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Faculty of Arts and Design. Furniture Design (3). ( IDF 4102 ). Fourth Lecture. Week five. Furniture Design (3). Course Lecturer : . Prof. Hana Yassen. Course assistant : . Eng. Maha Elwany. Location ( F 513 ). Lecture (8:30-9:20) Tutorial ( 9:30-1:20 ) .
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Faculty of Arts and Design Furniture Design (3) ( IDF 4102 ) Fourth Lecture Week five
Furniture Design (3) Course Lecturer : Prof. Hana Yassen Course assistant : Eng. MahaElwany Location ( F 513 ) Lecture (8:30-9:20) Tutorial ( 9:30-1:20 ) Office hours: Thursday ( 8:30 – 12:30 ) E-mail : Prof_Hanayassen@yahoo.com
Course Objectives: • - Developing your creative ability on a course with a design culture that considers all aspects of furniture and related product design, and a philosophy that thrives on new ideas, new ways of doing things and the exploration of creative possibilities. We celebrate diversity and encourage our students to develop - their own personal identities. • - Learning to think about furniture in its broadest terms, developing your creativity by exploring space, form and structure. • - Designing different furniture units to suit any interior space according to the needed function (counter – storing shelves – chairs – decorative partitions, etc ……) within architectural artistic aspects, considering working details and used material, and according to human scale standard measurements (Anthropometric) and duty function (Ergonomics). • - Studying includes • research skills • idea generation • concept development • ergonomics • model making • production and communication.
Course Description: • - Training students on drawing different elevations (plan – vertical elevation – side elevation) for interior spaces ( residential, commercial and office) furniture units using suitable drawing scales. • - Drawing different illustrating sections showing the working details used in each unit. • - Drawing different isometric perspectives showing the wooden joints used in each unit. • - Studying the different line textures used in illustrating different wooden parts and joints through plans, elevations, sections and perspectives. • - Designing a decorative furniture unit using the suitable joints and geometrical drawing details.
Way of evaluation The course grade is 150 in total in a final evaluation committee with three examiners Attendance: (10) Presentation: (30) Mid-term exam (A daily project): (10) Final evaluation: (100) - First project (50 ) -Second project (50 ) Total = 150
Textbooks: • - Joseph De Chiara, Michael J. Crosbie. Time-saver standards for building types.4th edition. Mc.Graw-Hill.New York. • - The best of fine wood working tables & chairs. Fine wood working pub., Tauton press. • - Thomas a. Heinz. Frank Loyd Wright Interiors & Furniture, Academy Press. Websites: • - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/woodworking_joints • - www.houzz.com/partition-wall/p/16 • -www.lushome.com/room/dividers-partitions-walls-creating-functonal-modern-interior-design/99943
Applying the suitable Working Details for the Designed partition Example for : a Fascinating Partition with very simple working details Modular Decorative Partition Material: Natural Stone
What is a modular Design ? In systems engineering, modular design — or "modularity in design" — is an approach that subdivides a system into smaller.. For example: an Officebuilding can be built using modular parts such as walls, frames, doors, ceilings, and windows. The office interior can then be partitioned (or divided) with more walls and furnished with desks, computers, and whatever else is needed for a functioning workspace. If the office needs to be expanded or redividedto accommodate employees, modular components such as wall panels can be added or relocated to make the necessary changes without altering the whole building. Later on, this same office can be broken down and rearranged to form a Retailspace, Conference hallor any other possible type of building using the same modular components that originally formed the office building.
The design cleverly hides a steel frame that crosses the entire structure of the modular wall, no matter how wide and height you desire it to be; it is absolutely invisible, but it’s in there to keep the structure together. This steel skeleton can be attached to the floor and / or to the ceiling, and it is provided together with the wall modules, with proper laying instructions. Were it not for its weight, you could just mount it as any Lego Technic construction set…
Our effort is devoted to provide not only aesthetic pleasure, but also solid solutions to real, possible problems
Assignment: No Assignment; Due to Midterms Exam
Thank You Prof. Hana Yassen Eng. MahaElwany