RURBAN COMMUNE
STUDIO FEI WANG FALL 2014
RURBAN COMMUNE
STUDIO FEI WANG SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY 2014
TEAM
Advisor: Wang, Fei Students: Al Marsoomi, Mustafa Costan, Silvia Ediger, Nolan Robert Fang, Chunqi Han, Gang Liu, Xuyun Shi, Bangyuan Yang, Mei Yang, Yanqiao Zhang, Haiying
INTRODUCTION
With rapid urban development in China, a huge amount of rural area has been destroyed and transformed drastically. It resulted conflicts and social, political, economical and cultural problems. Commune, a very important term in many fields, different from pure Utopia, is more a multi-dimensional systematic framework. In such a complicated condition, commune, as a strategy, is capable of dealing with the current issues in more general ways to influent the Rurban’s future projective development. Rurban Commune project, as a multi-plex itself, invites many other scholars from other fields, like socialists, artists, historians to participate, besides architects. Thus, through a thorough research and investigation, it allows various experimentations and feedbacks, and finally sets up a catalytic systematic strategy, in order to inspire the revolution. As architects, we will go back architecture per se and work with the specific locality and programs to work on decisive practice in a more elementary way.
MODERNISM COMMUNE
NARKOMFIN BUILDING
Moscow, RUSSIA
Moisei Ginzburg, Ignaty Milinis, 1932 Size:
54 Units on 5 Floors
Purpose:
Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure
Typology:
Low-Rise Apartment
Management: Autonomy
Description: The Narkomfin Building, designed in 1932 by Moisei Ginzburg and Ignaty Milinis in Moscow, Russia was the product of experimentation in new ways of living together during the Russian constructivist era. It stands as a prototype for the communal housing typology until this day and was specifically used as a precedent by Le Corbusier when designing the 1952 building Unite d’ Habitation. While not completely communal housing, The Narkomfin Building is a hybrid combining both traditional style units and communal units as a means to ease people into the idea of communal housing. Using the idea of a “Social Condenser”, a term coined by the architects themselves, the building incorporated a wide variety of shared spaces required for day to day activities (housekeeping, childcare, healthcare, dining, and leisure). This attempt at using architecture to influence social behavior was designed to combat both isolation and overcrowding caused by increased numbers of city dwellers in the early 20th Century. Using architecture in this way was meant to elevate the housing standards for the working class. Specifically, the building contains 54 units over 5 floors, in two types. Type K units, which are traditional style units containing 2 bedrooms, bathroom, kitchen, and living room. The second being Type F units, these contain one bedroom and bathroom; other necessary amenities are shared with other tenants. The intention was that over time the units would be further collectivized.
50M
P CÎŚC P
Russian Revolution
New Ideas
Restore Culture/Prestige
Modernism
Importance of the City
Constructivism (Arts)
Over Crowding
Populace moves to cities
Further Industrialization
1917
pilotis
free facade
open plan
Le Corbusier’s 5 Points of Architecture
1926
ribbon windows
roof garden
New Ways of Living
Stalinist Russia
Commune (Experimentation)
Return to the Traditional
1930s
1922-1952
Commune
5 points
Exported
Imported
Ideas from Narkomfin Building
For Narkomfin Building
1930s
Modernism
New Designs
Stalinist Russia
Unite d’ Habitation
Return to the Traditional
1922-1952
1947
Location of Residents Midnight
D 22
00 02
20
C 04
A 18
06
08
16 14
10
Level of Publicness
B
Low
12
Medium High
Improved Living Standards
transition
Communal
Traditional
Noon
B
A
C http://thecharnelhouse.org/2013/10/05/dom-narkomfin-in-moscow-1929/
D
X
Y
Z
http://www.urbipedia.org/index.php?title=Edificio_Narkomfin
Level 3
Level 4
Level 5
Level 5
Unit Type F
b
X
Level 4
Unit Type F
Unit F Communal
b a
a
1
1 0 Hall
0
1 Bedroom 2 Bathroom 3 Living
Level 3 4 3
c
c Unit Type K
Y
Level 2
Z
Unit K Traditional
0 Level 1
Level 1
Ground Level Public Space
4 Kitchen
2
1
1
Level 2
Circulation
Model by Alexey Ginzburg http://www.oginoknauss.org/blog/?p=2815
CAPTION http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narkomfin_building
CAPTION
Dilapidation CAPTION Today
Unité d’Habitation Le Corbusier 1952 Size:
137m (L) × 24m (D) × 65m (H)
Purpose: Commune Typology:
Residential / Apartment / Mix-used Housing
Background:
Shortage of Housing
Structure:
Rough-cast Concrete
Description: The Unite d’ Habitation was the first of a new housing project series for Le Corbusier that focused on communal living for all the inhabitants to shop, play, live, and come together in a “vertical garden city.”
Le Corbusier’s idea of the “vertical garden city” was based on bringing the villa within a larger volume that allowed for the inhabitants to have their own private spaces, but outside of that private sector they would shop, eat, exercise, and gather together.
With nearly 1,600 residents divided among eighteen floors, the design requires an innovative approach toward spatial organization to accommodate the living spaces, as well as the public, communal spaces. Interestingly enough, the majority of the communal aspects do not occur within the building; rather they are placed on the roof. The roof becomes a garden terrace that has a running track, a club, a kindergarten, a gym, and a shallow pool. Beside the roof, there are shops, medical facilities, and even a small hotel distributed throughout the interior of the building. The Unite d’ Habitation is essentially a “city within a city” that is spatially, as well as, functionally optimized for the residents.
Marseilles,France
Area ( Living Space & Pubilc Space ) Area
Housing Unit Corridor
Daylighting Daylighting
Ventilation Ventilation of Housing Unit
Conventional Housing
Unité d’Habitation
Corridor ( Living Level )
Corridor ( ShoppingLevel )
Dom-ino Le Corbusier
1914-1915
Dom-ino House is an open floor plan structure, which is a design idea to manufacture in series.
Housing Unit
Structure System ( partial )
Housing Unit Matrix
Outside of Unit Corridor Inside of Unit ( Public ) Living Room Circulation Hall Kitchen Balcony Inside of Unit ( Private ) Bedroom Bathroom
Outside of Unit Corridor Inside of Unit ( Public ) Living Room Circulation Hall Kitchen Balcony Inside of Unit ( Private ) Bedroom Bathroom
Collective Infrastructure
Level 7 and 8 is a shopping centre, containing food stores, a liquor and drug-
The roof contains a kindergarten and a nursery, with roofgarden, a small
store, a laundry, a pharmacy, a barbershop, a post office, a hotel accommoda-
swimming pool far children, a gymnasium, an open space for gymnastics, a
tion and a restaurant snackbar.
300 m sprinters’ track and a solaÂrium with a snackbar.
Roof Level 17 Level 16 Level 15 Level 14 Level 13 Level 12 Level 11 Level 10 Level 9 Level 8 Level 7 Level 6 Level 5 Level 4 Level 3 Level 2 Level 1
Vertic Circulation
Roof Level
Roof Level
Shopping Level
Shopping Level
Groud Level
Groud Level
HIGHPOINT ONE FLATS Bertold Lubetkind 1935
London, ENGLAND
Size: Housing Purpose:
Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology:
Residential building
Managerment: Sigmund Gestetner
Description: Highpoint I was built for Sigmund Gestetner who owned the company that manufactured office equipment. Gestetner was interested in designing housing for his workers in the Camden area but later purchased the site on top of the hill. He seems to have been an ideal client who had an informed outlook on contemporary culture and was thus sympathetic to the idea of a modernist block of middle class apartments. Highpoint I contains 64 flats in two, connected, seven-story cruciform towers. The double cruciform is aligned perpendicular to the street. Entrance is made in one end through a curving porte cochere and connects to common lobby and shared spaces at the ground floor including a winter garden, stepping down one level to a tea room and terrace at the opposite end of the building overlooking a garden on the slope below. There are two elevator cores in the lobby one at the crossing of each cruciform and the residential floors above are organized as two point-access towers each with 4 flats per floor, two 2 bedroom and two 3 bedroom dwellings. There are shared roof terraces. The pilotis expression of the structure at the ground floor contrasts with the poured-in-place concrete walls of the upper floors. The facades are organized with alternating zones of steel strip windows and cantilevered balconies. The Highpoint One building with his generous recreational landscaped gardens narrate the evolution of Lubetkin’s work over the 1930s and remain the most accomplished example of Le Corbusier’s concept of the ‘vertical garden city’ ever achieved in England.
The Highpoint One Flats clearly refers to the “vertical garden city” concept proposed by Le Corbusier in the Unité d’Habitation (Marseille, France). Afetr Lubetkind’s invitation, the architect visited the project and admitted that “for a long time he had reame of executing dwellings in such conditions for the good of humanity”, describing Highpoint I as “an achievement of the first rank, and a milesotn which will be useful to everybody”. Highpoint illustrates the Courbusian town-planning pro position, whereby the accomodation is concentrated into a densely planned structure and raised off the ground by piloti, thus releasing the maximum remaining area for communal facilities and recreational landscaping. Gardens here are beautifully planted , organized with tennis court, children’s play areas, a squash court and a swimming-pool.
