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Architecture on the Edge of Survival involves the development of an original prototype of emergency housing for future potential deployment in areas of natural or man-made disaster anywhere in the world. Emergency housing from the point of view of design is only an extreme form of architecture. Its context is that of almost unsustainable conditions, and its object, the creation of an environment we can inhabit temporarily while living on the edge.
Red+Housing is proposed with the knowledge that, when living on the edge of survival, action needs to be decisive and precise. By definition, an emergency will arise suddenly and demand fast response, but the immediate actions we take can have long-term consequences.
Red+Housing proposes an approach that tries to incorporate both the advantages of fast-response solutions, such as the deployment of military tents, with those of slower and more considered responses such as neighborhood reconstruction efforts involving local traditions and user construction.
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RED+HOUSING: Concept
The design has been developed as an in-progress embodiment of the following 10 Points of Architecture on the Edge of Survival.
01. Universal Application
This prototype aspires to universal applicability. Its development contemplates a series of simple modifications that would make it a useful solution anywhere in the world: add insulation and a stove for cold climates; remove doors and windows for tropical climates; replace materials according with local availabilities, etc.
02. Effective Performance
The project makes economical use of materials by enlisting the structural strength of post-tensioning. The bamboo plywood strips of the dome support the enclosure, with the same force with which a bow propels an arrow into the sky.
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RED+HOUSING: Concept
03. Economical
The project proposes the use of locally available low-cost materials. The materials are always replaceable and are chosen for their performance rather than appearance. When working in different locations materials which become exotic can be replaced with ones that are locally abundant.
04. Transportable
All parts are collapsible to flats and can therefore be easily packed and transported.
05. Ease of Assembly
All connections are a simple friction bond of male/female parts which are then secured with a minimum of fasteners.
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RED+HOUSING: Concept
06. Renewable Materials
In China the project is proposed almost entirely in bamboo plywood, one of earth's most renewable of materials. The cover fabric can also be considered as woven out of waterproof bamboo fibers.
07. Digitally Pre-fabricated
Digital pre-fabrication makes the project economical in its speed of production and also easy to assemble due to the precision of its fabrication.
08. Open Work
The cruciform house, while iconic, retains in its biaxial symmetry a certain 'indifference' that allows its easy recombination with other locally and diversely made structures.
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RED+HOUSING: Concept
09. Urban/Rural
The geometry of the crosses, when deployed together in groups, defines in-between spaces of infinite flexibility that can suggest an 'urban' context for a field of houses. Likewise, if a house is erected by itself, the exterior of the cross creates spaces that mediate between interior and exterior providing a context for people to spend time outside.
10. Flexibility of Use
The geometry of the cross allows the inhabitation of the house as either 1, 2, 3, or 4 different units of housing.
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RED+HOUSING: Concept
The value and need of effective emergency housing is self-evident. There are, of course, a number of different approaches to be considered and our intent is to utilize the opportunity of the architectural design process to test and explore possibilities which might best benefit victims. We feel architecture has something to contribute not only to their physical but also to their emotional and psychological well-being. Under the extreme conditions of a situation of emergency, architecture is rarely called upon to participate in the creation of temporary housing. This exhibit provides an opportunity to test how “high design” can contribute to apparently pre-eminently pragmatic concerns. Emergency housing from the point of view of design is only an extreme form of architecture. Its context is that of almost unsustainable conditions, and its object, the creation of an environment we can inhabit temporarily while living on the edge.
OBRA Architects was invited to acknowledge and mark the first-year anniversary of the Sichuan earthquake through participation in CROSSING: Dialogues for Emergency Architecture , an exhibition on emergency housing at the National Art Museum of China in Beijing. Working from New York City, we seek to take advantage of this opportunity to contribute to the victims of future catastrophe around the world by advancing disciplinary thinking about temporary emergency housing. The completed full-scale prototype was exhibited in the entry courtyard to the Museum from May 12 to May 24, 2009.
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RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
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RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
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RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
↑ Click image to enlarge
RED+HOUSING: Exhibition of the Prototype in Beijing, PR China
OBRA Architects Project Team:
Shin Kook Kang, Project Architect
Atsushi Koizumi, Sihyung Lee, Sara Kim, Orla Higgins, Michel Dinis
Special thanks to:
National Art Museum of China
United Nations Development Programme China
China Central Academy of Fine Arts
OBRA Architects
OBRA Architects was founded by Pablo Castro and Jennifer Lee in the year 2000 in New York City. The projects undertaken by OBRA Architects span a wide range of programs and sizes yet consistently seek to evoke invention and interest through explorations of material, structure, site and experience. Their practice and their work seek to challenge and expand the range of metaphors in which architecture finds its meaning. OBRA considers each and every project to be intimately bound to its surroundings, extending afield into site and landscape the conceptual understanding of the architectural work. As a result many proposals and built works include outdoor components and integration into the natural or urban landscape.
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1 Comment
awesome, when will we see the crescent variation?
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