community Room Space - vaulted ceiling space only2,000sf
Fitness and Exercise Spaces3,000sf
Operations and Public Spaces2,600sf
Entrance CourtyardLobbyCafé
Recreation Office 200sfLibrary Office 200sfConference room
800sf
With capacity to hold 200-250 guests
Warming Kitchen and Staff Lounge
Guest ServicesChildren’s Collections and Seating Area 1,100sf Teen and Adult Collection and Quiet Reading 2,600sfStorage and Sorting Room 1,000sf
Media and Computer Center (shared space)
500sfTech / Teen / Game Center (shared space)
700sf3-D Printing Studio 600sf
2 Multipurpose Rooms (shared space)
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public RestroomFamily Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)Circulation
Open space
Cardio Area 1,500sfWeight Area 400sfDance Studio 800sfStorage 200sf
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public RestroomFamily Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)Circulation
+Outdoor Spaces4,200sf
Entrance CourtyardChildren’s Reading Garden
Small outside courtyard areaOutdoor furniturePartially covered and shaded Landscaped
Teen and Adult Reading GardenSmall outside courtyardOutdoor furniturePartially covered and shadedLandscaped
Activity-Performance Program SpaceOutside exercise or performance program areaPartially covered and shadedLandscaped
CaféOutdoor counterTables and chairsComfortable seating
Recreation Center+Library
17%
6%9%6%
7%
11%
9%
15%7%
4%
7%2%
Library
Outdoor
Recreation Center
Recreation Center
Chuck Pezoldt Park
Entrance / Guest Services2,000sf
Administrative Office Spaces1,200sf
Community Room Space2,000sf
Food and Beverage Spaces 600sf
Library 4,700sf
Technology Spaces1,800sf
Operations and Public Spaces 2,600sf
Flex Spaces1,600sf
Community Room Space - vaulted ceiling space only2,000sf
Fitness and Exercise Spaces3,000sf
Operations and Public Spaces2,600sfEntrance Courtyard
LobbyCafé
Recreation Office 200sfLibrary Office 200sfConference room 800sf
With capacity to hold 200-250 guests
Warming Kitchen and Staff Lounge
Guest ServicesChildren’s Collections and Seating Area 1,100sfTeen and Adult Collection and Quiet Reading 2,600sfStorage and Sorting Room 1,000sf
Media and Computer Center (shared space) 500sfTech / Teen / Game Center (shared space) 700sf3-D Printing Studio 600sf
2 Multipurpose Rooms (shared space)
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public RestroomFamily Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)Circulation
Open space
Cardio Area 1,500sf Weight Area 400sf
Dance Studio 800sfStorage 200sf
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public Restroom
Family Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)
Circulation
Outdoor Spaces4,200sf
Entrance CourtyardChildren’s Reading Garden
Small outside courtyard areaOutdoor furniturePartially covered and shaded Landscaped
Teen and Adult Reading GardenSmall outside courtyardOutdoor furniturePartially covered and shadedLandscaped
Activity-Performance Program SpaceOutside exercise or performance program areaPartially covered and shadedLandscaped
CaféOutdoor counterTables and chairsComfortable seating
RecreationCenter+Library
Library Shared Spaces
Operations and Public Spaces2,600sf X 2
RecreationCenter
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public RestroomFamily Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)Circulation
Men’s Public RestroomWomen’s Public Restroom
Family Public RestroomAC Maintenance Room (east)AC Maintenance Room (west)
Circulation
PLANSYSTEM
02
Sections
N
WATERSYSTEM
03WALL
DISPLAY
01
BIO Display, responsiveInstallation for Patricia and Phillip Frost Museum of Science.
Guiding Concepts • Place-making by means of emergent and GREEN technology• Building as a DISPLAY• Continuous responsive surface - integrating the Knight Plaza with the BUILDING
RAD-UM
Lead: Rodolphe el-Khoury,
Christopher Chung, Veruska Vasconez
Type-Topia is an idealized and fictitious composite city created from the collaged combination of nine of Khoury Levit Fong’s public institutional projects. The interactivemodel calls attention to the iconic status of notable public spaces and buildings in shaping the identity of cities, highlighting the role that architecture can play in the constitution of a geography of monuments. Just as New York has been represented through its monumental icons such as the Empire State Building and Rockefel-ler Center, or Paris by the Ei�el Tower and the Arc-de-Triomphe, Type-topia is imagined through a series of graphic representations of its civic monuments. Using programmed QR tags, visitors can in-teract with each project proposal. The composite city becomes a historical metropolis in which the iconic elements instantaneously become memorabilia of this fiction, complete with travel posters and postcards.