THE DESIGN PROCESS
Site Planimetry
GARDEN CONSTRUCTION SITE
65’ 0’’ ROAD
Although byelaws give no height limit council arbitrary fixed height at 65’ 0’’ at front back gave no limit at back
THE VERTICAL GARDEN CITY
P
P
Site planimetry
TENNIS COURT SQUASH COURT PARKING PUBLIC SPACE
THE GROUND FLOOR: Promenade The indipendence of the ground floor constructionally gives possibility of designing a free ground floor without damaging the rigid logic of the flats and loows for uniting building with surroundings shadows created by recessed ground floor detach the building from ground, new lightness to old megalithic type of construction.
By ‘streamlining’ the entrance circulation equal importance of approch is given to both staircases
The sequence conjoined the several experiences of vehicular arrival, covered entry, ramped ascent and rooftop egress in a controlled ceremony of desengagement with machine and re-engagement with nature
ENTRANCES’ MAP
Tea room linked with garden by free terrace tratement
Large public hall creates feeling of spaciousness and freedom of movement
Canopy accentuates entrance curve of drive
View through from street to Garden PUBLIC COVERED SPACES
EQUAL DIVISION OF SPACES
Module division of the plan
Plan
Shared space for each floors Separation of the units from the stair towers produces four ancillary zone, which are used for diametrically places service lift and drying rooms. This arrangement allows borrowed ligh into the staircore.
Four units from 1 lift and stair Kitchen lifts and services shared by two flats
A
A
B
B
A
B
B
A
Direct access to the garden
SHARED KITCHEN SHARED SERVICES SHARED LIFT
GROUND FLOOR: Different module
Stairs
Direct access to the garden
VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL CIRCULATION
A
B
A
A
B
A
Nord front scheme VERTICAL CONNECTION (STAIRS/LIFTS)
Central spine of accomodation is raised half a storey above the wings, providing cleresotry lighting of the ground floor foyer and clear organization of the spaces.
Section
Double layer of public spaces: the ground floor and the roof top
UNITS’ MODULE
UNIT B 2 BD APT
UNIT A 3 BD APT
- Waste of space accentuated by a dark coridor - Designed on ‘hide & seek’ priciple.
The elevation ostensibly horizontal, does not express what is behind
Flat expressed by living room which access is given to units with various function - ‘Classification’ of living spaces rather than division of spces - Flat more spacious as the area is better utilized
The elevation frankly expresses the big hall
Balconies: carcass and foils
Entrance
Angle solution
The horizontal and bland inner facades where proximity of the neighbours’ windows imparts a sense of being continuosly overlooked
The change of level (now)
Clerestory-lit landing (now)
HABITAT ‘67 Moshe Safdie
Monterial, Canada 1967
Size:
22170 m2
Purpose:
Residential
Typology:
Housing, muiltiple dwellings
Managerment:
Description: Habitat 67, designed to present for the first time at the World Exposition of 1967, was originally intended as an experimental solution for high-quality housing in dense urban environments. The main concept of prefabricated modular units to reduce housing costs and allow for a new housing typology that could integrate the qualities of a suburban home into an urban high-rise.1
map
Habitat 67 was formulated from 354 identical and completely prefabricated modules accumulated in many combinations and connected by steel cables. The apartments vary in size, since they are formed by a group of one to four of the 600 square-foot “boxes” in different configurations. Each apartment is reached through a series of pedestrian streets and bridges, along with three vertical cores of elevators for the top floors. Service and parking facilities are separated from the tenant’s circulation routes, located on the ground floor.1 The prefabrication process of the 90-ton boxes took place on-site. The basic modular shape was molded in a reinforced steel cage, which measured 38 x 17 feet. Once cured, the concrete box was transferred to an assembly line for the insertion of electrical and mechanical systems, as well as insulation and windows. To finalize the production, modular kitchens and bathrooms were installed, and finally a crane lifted each unit to its designated position.1 1
M E R I N , G I L I .“A D C L A S S I C S : H A B I TAT 67 / M O S H E S A F D I E ” 21 J U L 2013. A R C H D A I LY . A C C E S S E D 0 3 S E P 2 0 1 4 . < H T T P :// W W W . A R C H D A I LY . C O M /? P = 404803>
50M22M
img
What shpe should be ? what material should be ?
Site plan
Bridge “street” plan - all strreet lead to roof garden “puplic space”
One bedroom to Four bedroom
Dewlling types
After Habitat 67 - Capsule Tower, Japan, 1972
After Habitat 67 - The Interlace, Singapore, 2013
CORVIALE Mario Fiorentino Size:
Rome, ITALY 1982
958 meters long 30 meters in height
Purpose:
Residence, Commerse
Typology:
Social Housing
Description: Corviale was designed by Mario Fiorentino in the early 1970s, but construction did not begin until 1975 and would not be completed until seven years later in 1982. The concrete buildingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s statistics are equally as immense as its presence on the crest of the landscape in the periphery of Rome. The building is 958 meters long, 30 meters in height, and has a total volume of 750,000 cubic meters. The building is navigated with its 74 elevators connecting 9 floors (11 including those below-ground in certain locations) that hold 1,202 apartments with 6,133 rooms designed to house 8,000 residents. The building has 60,000 square meters of parking space. Corviale follows many of the design principles presented by Le Corbusier in the UnitĂŠ dâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;Habitation and is an equally important example of Brutalist architecture. Corviale was supposed to be both the reaction and solution to the expansion of Rome, self-contained axes providing all of the support services any community would need within one structure, the complete opposite of the rampant speculative housing in the outskirts of Rome. The architect successfully created a monumental structure and a supreme example of an inhabitable wall. The non-residential component of the project centered around the (piano libero) fourth floor, originally designed for commercial and public spaces. However, the area was not completed when the building was opened in 1982 and quickly became a location for illegal squatting.
The first public housing required by nation
All municipalities have a master plan.
Over 400,000 new housing complexes.
Booming population
Romeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s 1964 First Master Plan for Social Housing.
Construction World War I
1904
1914
1918
World War II
1939
1942 1945
Economic Miracle Law 167
1949
1962 1963 1964
Corviale was designed
1970
Completed
1975
1982
Expectation
CORVIALE
Affordable Housing
Reality
Affordable Transportation Low Income Individuals
Disconnect
Parallel Piped Plan
Diversity of Spaces
Collective Design Support Services
Social Network
Poverty
Economic Diversity
Community
Self-sufficiency
Outside World
Outside Customers Illegal Squatting
Commerce
Self-sufficiency
Residents Commercial Tenants Illegal Squatters
Outside Interaction
Successful Commune
People of Economic Diversity Diversity of Spaces
Site Analysis
Commercial & Public Space
Old Rome Center
Corviale
8 km
Section Analysis
1 KM Long Plan
Parallel Piped Plan
Divide Into Shorter Section
Connect With Courtyards
Generation of Plan
Generation of Elevation
7th Floor
6th Floor
2 Bedroom Apartment
5th Floor
4th Floor
2 Bedroom Apartment 3rd Floor
2nd Floor
1st Floor
3 Bedroom Apartment
2 Bedroom Apartment 3 Bedroom Apartment 4 Bedroom Apartment
4 Bedroom Apartment
HOUSING UNIT ANALYSIS
7th Floor
6th Floor
5th Floor
4th Floor
3rd Floor
2nd Floor
1st Floor
Commercial & Public Space Parking Ancillary Space
PUBLIC SPACE ANALYSIS
MORIYAMA HOUSE Ryue Nishizawa Size:
236 m 2
Purpose:
Residential
Typology:
Lowrise
Managerment:
Autonomy
Description: The Moriyama House apartment building designed by SANAA. The architect aims to blur the distinction between private home and public metropolis within the density of Tokyo, Japan. The spaces are like a simple container within a big chaos community. Modularity the relationship of the module to the whole as well as the relationship of the module to the inhabitant are the driving forces behind the projects formal aggregation. The module and variations within it depend on the possible dwelling lifestyles. The openings in each unit only directly line up with extraneous program in two situations, lining up bathroom to its respective unit. Doorways for separate units line up with the white walls of another, offering some privacy in a largely porous structure. The project manipulates the box as the module for living stacking them on top of each other for larger dwelling spaces or various programmatic needs. The four centimeter steel walls provide the structure for these seemingly weightless white boxes. neighbors for spontaneous interaction and maximum use of shared space. The irregular organization of theses living modules confuses the typical singular circulation path. In this way the casual wandering of the city dweller or Moriyama inhabitant engage in a new interpretation of small scale housing within the density of Tokyoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; urban fabric.
Tokyo, Japan
Street View
K
B
C
B
A D
F E
Units
C
B+S
L
A
BT
D
F E
Hierarchy
B+S=Bedroom+Study BT=Bathroom L=Livingroom K=Kitchen
Landlord Unit
Ground Floor Plan
Program Distribution
B
C
Private Housing Area
B
D
F E
Rental Units Free Exchange
C
Communal Public Area
B
A D
F E
Paths To Each Unit
C
A D
F E
Paths Overlapping
B
C
A D
F E
Visiting
Studying
Entertaining
MORIYAMA HOUSE
Tokyo, Japan
Ryue Nishizawa Size:
236 m 2
Purpose:
Residential
Typology:
Lowrise
Managerment:
Autonomy
Description: The Moriyama House apartment building designed by SANAA. The architect aims to blur the distinction between private home and public metropolis within the density of Tokyo, Japan. The spaces are like a simple container within a big chaos community. Modularity the relationship of the module to the whole as well as the relationship of the module to the inhabitant are the driving forces behind the projects formal aggregation. The module and variations within it depend on the possible dwelling lifestyles. The openings in each unit only directly line up with extraneous program in two situations, lining up bathroom to its respective unit. Doorways for separate units line up with the white walls of another, offering some privacy in a largely porous structure. The project manipulates the box as the module for living stacking them on top of each other for larger dwelling spaces or various programmatic needs. The four centimeter steel walls provide the structure for these seemingly weightless white boxes.
