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The Topographic Maps between Yichang and Chongqing, 1936
Detail of “Close Combat Course”; Sketch to Accompany Inclosure 2 in 353.01/61–GnGTC (2-4-43); H.Q. A.G.F. to all Commanding Generals (February, 4 1943) “Subject: Special Battle Courses”; Training Directives; Background Files: “Military Training in WWII” 1939-1945; Record Group 319, National Archives Building, College Park, M.D.
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Map of Connecticut.
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Rendering of Boston City Hall Plaza with new intervention.
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Student Work

Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
Core 4 Project
1∕7

Title

Core 4 Project

Authors
Tong Hsu
Amelia Lin

Course
Architectural Design 4

Project Description

Quarrying is essentially an act of space-making: in satellite sites all over the world, spaces are made through construction, while reciprocally in the quarry, spaces are made through subtraction. The pink granite of Stony Creek Quarry in Branford Connecticut has participated in several US landmarks in the past century. However, as the more recent projects have been mostly urban infrastructure, the town of Branford is forgetting the quarry legacy and the cities hosting the granite projects are unaware of its existence. Therefore, the proposal aims to evoke the value of the quarry being an active site of space-making. The proposed live museum of the Stony Creek Quarry is primarily a roof structure that gently covers a corner of the quarry, implying the “full” landscape that once existed on the site. Walking into the roof is walking into the ground. Underneath the roof, a circulation path meanders through a series of “ghosts” of the granite projects in the cities until reaching a viewing platform to appreciate the ongoing quarrying activities. The proposal aims to co-exist with the active quarry, bring the visitors and the quarry workers under the same shade, provide basic services that are currently absent in the quarry, and preserve the memories of the collective that is associated with the quarry.