KLFKhoury Levit Fong
Show Dates: 09/22 - 10/21
Gallery Hours:11-7pm 09 /26 - 10/21
by appointment
168 SE 1st Street - Penthouse (Downtown) Miami FL 33131
www.meetinghousemiami.org
Opening09/22
From 7-10pm
Exhibition Design by Robert Levit with Dorsa Jalalian and Nick Reddon
Architectural Projects by Khoury Levit FongPrincipals in Charge: Rodolphe el-Khoury and Robert Levit
2 0 1 6
Show Dates:05/22 - 06/17
Open by appointment
Opening: 05/22From: 4:30 - 7:30pm
Karen RifasArchitectual Interventions
And Works on Paper
Tyler Emerson-Dorsch Curator
meetinghouse 168 SE 1st Street PH
(Downtown) MiamiFL . 33131
www.meetinghousemiami.org
Giuseppe Terragni (1904 – 1943) was an Italian architect who worked under the fascist regime of Benito Mussolini and was one of the pioneers of the Italian modern movement or Italian Rationalism. His most famous works were built in and around the city of Como in northern Italy, including the Casa del Fascio (1932 to 1936). The exhi-bition Giuseppe Terragni in Rome now presented at The Meeting House is a critical reading of the works that he designed for the city of Rome from 1932 to 1940. The ten projects—which include the monument/museum to Dante Alighieri, the Danteum—allow us to effectively frame the complex figure of an architect who joined the battle for the Italian architec-tural avant-garde, while confront-ing the historic urban context, the
demands of tradition, and a per-sonal quest to deploy a rationalist language anchored in the classical and vernacular sides of mediter-raneità. The exhibition also aims to highlight the importance of his many collaborators, particularly the artists Marcello Nizzoli, Ma-rio Radice and Mario Sironi, who played an important role in the development of architectural proj-ects. The exhibition was first present-ed at the Casa dell’architettura in Rome (2015) and embraces a vari-ety of media, including new digital reconstructions by students and faculty from Università della Sapi-enza in Rome. For the presentation in Miami, new 3-d printed models were produced at the University of Miami School of Architecture.
GIUSEPPE TERRAGNI inROME
April 9thOpening 7pm to 10pm
April 16thConference 2:30pm to 6pm at MCADTERRAGNI IN ROME IN MIAMIPanel with:Silvia Barisione (The Wolfsonian-FIU), Pat Bosch (Perkins&Will), Jason Chandler (FIU),Carmen Guerrero (UofM), Jean-François Lejeune (UM), David Rifkind (FIU)
Exhibition Hours:1-5pm 05/09 - 05/14168 SE 1st Street - PH Floor (Downtown) Miami FL 33131meetinghousemiami.org
April 9thOpening7pm to 10pm
Exhibition Hours:1-5pm 05/09 - 05/15168 SE 1st Street - PH Floor (Downtown) Miami FL 33131meetinghousemiami.org
Casa Malaparte is a solitaire of modern architecture on the island of Capri, Italy.
The artist Petra Liebl-Osborne had the unique chance to repeatedly visit and live in the iconic house during several summers in the 1990’s.
And so began her Fixed Sites project.Liebl-Osborne’s book about the house was published in German in
1999 under the title: Ein Haus wie ich - Die Casa Malaparte auf Capri (A House like Me – The Casa Malaparte in Capri).
Art Basel Week Hours:12-5pm 12/01 - 12/06
168 SE 1st Street - PH Floor (Downtown) Miami FL 33131
www.meetinghousemiami .org
12/Show Dates:01 - 01/09
Opening: 12/01From 7:00-10pm
meetinhouse_card6_final.indd 2 11/20/15 3:22 PM
Show Dates: 10/24 - 11/21Opening: 10/24
From 7-10pm
Gallery Hours:5-8pm 10/24 - 11/21
168 SE 1st Street - Penthouse (Downtown) Miami FL 33131
www.meetinghousemiami.org
Rene GonzalezKerry Phillips
Marc Schmidt
architect
sculptor
photographer
Meetinghouse, is an interdisciplinary artistic and cultural
space located in the historic Huntington building in downtown Miami. Inspired by past artist cooperatives such as Roycroft,
Bauhaus, and the Shakers, we were founded in 2014 to further the discovery, dialog
and expression across disciplines.Our programming includes exhibitions, lectures,
screenings, performances, and printed materials and catalogs, bringing together
local, national and international artists and designers based on shared processes and
concepts observed in their works.
PopulationBY AGE RANGE - TOTAL: 249,906
33186Population71,441
12.6 square miles5,653.2 people per square mile
AGE 37.822%
33196Population46,577
24.5 square miles1,901.5 people per square mile
AGE 39.919%
33032Population
38,672
18.8 square miles2,057 people per square mile
AGE 30.413%
33187Population
16,577
39.6 square miles419 people per square mile
AGE 39.16%
33170Population
13,399
13.2 square miles1,017.1 people per square mile
AGE 30.55%
33031 Population
6,504
21.4 square miles304.3 people per square mile
AGE 41.83%
33177 Population56,736
12.5 square miles4,530.2 people per square mile
AGE 3919%
78%
81%
84% 87%
94%
95%97%
0 - 9
10- 19
20 - 29
30 - 39
40 - 49
50 - 59
60 - 69
70 - 79
80 +
13%
15%
13%
15%
13%
9%
5%
3%
14%
33186Population71,441
12.6 square miles5,653.2 people per square mile
34.8 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 83%
33177 Population56,736
12.5 square miles4,530.2 people per square mile
28.7 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 68%
33196Population46,577
24.5 square miles1,901.5 people per square mile
38.3 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 85%
33032Population
38,672
18.8 square miles2,057 people per square mile
33.3 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 77%
33187Population
16,577
39.6 square miles419 people per square mile
40.9 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 76%
33170Population
13,399
13.2 square miles1,017.1 people per square mile
36 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 72%
33031 Population
6,504
21.4 square miles304.3 people per square mile
30.8 minutes Mean travel time to work
Drove alone: 78%
83%
8%
3%.1% 1%
1% 3%
69%
10%
14%
1% 4%2% 1%
85%2%3%
8%
1%1%.1%
77%
14%
3%.1%
3% 3%
76%5%4%
2%
13%
72%
12%
3%1%1%
5%7%
78%
7%
2%2%
12%
Drove Alone
Carpooled
Public Transportation
Bicycle
77%
10%
.3%
4%
Walked 1.4%
Other 2.5%
Worked at Home 4.7%
TRANSPORTATION TO WORKAverage Time to drive to work35 minutesDrove Alone 77%