Axon
neighbors for spontaneous interaction and maximum use of shared space. The irregular organization of theses living modules confuses the typical singular circulation path. In this way the casual wandering of the city dweller or Moriyama inhabitant engage in a new interpretation of small scale housing within the density of Tokyoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; urban fabric. Circulation
Vanke center Steven Holl
2009
Size:
80,200 m2
Purpose:
Shenzhen, CHINA
Culture, Commerce, Social, Ecological
Leisure Typology: Commercial Managerment: Autonomy
Description: The Horizontal Skyscraper, designed by Steven Holl Architects and completed in 2009, is a mixed-use building that includes offices for the Vanke Co., a conference center, restaurant, an auditorium, a hotel, apartments and a large public park. By raising the 1,296,459 sf building on eight cores — as far as 50 meters apart and positioning the building right under the 35-meter high limit of the area — Steven Holl Architects was able to create the largest possible tropical garden on the ground level of the site. In addition, the raised building allows for sea breezes to flow through the public gardens, reducing the temperature. Covering the entire length of the building, a public path connects from the hotel, through the apartment zones and to the office wings. The building is LEED Platinum, and features an innovative merging of cable stay bridge technology and a high strength concrete frame. The Horizontal Skyscraper has been honored with several awards, including an AIA NY Architecture Honor Award, a Green Good Design Award, and was named Best Green Project in the Good Design is Good Business Awards. In 2012, Steven Holl published “Horizontal Skyscraper,” a book that follows the project from its beginning in 2006 through construction and to the opening of the building in 2009. The book was published by William Stout Publishers.
Squatters
50M
Vanke Node
Business Node
Community Nude
Hotel Node
Business Node Community Nude
Vanke Node
Semi-Public Interior Path
Hotel Node
Vertical Transportation Park
Transportation
35m
35m Ocean View
Design Concept
Mountain View
Lack View
Ocean View
Views
Office Open
SOHO creative environment
Conference
uniqueness
Working Personal Sleeping Open
Closure
Diet Personal
Working
lease Personal
Diet Sleeping
Entertament
Living Entertament
DIY lease Serve DIY Persopnal
Diet
Entertament
Serve Public Persopnal
Hotel
DIY
Condo Conference
population security entertanment health(sport)
Restaurant
Hotel Condo
Theater Bar Theater Park
community activity job opportunity security exclusivity
Serve
Restaurant Hotel Restaurant
spacial diversity entertanment communication community activity
Theater
health(sport) use time job opportunity lighting
Persopnal
exclusivity air use time noise
Bar
lighting environment air consumption
Public
Bar
noise diet environment crossablity
Park
Park
consumption traffic diet crossablity traffic
and Needs Basic Needs
Public
spacial flexibility communication spacial particularity population
Conference SOHO
Specificity needs Specificity needs
Closure
Sleeping
lease
SOHO Office
Safety Needs Safety Needs Physiological Belongingness Physiological and Basic
Working Living
Open
Condo
congnitive identity spacial particularity privacy spacial diversity
Belongingness Esteem
Living
public privacycommunication exhibit spacial flexibility
Office
communality communality needs needs
public communication creative exhibit environment uniqueness congnitive identity
Self-Actualization Self-Actualization Esteem
Closure
SOHO
Vanke
Condo
Hotel
SOHO
Vanke
Condo
Hotel
Park
SOHO
Conference
Park Theater
Restaurant
Bar
Conference
Theater
Restaurant
Bar
Condo
Vanke
Park Section
uniqueness public communication Soho
congnitive identity privacy spacial flexibility spacial particularity
SOHO
spacial diversity communication
Conference
population entertanment community activity security
Hotel
health(sport)
IY
Hotel
opnal
exclusivity use time
Theater
lighting air
Bar
blic
noise environment
Park
consumption
Office
diet crossablity traffic CorridoTypology
Condo
Park
Physiological and Basic Needs
rve
job opportunity
Restaurant
Safety Needs
ase
Specificity needs
Condo
Belongingness
onal
Condo
sure
Esteem
Office
pen
communality needs
exhibit
Self-Actualization
creative environment
Maslowâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s hierarchy of needs
Hotel
MARKTHAL MVRDV
Rotterdam, The Netherlands
2014
Size:
100.000 m2
Purpose:
Market, Apartment, Restaurant, Shop
Typology:
Building Complex
Managerment: Autonomy
Description: The Market Hall is part of the new inner city heart of the Laurens Quarter, the pre-war centre of Rotterdam. The buildingis a sustainable combination of food, leisure, living and parking, all fully integrated to enhance and make the most of the synergetic possibilities of the different functions. The hall is formed from an arch of privately developed apartments, strategically allowing private investment and iniative to provide a public space. The result is a covered square which acts as a central market hall during the day and, after closing hours remains lively due to restaurants on its first floor. The project, comissioned by Provast, includes an open air market, that due to new hygienic constraints of dutch laws has to be covered. It also includes 246 residences, that form an arc that covers the open market area. This results on a 3,000sqm retail area, with a 1,600sqm catering area on the ground level and first floor, a 1,800sqm supermarket and an underground car park for 1,100 cars. The interior face of the arc will be covered with LEDs for an ever changing interior. The front and backside are covered with a flexible suspended glass facade, allowing for maximum transparency and a minimum of structure.
50M
PROBLEM
Oppose Expanding Urban Area
Sanitary Constraints
New Hygienic Law
Covered Market
Apartment
Markthal No Open Air Market
Maximize Building Density
Site Plan
03
06
09
12
15
18
21
Ground Floor Plan
Fifth Floor Plan
24
Timeline
Longitudinal Section
FORMATION
NOLIMAP
market apartmen NOLIMAP private
transition
public
NOLIMAP
residents
visitors
worker
CIRCULATION
TORRE DAVID
Caracas, VENEZUELA
Enrique Gomez, 1990-1994 Size:
45-story, 190m
Purpose:
complex, office, hotel
Typology: Highrise Managerment: Autonomy
Description: Torre David, a 45-story office tower in Caracas designed by the distinguished Venezuelan architect Enrique G贸mez, was almost complete when it was abandoned following the death of its developer, David Brillembourg, in 1993 and the collapse of the Venezuelan economy in 1994. Today, it is the improvised home of a community of more than 750 families, living in an extra-legal and tenuous occupation that some have called a vertical slum. Where some only see a failed development project, U-TT has conceived it as a laboratory for the study of informal vertical communities. In exhibitions and a book, the architects lay out their vision for practical, sustainable interventions in Torre David and similar informal settlements around the world. They argue that the future of urban development lies in collaboration among architects, private enterprise, and the global population of slum-dwellers. U-TT issues a call to arms to their fellow architects to see in the informal settlements of the world a potential for innovation and experimentation, with the goal of putting design in the service of a more equitable and sustainable future. Location
Perspective of Main Tower
Slums in Venerzuela
1989
Slums in Caracus
Torre David
Developer
Architect
Finacial Center
David Brillembourg
Enrique Gomez
Torre David
Venezue 50M
Funding 1993
40M
Pass Away
30M
1994
20M
Banking Crisis
10M
Abandoned
Government took over
2007
90% completed 10%
elevators + infrastructure
Funding Evaporated
0
19
Economic Downturn
Squatters
Housing Shortage
Increasing Population
Invaded
Recreation
Self-organization
Venezue 50M
Adiministration
Security Guard
Residents
Craftman
Moto-taxi driver
Productivity Jobs
40M 30M 20M 10M
2012
Development of Torre David
Informal Vertical Communities
50.54% occupied
0
19
CAPTION
Venezuela, Population, 19.26 million 50M 40M 30M 20M 10M 0
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
1989
69.6%
1989-2007
30.3%
Venezuela, Population, 27.66 million 50M 40M 30M 20M 10M 0
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
Development of Population in Venezuela
CAPTION
At the begining, Torri David was desgine to be a central trade center in the CBD of caracas. But two things happened make this vision shut down. One is the death of its developer in 1993. The other is the Banking Crsis in 1994. After the funding of the building ended, Torri David began its abandoned life for almost 14 years. At this time, the building remained a incomplete status which didnt have any infrastructure at all. Meanwhile, the Venezulaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s population was losing control. It increased to almost 1.5 times as before. And with the influence of economic downturn, the housing shortage became a very serious issue that the government cannot ignore any more. In 2007, the first group of its user discovered it and explored every space in it. The building was given back to a living space for hundred of squatters.
Facade of Post -occupied main Tower
edge
corner
core
TYPOLOGY OF UNITS IN BUILDING A
The most amazing thing, which is also the key point to make this building famous as vertical informal community, is the recreation by the squatters. They use the regional material such as adobe bricks to reorganize the interior space of Torri David. Furthermore, they almost find every square centimeters of space that they can occupied to build their new home. The digram on the top shows different types of their recreation work in plan in differet part of Building A. The squatters occupied up to 28th floors since there is no elevator here. And a administration institute was founded by elder people to maintain the order of the residencers in the building. With the increasing of the occupiers and their basic living demand, a variation of new function emerged in this building, such as hair cut, tailor, grocery, gym, playground and even moto-taxis for the first 10 floors.
