JULES RENAUD
M.Arch Student
Based in Los Angeles


About Me
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Email:  j.a.renaud@gmail.com
Phone:  (971) 336-3023
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01
CORVALLIS RESIDENCE

A transformative remodel from a modest ranch house to an environmentally-focused “forever home”.


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02
BROOKLYN STREET ADU


Fully designed, permitted and constructed by myself and two childhood friends.

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03
MCKENZIE RIVER CABIN
 

A simple countryside getaway resting by a roaring river.

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04
DOROTHY CHANDLER PAVILION RENOVATION


Reimagining Los Angeles’ opera house to actively engage the public.

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05
SANTA ANA MARKETPLACE


A modern twist on Le Corbusier’s “Marseille Housing Block”.

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06
COVERED PATIO EXTENSION


An airy extension that faithfully replicates the design language of an existing Passive House.

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07
CAL POLY EXPANSION BUILDING


A new Cal Poly Pomona School of Architecture building focused on massing and orientation.

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08
SHOU SUGI BAN PERGOLA

Clad with hand-charred yakisugi (a Japanese method of wood preservation).  

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09
WASHINGTON
STREET HOUSE


An environmentally-driven design that compactly fits onto a residential site with an existing house.  

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10
CALTECH LABS


Laboratory and residence spaces within a series of stainless steel scallops.

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11
INFLATABLE INSTALLATIONS


An homage to Ant Farm. A portable polyethylene space for overnight campouts and parties.

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12
KURUVUNGA VILLAGE SPRINGS ENTRANCE


A series of pergolas that create a celebratory entryway for a historic Tongvar freshwater spring.

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13
PORTABLE CLASSROOMS


Twelve classrooms as cheap and quick as possible.  

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14
RECYCLED RAIN JACKETS


Repurposing plastic bags into wearable jacket designs.

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12 KURUVUNGA VILLAGE SPRINGS ENTRANCE


Project Type | Academic Assignment
Location |
Los Angeles, CA
Size |
15,000 SF
Year |
2024
Course |
Fall Semester Indigenous Studies Course
Instructor |
Giulia Amoresano
About | At the Kuruvunga Springs where water is the spirit that gives life to landscape, we intend to stand with, and amplify this idea by proposing a “de-framing” structure for the park’s entry area. This amorphous pergola blurs the property line and serves as the infrastructure needed to collect and supply water to the entire site.  

Our project intends to break the property line concept of separation. Prior to colonization, the property line was not part of the Indigenous realm.

The “de-framing” structure changes shape with context and program. The pergola’s arches connect to create tunnels, or open to evoke a room. On the project’s southeast side the structure swirls into two domed nurseries for native and mesoamerican plants.