Temporary architecture (2)
Campus (5)
Construction (68)
Costs (55)
Density (346)
Drawing (1)
Complex buildings (18)
Hybrid buildings (122)
Leaning (4)
Efficiency (6)
Remove (18)
Civic Facilities (83)
Schools (3)
Public spaces (182)
Exhibitions (1)
Grand Tour 1977 (5)
History (51)
Interior (49)
The City (73)
Low-cost (48)
Mix of Uses (26)
Moscow Tour (5)
Offices / Workspaces (65)
Organization (10)
Landscaping (153)
Prefab (10)
Recycle (20)
Retrieve (20)
Reduce (18)
Remediate the territories (42)
Refurbishment (84)
Reuse (57)
Simulate (7)
Sustainability (86)
Design techniques (25)
Japanese lineages Tour (18)
Multiple uses (11)
Housing (106)
Collective housing (472)
Collective Housing XX Century (5)
Community architecture deploys imaginative and hopeful methods to navigate against the mainstream. It is an alternative architecture built with basic means, constructions which are appearing in numerous cities stressed by an inclement market, where the population is finding it increasingly difficult to access housing.
How do we interact with others within contemporary habitable space, and how do we face together a more equitable and sustainable future?
These are some of the questions raised in a+t 59, The Interaction within the Living Space, the last issue of the GENEROSITY series, dedicated to collective housing.
This volume includes twelve works of cooperative housing, which respond to the 4 conditions that contribute to a design based on Generosity: Indeterminacy, Exteriority, Privacy, and Interactivity.
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Currently, electronic devices transport the self to virtual realities, blur public with private, even the innermost, and provide a foretaste of a different domestic spatiality. Facing this challenge, and taking a resistant stance, architecture turns its gaze to the recent past and is capable of constructing a privacy in which materiality still preserves its full evocative power.
The third volume of the GENEROSITY series is dedicated to delving into how this privacy is built in the collective housing environment. Stephen Bates signs an extensive article on new architectural options for living together, Javier Mozas summarizes in five points the benefits of a home in which it is possible to achieve domestic happiness and Aurora Fernández Per compares the strategies to improve privacy followed by 8 selected projects.
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The second issue of the GENEROSITY series is devoted to strategies of domestic exterior space.
The different degrees of domestic exteriority were modulated over time through openings or closures, with one defining moment, when the envelope was released from its load bearing functions.
From a distance, the modernist façade has multiple readings and Le Corbusier’s thick diaphragmed ‘fourth wall’ is not the same as Mies’ fine curtain wall.
Contemporary domesticity plays with the creation of thresholds to extend the liveable domain outside the envelope.
The three-dimensionality facilitates the construction of liveable spaces within a thick façade.
Works by Caruso St John Architects, Atelier Kempe Thill, Vivas Arquitectos, Henley Halebrown, Schneider Studer Primas, Studio Woodroffe Papa, MIA2, ITCHstudio + Vincenzo Di Salvia, MVRDV, Flint and Duncan Lewis - Scape Architecture.
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Once upon a time there was a residential building that emerged from an urban project, in turn the consequence of an intermediate plan, which was born from a master plan ... Here is the routine growth of the contemporary city, which is structured from top to bottom in a succession of decisions - more like surrenders and resignations - where only a few initial ideals manage to survive.
To face the game board on which the construction of the city takes place, we propose a test ground whe.
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Project published in a+t 49: Dwelling Mixers. Complex Buildings series.
Project published in: DENSITY IS HOME. Photos by a+t research group. October, 2018