Planting
Adimin
Cleaning
Residents
Guard
Adimin
Church
Residents
Residents
Recycle
Core
Water tunk
GYM
Sports
Grocery
Tailor
INVASION
6%
Parking
50.45%
78.5% 1.5%
13.5%
Moto-taxi
0.5%
Occupied Rate
Overall Occupied
P Building Atrium Building B Building K Parking Structure Building A
Floors 7 19 19 10 45
Occupied 6% 13.5% 1.5% 0.5% 78.5%
Statistic
Yard
B Atrium K A
Plan
Atrium
Building B
Program Diagram of all buildings and Present Occupied Ratio
Building A
Building K
Parking Structure
TULOU (EARTHEN BUILDING)
Local Residents
Fujian Province, CHINA
12th-20th
Size: Vary Purpose:
Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology: Vernacular Managerment: Autonomy
Description: Tulou is a type of Chinese rural dwellings in the mountainous areas in southeastern Fujian, China. They were mostly built between the 12th and the 20th centuries. A tulou is usually a large, enclosed and fortified earth building, most commonly rectangular or circular in configuration, with very thick load-bearing rammed earth walls between three and five stories high and housing up to 80 families. Smaller interior buildings are often enclosed by these huge peripheral walls which can contain halls, storehouses, wells and living areas, the whole structure resembling a small fortified city. People living in one tulou are members of a big family who share a commune life and are guided by certain hierarchies. Life of every member is connected with each other in the public yard, shrine, corridor by working, relaxing, celebrating, etc. together. The round shape is the most popular form for tulou. It is steady, wind protective, and easily to separate the families equally. Nowadays, most young people leave these old buildings and go to urban area for better life quality. And the residents want to have more privacy than public interactions. The traditional lifestyle is in danger. However, recently, more and more architects and scholars are researching about tulou and applying the form and technologies to architecture design.
50M
TIANLUOKENG
ROUND BUILDING
RECTANGLE BUILDING
WUFENG BUILDING
Prototype
One ring
Two rings
Three rings
Four rings
TYPOLOGY
Composite
Environment
Symmetrical
Solar Condition
Wind Protection
One Entrance
Defence all direction
Centrality
Equality
Exterior windows. Only small windows on the top for investigation and shooting.
Firewalls made of stones between each section.
STRUCTURE & MATERIAL
Thick exterior wall. Max thickness =1.5m Stones as foundation to protect from water. Rammed earth wall--- a mix of earth,quicklime, egg white, brown sugar, cooked sticky rice.
Timber structure inside. Stone slices on top of floors to protect from fire.
SCALE
14M
74.1M Largest Tulou---Shunyu Building
Smallest Tulou---Cuilin Building
DUALITY
Family Unite
Private
Public
Cooking&Eating
Barn
Sleeping
TYPE A
Shrine
Yard
Circulation
Family Unite
Private
Public
Cooking&Eating
Barn
Sleeping
TYPE B
Shrine
Yard
Circulation
Shrine
чен
Corridor
Corridor Shrine
чен
Corridor
Public Yard
Private Yard
TYPE A
Corridor
TYPE B
TULOU LIFE
CULTURE IMPACT
Tulou is highly influenced by traditional Chinese culture and hierarchies. The form of some tulous follows the geometry of Bagua---eight symbols. The shrine in a tulou is always located in the middle or on the south-north axis to show its highest position in the building, which is the main place for holding rituals and big social events.
5M
TULOU COMMUNE URBANUS ARCHITECT Vanke-Tulou, Guangdong,2006-2008 Size: 12,000 m2
Tulou Commune D=72M
Shunyu Building D=74.1M
GLOBAL RURBAN
GARDEN CITY
London, England
Ebenezer Howard Size:
Purpose:
9.000 Acres Culture, Politics, Social, Residential
Leisure Typology: Lowrise Managerment: Autonomy
Description: The primary Garden city idea is from Ebenezer Howard’s book: To-morrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform in 1898. In the book he was convincing people of the beauty and utility of “the Garden City Idea.” This idea is a revolutionary one at that time, it’s an idea of urban decentralization, zoning of different uses, the integration of nature into cities, greenbelting, and the development of self-contained “new town” communities outside crowded central cities. His argument started with a protest against urban overcrowding. He used the very famous three magnets diagram to create a solution to this issue which is a new kind of human community based on “the town-country magnet.” Then he diagramed what this ”town-country magnet” realm look like, it’s a concentric-ring diagram, the center of Garden City is to be a central park containing important public buildings and surrounded by a “Crystal Palace” ring of retail stores. The entire city of approximately 100 acres is to be encircled by a permanent agricultural greenbelt of some 5000 acres, and the new cities are to be connected with central “Social Cites” by a system of railroad line. So overall the “Garden City Idea” is a utopia concept raised to solve social concerns and end up with creating a new planning for human settlement to pursue a better living condition.
Group of Slumless Smokeless Cities, Ebenezer Howard
Garden City Poster
YESTEDAY: THE GADEN CITI IDEA START FROM SOLVING THE POLITICAL ECONOMY AND SOCIAL ISSUE? AT THAT TIME
Industrialization (smoke-health) Rise of Population (overcrowded ) Poor Living Condition Urban Centralization ( overcrowded and agriculture depression)
XL SCALE
TODAY: WE NEED TOWN-COUNTRY TO REPLACE TOWN AND COUNTRY WHY?
Town: High wages, opportunity, amusement Country: Natural beauty, low rents, fresh air Town-country: combine all the advantages of Town and Country avoid their disadvantages
LARGE SCALE
DECENTRALIZATION
ZONING
TOMORROW: GARDEN CITY IS A REVOLUTIONARY CONCEPT HOW?
Urabn Decentralization
Integration of nature with cities
MEDIUM SCALE
CAPTION
TOMORROW: GARDEN CITY IS A SELF-CONTAINED COMMUNITY HOW IT WORKS?
Central park containig public buildings in the center Crystal Palace function as retail stores surrounding Central park Outskirt ring with all the factories Entire city is encircled by a permanent agricultural greenbelt Railroad system connects Garden city with central Social City
SMALL SCALE
Garden Cities of To-Morrow, Ebenezer Howard
Howard organized the Garden-City Association
ENGLAND
HAMPSTEAD GARDEN
Barry Paker and Raymond Unwin designed Letchworth
Urban Crisis and agriculture depression
1898 1899 1903
Not a Garden city but a Garden Surburb, no industry, openly depend on commuting from adjacent tube station, man-made landscape
1906 GARDEN CITY_ INFLUENCES
GERMANY
FALKENBERG GARDEN CITY B. TAUT
FRANCE
Louis de Soisons designedVILLE RADIEUSE Welwyn Garden City LE CORBUSIER
Focus on archtiectual technologies, needs of people, expressive colourfulness
1913-1916
High-density Garden city, Super-block and “project neighborhood”, Empty open space, Unchangeable plan, keep pedestrians off streets and in parks
1920
1929-1930
USA
BRAODACRE CITY
Decentralization, less desity, landownership for all belief in power of modern technology, efficent transit system, egalitarian ideal
1934
SUMMARY
At the beginning of the twentieth century two great new inventions took form before our eyes: the aeroplane and the Garden City, both harbingers of a new age: the first gave man wings and the second promised him a better dwelling-place when he came down to earth. Lewis Mumford
Howard’s famous statement of advantages and disadvantages [of town and country, originally expressed in his diagram of the Three Magnets] can be rephrased for the conditions of the 1990s. The town has been sanitised and the country has been given urban technology, but both still suffer problems; and, still, towns set in the country offer and optimal lifestyle. Peter Hall and Colin Ward
Howard’s “prescription for the city was to do the city in.” He advocated: “really nice towns if you were docile and had no plans of your own, and did not mind spending your life with others who had no plans for their own. Jane Jacobs
CRITIQUE
FREELAND Mvrdv 2011
Almere Oosterwold, NETHERLAND
Area: 43 km2 Purpose:
Culture, Social, Recreation
Leisure; Agriculture Typology:
Free Housing development
Managerment: Autonomy
Description: In cooperation with the city of Almere and the Governmental Real Estate Development Agency, MVRDV present the development strategy for Almere Oosterwold. Free design and construction will transform an area of 43km2. Limits are set to ensure the rural character of the area is maintained: 18% construction, 8% roads, 13% public green, 2% water and 59% urban agriculture. An individual’s creativity is limitless within this framework What if you could start here and create your own world? This is the question that generates the entire concept of the project. In fact, Freeland plunges visitors into the animated world of a city without the rules of urban planning. A multi-screen surround projection envelopes the audience and invites investigations into the legitimacy of classical centralized planning in today’s world and inspires the individuation and self-organization within cities. ”Freeland” is rooted in two projects: MVRDV ‘s Almere Oosterwold, on which ArchDaily reported earlier this year, and the research conducted in bottom up organization by the AnarCity studio led by The Why Factory. Both projects invite “do-it-yourself” thinking to development strategies for cities. Driven by need, individual desires, and community goals, “Freeland” explores a range of possibilities, none of which are strictly predictable. MVRDV’s Almere Oosterwold steps away from government dictacted urban development and uses its inhabitants initiatives to build their own neighborhoods at such scales as a public green, energy supply, water management, waste management, urban agriculture and infrastructure.
