Thesis Projects

Both my Architecture (M.Arch) and Planning (MUP) theses worked around the rubric of the Architecture 2030 Challenge and the efforts of the Seattle 2030 District to meet it (2030DC – see http://www.2030district.org/seattle/ ).  In taking up this challenge, the City of Seattle and the 2030DC teamed up with major property owners, property managers, developers, architects and the Integrated Design Lab at UW to target and benchmark existing opportunities in Seattle’s commercial building stock for potential deep retrofits and redesign.  The goal of both theses was to provide the 2030DC with tools and intelligence that will assist in targeting its program and outreach efforts.

Both the M.Arch and MUP theses examined the behavior of commercial property owners and their propensity to either retrofit their buildings for energy efficiency or raze them in favor of redevelopment.  To determine this, in the M.Arch thesis I developed a scoring system that utilized various algorithms to process publicly available data combined with other data developed locally to derive a score that permits an apples-to-apples comparison of that propensity.  The M.Arch thesis reviewed these conditions at the building level; cites several case studies, and presents in-depth analysis of a selected commercial building in the Pike-Pine corridor, serving as an example of a typical Seattle property.

The MUP thesis carried the work of the M.Arch thesis further.  It scaled the building owner propensity up to the neighborhood and district levels, and investigates the potential impact of development in Major Institutional Overlay (MIO) districts upon properties immediately adjacent to those districts.  It applied the scoring system developed in the M.Arch thesis to demonstrate a correlation between proximity to an MIO district and the presence of predictive indicators of redevelopment.  Thus, the scoring system can be used to indicate the likelihood of redevelopment in districts adjacent to an MIO district.  The MUP thesis concludes with suggested policy changes to MIO districts to reduce the abrupt spatial transitions that are currently evident.

Follow this link for a detailed discussion of my M.Arch thesis: Raze-or-Retrofit:  
Evaluation of Seattle’s Commercial Building Stock for Energy Efficiency

Follow this link for a detailed discussion of my MUP thesis: Raze-or-Retrofit:  
Institutional Influences on Redevelopment for Energy Efficiency