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Brooke Jackson and Dave Pigram
The ‘single family’ home, whether designed as bespoke response to an individual Client or produced en masse as an archetype to house the masses – there are always inherent clues in the production of the home that demonstrate a response to a social, political, economic and cultural climate. Plan arrangements, structural + material technologies, and programmatic allowance reveal not only an architectural logic, but a logic of what it means to ‘dwell’ within the social/political/economic/cultural construct of their time.
What does the future home look like for Sydney? With an expected increase in population by 8 million over the next 30 years, now is the time to consider how we dwell, and reconsider how we could dwell together, differently. We understand that there is a logic of dwelling that exists within the system of our cities, however when thinking about the future of ‘home’ we need to address the changing nature of household types, spatial provisions for the changing nature of how we use the home, and what can contribute to social and environmental ramifications. How can we deliver a new house, as type, that;
1_Understands the changing nature of a household over time
2_Renogatiates the spatial provisions that facilitates our use of the home (live/work for example)
3_Contributes to the sustainability of our cities from an environmental, social, cultural and economic perspective
Students interrogated these through 3 consecutive projects across the semester
PROJECT 1 – SHARE HOUSE: testing structural/programmatic/conceptual logic
PROJECT 2 – HYBRID HOUSE + Case Study Analysis: analysing and merging existing structural/programmatic/conceptual logic
PROJECT 3 – PROJECT HOUSE: methods of subtraction + addition – rethinking the ‘household’ and the Sydney single lot house archetype, contributing to the suburb at the scale of the block
Tutors
Oliver Bennett
Ben Berwick
Samantha Donnelly
William (Billy) Feuerman
Rainy Huang
Brooke Jackson
Caitlin Mills-Sheehy
Gavin Perin
Jenna Rowe
Dane Voorderhake
with guest lecturer, Andrew Benjamin