It is an unexpected urbanism and a world of surprises of a rich collection of houses and all other initiatives appears. A city that is not predominated by ‘structure’. A city that we develop all together over time. Where facilities are developed by individuals, collectives and public organizations. The absence of zoning allows for rich and exciting program, providing diversity and liveliness at all times. It is a next step in evolutionary urban development. It introduces a radical new model within the current urban planning, totally oriented on the user and totally flexible by which the area will be transformed into a differentiated, experimental and surprising urban areas.
ADMINISTRATION: No hierarchy
TOTAL INDIPENDENCE
NO RULES
NO LANDLORD
SELF-ORGANIZATION
No totally anarchy but people are ruled by the common sense
PROJECT
COLLABORATION
INFORM
CONSULT
INVOLVE
COLLABORATE
EMPOWER
EVOLUTION OF THE COMMUNITY The diagram does not describe the impact of the individuals
on labor
and money
to further encourage the people to participate in the evolution and well-being of their community
. The objective of the collective housing is
CITY CENTRE
ALEMERE PLAN
Renders of the project
FREELAND
SATELLITE CITY’S DEVELOPMENT: THE CITY OU OF THE CITY
FREELAND CITY’S DEVELOPMENT: THE CITY IN THE CITY
NEW MODEL OF URBAN STRUCTURE
SECTOR MODEL
MULTINUCLE MODEL
CONCENTRIC ZONE MODEL
Service
Housing
Agriculture
Co-living space
FREELAND MODEL
COMMUNITY LAYOUT FREELAND: DISPERSED
Freeland, MVRDV
EXAMPLE 1: CENTRAL COURTYARD
Mosque of Kairouan
EXAMPLE 2: LINEAR
RWTH Aachen Campus, GmbH
MEETING SPACE BUFFERING SPACE BUILDING SPACE CIRCULATION
FREELAND’S AIMS:
a. IDENTITY
CREATE A SENSE OF CUMMUNITY
CREATE UNIQUE NEIGHBORHOOD
CREATE A DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
MAINTAIN AGRICULTURAL BACKGROUND
READAPTATION OF USEABLE SPACE
FLEAXIBLE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
b. EFFICIENCY
5
6 2
3
7
8
1
PHASED DEVELOPMENT
4
CLEVER PARKING SOLUTIONS
c. DIVERSITY
NODES WITH DIFFERENT PUBLIC PROGRAM
DIFFERENT CHARACTERS AND TYPOLOGIES
MIX BETWEEN SMALL AND BIG SCALE DEVELOPMENTT
d. SUSTEINABILITY
INTRODUCE NEW TECHNOLOGIES
DIFFERENT ENERGY RESOURCES
DIFFERENT USES OF FARMLAND
FAMILY FRIENDLY DEVELOPMENT
PLOT’S REALIZATION: DO IT YOURSELF 1
2
3
4
HOME MAKER
You
LAND MAKER
FREE TIPOLOGY DESIGN OF YOUR LAND
The plot development can happen individually (ILand) or collectively (WELand)
ARCHITECT
STEP1
a. Choose a plot
b. choose the shape of your plot
LANDMAKER
c. build your house
HOUSEMAKER
stay in your property
think green
STEP2
b. plant green spaces
a. build a road
d. organize agriculture land
c. set-back building area
e. own property energy and water sufficient
AMISH Population:
US & CANADA 290,100 (2014)
Religion: Anabaptist Language:
Germany & English
Managerment: Self-governing *
Description: The Amish are a group of traditionalist Christian church fellowships, closely related to but distinct from Mennonite churches, with whom they share Swiss Anabaptist origins. The Amish are known for simple living, plain dress, and reluctance to adopt many conveniences of modern technology. The history of the Amish church began with a schism in Switzerland within a group of Swiss and Alsatian Anabaptists in 1693 led by Jakob Ammann. Those who followed Ammann became known as Amish. Living in the world with highly developed technology, the Amish are still living in a traditional lifestyle. Their life mainly rely on agriculture and partly handicraft. The new generation is following their parentsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; life mode to do exact same things. High education and outstanding ability are not valued, but treated as causes of arrogance in the Amish society. The Amish has a well-organized community system for self-governing. The smallest unit called church district is composed by several families, which makes their own rules and disciplines. The districts sharing similar disciplines form the affiliation. Then several affiliations form a big settlement. The Amish continued their belief and lifestyle for more than 200 years. They got a lot conflicts and threats from outside world. Some communities changed their rules to unite with Mennonite churches. The ones still following strict rules are known as the old order Amish today.
DISTRIBUTION OF AMISH
1536
1693
18C
The foundation of the Mennonites
The foundation of the Amish
Migration to Pennsylvania
Menno Simons (1496 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 31 January 1561) was an Anabaptist religious leader from the Friesland region of the Low Countries. Simons was a contemporary of the Protestant Reformers and his followers became known as Mennonites. He founded the Mennonites in 1536.
The Amish movement takes its name from Jakob Ammann (c. 1656â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1730), a Swiss Mennonite leader. Ammann believed Mennonites, the peaceful Anabaptists of the Low Countries and Germany, were drifting away from the teachings of Menno Simons. He founded the new branch in 1693, which is known as Amish.
Amish Mennonites began migrating to Pennsylvania in the 18th century as part of a larger migration from the Palatinate and neighbouring areas. This migration was a reaction to religious wars, poverty, and religious persecution on the Continent.
20C
1961
1972
Group split
Tax exemption
Freedom to get no high education
Under their beliefs and traditions, generally the Amish do not agree with the idea of Social Security benefits and have a religious objection to insurance. On this basis, the United States Internal Revenue Service agreed in 1961 that they did not need to pay Social Security-related taxes. In 1965, this policy was codified into law.
On May 19, 1972, Jonas Yoder and Wallace Miller of the Old Order Amish, and Adin Yutzy of the Conservative Amish Mennonite Church, were each fined $5 for refusing to send their children, aged 14 and 15, to high school. In Wisconsin v. Yoder, the Wisconsin Supreme Court overturned the conviction,and the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed this, finding the benefits of universal education do not justify a violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
THE OLD ORDER AMISH
MENNONITE
Most Amish communities that were established in North America did not ultimately retain their Amish identity. Many of these eventually united with the Mennonite Church, and other Mennonite denominations, especially in the early 20th century. The more traditionally minded groups became known as the Old Order Amish.
Money Other products
individual farmland Amish community
Agriculture
Agriculture Product
Livestock
Dairy Product
Non-Amish
Labor
ECONOMY MODE
make disciplines
vote
&
Household
in charge bishop preacher*2 deacon
Church District
common discipline
A Commune Unit SELF-GOVERNING MODE
explore outside
stay
work on farmland
school 16 Y work at home
21 Y
return work for families
saving money buy and work on own farmland kids
marrage taking care of kids
LIFE MODE
NO HIGHSCHOOL
NO SOCIAL SECURITY
SEDUCTION OF OUTSIDE WORLD
SEXUAL ASSAULT
Living in modern society, the Amish are facing a lot conflicts and threats. In most cases, they got agreement with the government to respect their culture, like not attending high school and social security related tax exemption. However, sexual assault is a serious problem among the Amish communities since they should not search aid from outside. Discrimination and crime towards Amish happened. And the seduction of outside world towards young people is threatening their future generation.
DISCRIMINATION & CRIME
FUTURE OF AMISH?
SHAKERS COMMUNITY
Unite Stateof America
1774 - 1960 Population: Typology:
3 people (present 2014) Community
Managerment: Autonomy
*
The Shakers originated in Europe during the seventeenth century. They formed off the already existent Quakers, which was a branch of Protestantism (Shaker Historic Trail). The founder of the Shakers was a woman named Ann Lee who was born in Manchester, England. After her and her husband had four children who all died at birth, she decided that this was a punishment from God, so she joined a group of Quakers to repent. Later because of her beliefs of two things, the second coming of Jesus Christ and celibacy, a new branch of Quakers was formed. They were so adamant and fearful of the second coming that they would tremble, or shake, when they would talk about it, because of this they were called the Shaking Quakers, which was later shortened to just ‘Shakers.’ Ann Lee became known as Mother Ann because of her preaching and she gained her own followers. Ann Lee and seven of her followers decided to come to North America in 1780 to pursue a better life. The Shakers listened to Ann Lee devoutly. They even saw her as the second coming of Christ. They believed that the first time that God appeared on Earth, He came in male form of Jesus Christ, and the second time the He came in the female form of Ann Lee (Machaek, Wilcox) “The
Shakers of Pleasant Hill.” Shakervillage. Accessed September 12, 2014. http://shakervillage.wordpress.com/2011/11/28/hello-world/.
50M
Shakers Village in USA
Before 1760
1760
1774
1787 - 1826
New york M a s s a c h u s e t t s K e n t a c y O h i o I n d i a n a M a i n e C o n n e c t i c u t
New branch of Quakers in England
Mother Ann Lees founded â&#x20AC;&#x153;Qukers Shakers â&#x20AC;&#x153;
Mother Ann sailed to New york
19 Shakers colonies were formed in seven states
Before civil war
1865 - 1900
1956
present 2014
Population were 60000 Shakers
Population was lower than it had been since Shakers founded
Shakers Village sites had been sold to the world
Only three Shakers left in the entire world
Basic Shaker Beliefs • The confession of sins • The virtues of the celibate life • The equality of the sexes • The consecration of labor Shaker’s labor
CAPTION
CAPTION
SHAKERS ECONOMY
Agriculture
Livestocks
Industry
Self-sufficient
Money
By trade
CAPTION
Elders
Leeders
Eldresses
Industrial Deacons
activities
Deaconesses
Finances Trustees
activities
Trustees
Daily Brothers
activities
Sisters
Responsibilities Typical Shakersâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s family lay-
Minstry’s House
Dewlling’s House
Sister’s Shop
Seed House
Dewlling’s House Carage
Brthren’s Shop Wood Shed Herb House Bran
Meeting House
Office Church Family “Center Family” typical contents
North Family
West Family
Center Family
East Family
SouthFamily
Shakerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Village Layout
FREETOWN CHRISTIANIA
Copenhagen, Denmark
1971
Population:
900 (year 2003)
Size:
85 acres
Typology:
Community
Managerment:
Autonomy
*
Christiania is a squatted area in the district of Christianshavn in Copenhagen, located less than one mile from the Royal Danish Palace and the Danish parliament. It stretches over 49 hectares (excluding the water in the moats) and consists of old military barracks and parts of the city’s ramparts dating from the seventeenth century; as well as a number of buildings constructed after 1971 (when the Freetown was proclaimed). The area offers city life as well as life in the countryside. Today approximately 900 people live in Christiania. According to the latest public census (2003), 60 per cent of these were male and 20 per cent were under 18 years old. Further, 60 per cent had elementary school as their highest level of education. While there is a group with a substantial registered income, two-thirds of the population either receive social assistance or have no registered income. The Freetown is divided into 14 self-governing areas and all decisions affecting the whole of Christiania are takenby the Common Meeting, which is ruled by consensus democracy . “(Christiania’s) demand that there be a collective fund is not fair, It doesn’t meet the wish for a normalization. We (the government) have emphasized that there should be varied ownership-models, such as private ownership ... it is natural that there are also privately owned buildings in an area like Christiania... Because it is the case for the surrounding society in general, that there are variety in the ownership”.
50M
4 Sep 1971
26 Sep 1971
1973
1987
Surrounding neighbourhood broke down the fence to take over parts of the unused area as a playground for their children.
Jacob Ludvigsen ajournalist who published a magazinecalled Hovedbladet(‘Themainpaper’), which was successfully distributed to mostly young people.
theSocialgovernment gave Christiania theofficial(but temporary) status of a ‘social experiment’ .
‘Christiania Act’passed by abroad parliamentary majority made it possible to grant Christiania the right to collective use of the area.
1997
2007
2011
2014
start using new currency
The representatives of Christiania and Copenhagenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s city council reached an agreement to cede control of Christiania to the city over the course of 10 years for the purposes of business development
40th anniversary
Undecided issue
contact -group
defence ministries whole area issues COMMUNITYMEETING
idea
headcashier
AREAarea MEETING *14
areacashier
AREA-CASHIER MEETING economygroup
approved BUILDING-MEETING
applicant of loans
ECONOMYMEETING
unsolved area issues
execute group
common box
BUDGET COMMUNITYMEETING
cashier CORPORATEMEETING
Copenhagen Energy Christiania follows the Consentdemocracy. Everyone here could raise ideas to area-meetings. Once the idea is approved, they should conduct the idea by themselves. Every individual has a responsibility for his/her own life and his/hers home. The residents in an area have a common responsibility for the areaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s development and condition.
SELF-GOVERNING MODE
WEED Weed and other soft drugs are daily necessities for Christianians. They are sold in stores here. The residents treat the soft drug as the important tool for relaxing and creation.
FREE Christiania is a free place. Except some basic rules, people could do whatever they want here. The life mode is quite relaxing. The town is automobile free. So the bicycles with carts are very popular here.
ART A lot of Christinians are artists and architects. They design their own unique houses, doodle on walls, make sculptures. Christiania is a wonderful place for designers and artists.
CRIME
DRUG
As a part of Netherlands, but working like an independent country, Christiania suffers a lot conflicts with the Denmark government. Drug selling is a serious issue in Christiania, which also leads to criminal activities. Police are sent to the town to manage the criminal issues. A series of acts are published by government to normalize freetown. Self-built buildings are demolished by police. Christianians have never stopped fighting for their rights and freedom. They start to sell shares on line to get global economic supports.
DEMOLITION
NORMALIZATION
* Community
AMISH
SHAKERS
FREETOWN
Self-governing
Christian
Electricity
Automobile
Agriculture
Handicraft
Marriage
New member
Population
RURAL JAPAN
Size:
JAPAN
377,944 km2
72% Mountainous Population: 126,659,683 9,775,022 Rural
Description:
Generally these attempts can be categorized as follows: 1.Laws which incentivize certain behaviours over others. 2. New farming models that make better use of the limited land. 3.New economic models such as One Village One Product. 4.Tourism focused on activities, learning, and relaxation. 5.Tourism focused on art, installations, and sculpture. These attempts, while not enough on there own have been successful on a whole. Many ideas which begun in Japan have even been adopted by other countries with similar woes.
Issues 72% Ogimachi Village
200M
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b8/Ogi_Shirakawa02bs3200.jpg
Rural Japan is facing many issues which ultimately affect the country as a whole. Among these issues are depopulation and aging of the rural population, the younger generation has a lack of interest in farming as a profession, and a lack of flat land for large scale farming. These issues have led to poverty in rural villages and on as a country, a low food self-sufficiency rate. While the country has not fully recovered, many of these issues are being dealt with through innovative new ideas.
72%
Terraced Rice Paddy http://roundoftheseasonsinjapan.blogspot. com/2013/09/terraced-paddy-fields-in-autumn.html
Large Scale Farm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_production_in_Japan#mediaviewer/File:Rice_Paddies_In_Aizu,_Japan.JPG
Small Scale Rice Havesting
http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-08-02/japan-wants-free-trade-dot-its-farmers-dont
Food Self-Sufficiency Rate FAO Yearbook (2001) Asia: China Indonesia Japan Korea Philippines Malaysia Thailand North America: USA South America: Argentina Europe: UK France Germany Africa: Egypt Oceania: Australia
Rice
Wheat
Beans
Vegetables
Fruits
Meat
Eggs
Fish
97.6 93.6 92.8 111.4 97.2 66.4 189.5
91.5 11.0 0.1 0.1
110.0 93.5 34.7 36.4 35.7 112.8
101.2 97.1 80.8 97.7 97.8 54.5 112.8
99.4 100.0 52.1 75.0 133.3 82.3 123.9
98.8 97.9 53.5 79.3 93.0 85.5 128.2
99.9 100.8 98.4 99.5 99.4 121.9 100.5
94.4 07.0 50.8 89.9 90.1 87.4 116.2
155.9
162.2
96.8
96.8
81.3
109.5
101.8
74.0
258.1
270.1
98.3
98.3
115.7
103.6
98.7
271.3
0.0 18.1 0.0
85.8 164.7 141.0
47.3 88.1 44.3
47.3 88.1 44.3
6.0 77.1 43.7
70.0 105.4 96.0
92.7 100.0 81.7
44.3 39.1 24.1
109.7
54.7
101.9
101.9
103.0
82.6
100.0
58.3
569.9
352.1
98.1
98.1
104.4
171.1
100.0
49.3
Small Scale Rice Havesting http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2422.html
Rural Village Art Tourism http://spacehacking.net/naoshima-teshima-art-afar
Ainokura Village http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2422.html
Terraced Rice Paddy https://www.flickr.com/photos/ippei-janine/2692496914/
Options government policy
$ promoting companies
laws
taxes, subsidies, tarriffs
promoting research
crop management
food safety/ quality
Specific Examples: Basic Law for Food (1999): Incentivizes farming by directly paying farmers in return for their work in conserving environmental and cultural resources. It Stresses collaboration between farmers and consumers. Consumers have a role to understand rural issues and the impact their eating has on the countryâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s selfsufficiency. In addition computer software allows one to calculate how different meal choices said rate. Seikatsu Club: Co-operative movement where urban households guarantee receiving safe food by only purchasing from a particular group of farmers. Terraced Paddy Field Ownership Scheme: Urbanites invest in fields; they then usually pay the rent for the property and carry out the farming work themselves under the guidance of local farmers. Cloud-Based Agriculture Tool: A new management tool through the Rice Growers Improvement Network.
Cloud-Based Agriculture Tool http://media.toyota.ca/releases/toyota-brings-the-cloud-to-rice-farming-it-technology-modernizes-one-of-japans-oldest-traditions
Farmer A
work order
Agricultural Co-op
co-op team
Farmer B
work order
performance indicators daily reports
Landowner C
land lease
Laborer 1
result plan
Agricultural IT Mangement Tool work order
work order
Laborer 2
Laborer 3
result plan
Field area a
area b
area c
Mr. Morhiko Hiramatsu
high quality logo
village
product
brand name ad
local on global scale
visibility
provides
$
self reliance
stability
municipal standard services of living
economic model
case studies
yukiko sushi
bungo cow
health village
art festival
Ayako Takahashi the sushi chef, uses only local ingredients and has changed her recipe a number of times to reflect what she can find locally. Notoriety came when she participated and subsequently won an national food contest. The cattle used in bungo beef is differentiated from others in that they are breed in a specific manner. Only being fed a specific diet and cared for in a specific and humane manner has led to many awards for taste and brand name notoriety. Sichuan Farm Village in the Gunma Prefecture is an attempt to bring the rural experience to urbanites. It incorporating many peaceful and leisure activities that can only be done in rural areas. (agriculture, fishing, hiking, learning, sightseeing). In rural Niigata Prefecture, six villages band together in order to form an exterior art museum (2d art, sculpture, cinema). Around 160,000-200,000 people attend the roughly 50 day, yearly event. The two sessions have produced over 30 billion yen.
Those that have spent their lives working in urban Japan oftentimes long for a simpler life upon retirement. In the Hyogo Prefecture retirees will retirement work on a farm gardening and other rural occupations as a means to relax. 401k
http://www.onedoing.com/a/qiany/chuany/1/2011/1225/61.html
Volunteer Rice Harvesting http://www.chabadjapan.org/rice-harvest-chabad-japan/
Process
how
locations
farm inn types
farm inns
diversification
restaurants
ranches
developing vacation sites
sales of farm products
orchards and vegetable farms
utilizing human resources
tourist guides story telling
rice farms
activites
bed and breakfast room with a kitchen quality control diversity of farm inns
Volunteer Rice Harvesting http://www.chabadjapan.org/rice-harvest-chabad-japan/
Volunteer Rice Harvesting http://www.chabadjapan.org/rice-harvest-chabad-japan/
NAOSHIMA ART ISLAND Tadao Ando, Yayoi Kusama, Ryue Nishizawa Purpose:
Museum, Art Installation
Typology:
Mutiple
Naoshima, JAPAN 2014
Managerment: Benesse Corporation
Description: Naoshima is a remote island in Japan, formerly a fishing village, and presently the most perfect place to see contemporary art in the entire world Invested by Benesse Corporation a corporate oligarch who hails from the shores of Japanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Inland Sea decided a number of years ago to wield his wealth in a rather extraordinary way, commissioning Tadao Ando to design several showpiece buildings in which a very few, very famous artworks would be placed.
50M
PROBLEM
RESULT
SOLUTION
Industrial Polution Tourism Farming Decrease
Fishing Decrease
Villager
Other City & Other Town
Citizen
Art
Decoration and Filling
Artists
Architects
Revive Local Culture
Humanity
History & Life Style
Nature
Architecture & Art
Benesse Holding
Funding
Construction
Revive Village
Typology
Keywords
Result
Museum
Nature
Improve
Installation
Unique
Attracitve
House
Maintain
Interaction
SOLUTION
$$$ site
time
scale
cluster
investment
MUSEUM
new
1995
large
centralize
high
INSTALLATION
new
--
small
decentralize
low
HOUSE
old
1998
multiple
centralize
low
Teshima Art Museum
Location: Teshima Island, Kagawa Prefecture Seto Inland Sea, Japan Architect: Ryue Nishizawa, co-founder of SANAA. The artwork: Matrix (created by sculptor Rei Naito
http://www.designboom.com/architecture/ryue-nishizawa-teshima-art-museum/
Museum
Relationship Between Human and Nature
Artwork
Relationship Between Past and Future
Industrial Pollution
PAST
NOW
4.5m
25cm
40
m
60m
SIZE
ORGANIC
4.5m
25cm
40
m
Chichu Art Museum 60m
Location: Naoshima Island, Kagawa Prefecture, Japan. Architect: Tadao Ando. The artwork: Painting: Claude Monet Permanent installations: James Turrell, Walter De Maria
UNDERGROUND
LIGHT CHANGING
Art House Project graphic
Old Houses
Local Residents
Create
New Neighborhood
Visitors & Artists
Art Activities
Interaction
Maintain
LED lamps
sun light
stairs
display
craftmanship
garden
Aoki Jun
Designing architecture, it means not just to make some independent object of art, but to react to the surrounding conditions, the context, or the more physical constraints. And also, in this case, this installation is not just an object of art, but this is a reaction to the surroundings.
Sou Fujimoto
Pushing his ideas and his spatial conceits into direct contact with real life and real people and real goals, and negotiating the conflict and compromises that arise from that meeting.
Tadao Ando
Review Naoshima Island history, but also saw the Benesse Cooperation founder Soichiro Fukutake spirit. As an architect, I also feel the social responsibility.
YI-LAN COUNTY Size:
2143.6251 km2
Boroughs:
1 city, 11 townships(3 urban, 8 rural)
Population:
458,378
Yi Lan, TAIWAN
Economy
Description: Yilan County is located to the northeast of Taiwan, covering an area of about 2,143 square kilometers. Slightly triangular in shape, it is girt by mountains and hemmed in between the Xueshan Range and the Central Mountain Range, whilst facing the Pacific Ocean on the East. Prosperous and modern, Yilan commands a highly concentrated population. Since the opening of the Xueshan Tunnel in June 2006, it now takes only 40 minutes to cover the distance from Yilan to Taipei, providing even more ease and convenience of access. Yilan is often referred to as a “Holy Land of Democracy”, and that is because it has produced a number of Taiwan’s leading political opposition figures. At the same time, thanks to the excellent achievements through local public governance, Yilan has earned the good name as an exemplary city referred to as the “Yilan Experience”. It is demonstrated in its good quality public works, a very forward-looking planning and the follow-through of local area development, and the citizens of this place’s collective sense of honor and pride. Aimed at building Yilan into a LOHAS (Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability) city, Yilan County Government has set up three strategies to help achieving this goal: turning Yilan into an “Ecological City”, a “Creative City” and a “Friendly City”, which work in tandem with six major policies: (1) Economic Growth, (2) Safe Community, (3) Holistic Education, (4) Urban and Rural Harmony, (5) Environmental Conservation and (6) Multiculturalism. CAPTION
CAPTION
Keywords of Community Development in Taiwan
Increase Budget of Culture Construction
Government
Hardware Construction Competition between Communities
rethink
1995 Policy towards Community Construction
Adiministrative Department
Culture Ideology
themes
goal
Community of life
Public Participation Community Construction Master Plan
to evoke the ideology of Community
Political resources
Community
Central government
County government(province) Policies
Movement Villiage government
Local communities
The Taiwan government took a seires of policies to encourage the development of communities before 1995. One of them is that by increasing the budget for culture constrcution based on the planning propsals of local government. However, this policy didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t achieve what it initially want. On the contraty, it lead to the hardware competitions between local communities and waste a lot of money and human resources at that time and the result was far beyond what the government expected. This consequence of this phenomenon make the government rethink the policy. After that, government took 2 kinds of measures to achieve the goal that make the communities find their culture and ideology positively and take full use of the political resources offered by the government.
Safe Society
Creative Industy
Organic Agriculture
Prosperous Economy
Happniess + Prosperous
Biodiversity
Green-blue Network
Basin Manage
Green Leaves + Blue Water
ĺŽ&#x153; ĺ&#x2026;°
Water Resource
Local Economy
Ecoindustry
Happniess Index
Ecology + Economy
Harmounious Rural-urban
Micro-climate Accommodation
Healthy + Comfortable
Living + Roaming
Tourism
Homeland Conservation Zones
Agriculture Development Zones Maintain agriculture activities :Lv.1 Maintain agriculture activities, ensure buffer function :Lv.2 of Homeland Conservation Zones
Recycle Resource
Ecocommunity
Peaceful Traffic
Green TOD
Vacation
Preserve and conserve good ecosystem :Lv.1 Maintain present natrual rsources and ecosystem :Lv.2 Recover damaged habitat environment to make :Lv.3 ecosystem complete
Clean Air
Leisurely Life
Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.1: Core zone of rural-urban development Lv.2: Reserves for increasing rural-urban population Lv.3: Avoid generate negative influence on surronding areas Lv.4: Giver priority to be harmonours with surronding habitat Lv.5: Reduce, shrink land area for developing usage River & Ocean ResourceAs Zones Follow the principle of ecosystem protection, conservation or homeland security
The Flower Vision of Eco-Yi-lan
Legend Homeland Conservation Zones Lv.1 Homeland Conservation Zones Lv.2 Homeland Conservation Zones Lv.3 Rive & Ocean Resources Zones Lv.1 Rive & Ocean Resources Zones Lv.2 Rive & Ocean Resources Zones Lv.3 Agriculture Development Zones Lv.1 Agriculture Development Zones Lv.2 Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.1 Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.2 Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.3 Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.4 Rural-urban Development Zones Lv.5
For Yilan County, the local planning insistue develop a planning based on its special geographic advantages since Yilan is the only county which has diveristy geographic types. They classify them into 4 big categories and subdivide them into different levels. For each category, there are different policies towards them and different expected visions. Behind each level, the different requirements and measures was described into details as the diagram, flower or Yilan vision, shows. Whatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s more, each category refer to different land use of Yilan county, which is shown on the right.
Yiilan County Development Management Map
Natural Conservation Region Wildlife Conservation Region Wildlife Important Conservation Region Ocean Conservation Region
Homeland Conservation Zones Lv.1, Lv.2, Lv.3
Security Guard Forests National Forests Office Region Mud-rock Flow High Potential Region Important Birds Habitat Natural Forests Region Aquatic Products Reserve Natianal Scenic Reserve Forests Region (nonmetropolitan Land Use) Coastal Reserve 1500 meter Contour Line
Agriculture Development Zones Lv.1, Lv.2
Mountain Region Potable Water Sourse Reserve Particular Water and Soil Reserve Reservior Store Water Region Fluvial Landforms Region High Flood Low Potential Region Subsidence Protection Zone Storm Surge Zone
Flooding Zone Ditch and Pond
Rural-urban Development Zones Lv. 1, Lv.2, Lv.3, Lv.4, Lv.5
<Digital Topology Model> -Gradient > 30% Region Sea Level Rise by 1 meter Fertile Farmland Sensitive Zone Rural-Urban Landscape System -Foothill Agriculture Production Urban Planning Region Particular Landscape Region Industry Region
Morphometric Map
Briefly, the geography of Yi-lan is divided into 6 regions: 1). High mountain region; 2). Piedmont Region; 3). High altitute plains region; 4). cities and towns region; 5). low altitute plains region; 6). coastal region. The work flow of how local communites apply for government resources is shown like the diagram upon. First of all they need to make a commnity construction plan with details about meatures and future vision and goals to make an application. Then,
the government will deliver this plan to adminstrative departments and give them right to investigate the feasilbility of the plan. After doing that and if the plan is passed, the admin department will give a feedbackto government and apply for further support to the community construction. They get the right to distribute resources to local community and play a role as supervision during the construction process at the same time.
Taomi Village Size:
180,000 square kilometers
Altitude:
420~800 meters
Nantou, TAIWAN
Population: 1300 Economy:
Agriculture & Tourism
Description: Taomi Village is situated in Puli Township, Nantou County, along the route to Sun Moon Lake. Before 1999, the agricultural village was facing decline due to Taiwanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rapid industrialization. During the Taiwan 921 Earthquake, 70% of the small village was destroyed - 168 out of the 369 houses were completely destroyed, and 60 were partially destroyed. Instead of being absorbed in sorrow, the village turned crisis into an opportunity to not only re-construct, but also to re-brand the village. Rebuilding Taomi village required a lot of effort and self-sacrifice. People couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t plant bamboo any more so they started to look for new ideas; they tried to find what is unique about their place. Then the idea of Taomi as an eco-village was born. Scientists were invited and they found that this area has an unprecedented diversity of fauna. Taomi village is situated in a valley. There are wetlands and waterfalls; the place is very natural and not influenced very much by people. Of the 29 species of frogs in Taiwan Taomi boasts of 23 of them. Moreover Taomi has around 60 kinds of dragonflies and 72 kinds of birds. 10 years on, Taomi village pride itself as an eco-village, with Paper Dome as the centerpiece. The Paper Dome originated in Japan, and is the embodiment of the love and mutual assistance between Taiwan and Japan community reconstruction experience sharing in addition to being the heart of Taomi Village.
Taomi Village
Sun-moon Lake
Community Construction Development in TAIWAN
人
景
地
產
文
人 Human
-demand from residents -management of relationship -creation of well-being
地 Land
-protection of environment -development of advantage -continuity of local management
景 Landscape
-construction of community collective space -construction by residents -long-standing management of living environment
產 Productivity
-business managed by local community -local artifact
文 Culture
-continuity of community history -development of cultural activity
Enrich
Activities
Architecture
Concept
Activities
Additional Value
Improve Living Quality
921 earthquake
Government
Residents Participation
return
destory
long-time support
Tao-Mi Village
reborn
Eco-tourism Community recover
coexist
Natural Resources
Agriculture
transition
Industrialization
1999.09.21 earthquake crisis Village
Houses
45% compeletly
70% Destroied
40% remained
15% partially
-7.3magnitude temblor -0 people killed -bammboo field destoryed -deprived people of their means of subsistence
1999
re-construct
recession
opportunity
eco-tourism re-brand
paper dome Originally built in Kobi, Japan. Designed by Shigeru Ban for 1995 Kobi earthquake. Resettled in Taomi vilage after 10 years. As a symbol of friendship between Japan and Taiwan
eco-village natural treature
-diversity of fauna -wetlands -waterfalls -originally ecology
Details -all residents can earn money by cleaning up village -professional weekly training class -tutorial about how to make local artifact -old residents in charge of wetland and education -ecologocal B&B
Rural typology in china Ownership of Land
State Collective
People
Land
Rural Land
Urban Land
Source : Jiang Junâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Lecture, 2013, University of Hong Kong
Ownership of Land VS Usership of Land
State Collective
People
Land
Villagers
Rural Land
Citizens
Urban Land
Scenario 1 : Small-Peasant Model ( Xiaogang Village, Fengyang, Anhui )
Weak Collective
Collective Ownership
People
Indigenous Villagers
Private Usership Land
Rural Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Scenario 2 : Landlord Model I ( Xinlong Village, Shunde, Guangdong )
Weak Collective
Migrant Villagers
Collective Ownership Indigenous Villagers
People
Rural Arable Land
Land
Rural Construction Land
Rural Land
Scenario 3 : House-lord Model I ( Xian Village, Guangzhou, Guangdong )
Weak Collective
Urban Village Migrant Workers
People Multiplication
Rural Construction Land
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Urban Construction Land
Scenario 4 : Landlord Model II ( Wusha Village, Dongguan, Guangdong )
Weak Collective
Indigenous Villagers
Migrant Workers
People
Rural Industry Rural Construction Land
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
“Rurban Construction Land”
Urban Construction Land
Scenario 5 : Landlord Model III ( Zhaozhuang Village, Fengyang, Anhui )
Migrant Workers Collective
Indigenous Villagers
People
Rural Arable Land
Land
Rural Construction Land
Rural Construction Land
Scenario 6 : Shareholder Model I ( Huanggang Village, Shenzhen, Guangdong )
Collective ( More ) Migrant Workers
Multiplication
People
Urban Hi-Village Merge
Rural Construction Land
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Urban Construction Land
Scenario 7 : Factory Owner Model ( Dashun Village, Jiashan, Zhejiang )
Collective
Migrant Workers
People Indigenous Villagers
Rural Industry Rural Construction Land
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
“Rurban Construction Land”
Urban Construction Land
Scenario 8 : Shareholder Model II ( ? )
? Collective
Re-collective
People
Merge
Rural Construction Land
Rural Industry “Rurban Construction Land”
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Urban Construction Land
Scenario 9 : Shareholder Model III ( Huaxi Village, Jiangyin, Jiangsu ) Post - Collectivism Decentralized
Centralized
Rural Enterprise
Planning Economy Social Warefare
Great Huaxi
Cadres - Management Pesonnels - Job Security Rural Planning
Collective
Satellite Villages
Migrant Villagers
Neighbour Villagers
People
Indigenous Villagers
Rural Arable Land
Land
Rural Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Rural Sprawl
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Rurban Construction Landâ&#x20AC;?
Urban Construction Land
DAFEN VILLAGE Size:
400,000 m2
Renovation:
1989 - Now
Purpose:
Culture, Politics, Social, Economy
Typology:
Urban Village
Managerment: Government
Description: Dafen Village is in Buji Township, Longgang District, Shenzhen. Best known for its oil painting replica workshops and manufacturers, its oil paintings exported to Asia, Europe and America bring in billions of RMB each year to this area. Different from the extremely high density and chaotic environment in a typical village, the density in Dafen village is rather comfortablez and its urban environment has been improved over the years due to the booming local oil painting industry. The urban texture of Dafen village is unique in the region, it has a street pattern and scale similar to a European town: a nice variation of roof skylines, narrow streets and alleys, and rich colors; But the village’s figure-ground pattern looks more like a micro American city’s checkerboard layout. Its high-density living environment is in strong contrast with the surrounding fast growing but characterless city. The oil paintings produced in Dafen village are only manual duplication of the original paintings and sell for rather cheap prices; therefore it doesn’t contradict copyright law. The massive duplication and cheap sales of western classical oil painting inevitably make those western icons more accessible to the local people, but in a way of fast food like consumption.
Shenzhen, China
Dafen Village ( Urban Village )
Rural Type In China
Urban Village
Dafen
Rural Construction Land
Urban Construction Land Rural Arable Land
Urban Construction Land
Urban Construction Land
1989
Dafen Village
1998
Dafen Oil Painting Village
2014
Investors
Groverment & Collective
Investor ( Oil Painter, Huang Jiang, Hongkong )
Rent
Work Work Rentable Houses, Catering, General Merchandise
Rent Indigenous Villagers
Catering, Selling Oil Painting
Vistors Oil Painter Migrant Workers Residents
Work
City
Dafen Village in the modern city is like a Oil Painting on the Boring canvas.
Industry of Oil Painting
Life of Painters ( Residents )
Eating
Joking
Sleeping
Sleeping
Working
Napping
Village in the City
Shenzhen, CHINA
URBANUS 2005 Purpose:
Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology: Planning Managerment: Government
30000
190 million
2004
1979
Description: Recently “Villages- amidst- in- the-city” has been a hot academic issue. URBANUS is giving attention to this issue as an active participant in urban construction, rather than as a scholar. This participation reflects the positioning, attitude and intent of our practice. The cause for the formation of “Villages- amidst-the-city” is simple. A Huge amount of agricultural land has been taken over by cities due to the rapid urbanization land that has occurred since late 20th century in China. However, the law-protected villagers residential lots are intact. Hence the “ village- amidstthe- city” were formed. Aesthetically, the “villages- amidst-the -city” are seen as scar of the city. Politically, it os regarded as a sort of time bomb, except from those artist who appreciate the “villages-amidst-the-city” as a meaningful background for their dramas, these villages have became a seemingly unsolvable problem to those who take serious consideration of issue.
population
10 million
GDP (Gross Domestic Product) 300 billion
50M
Site map
1500m
Urban population Rural population
1000m
GDP=Rmb1tm Farmers can enjoy the same rights and fulfill the same obligations as town residents
500m
GDP=Rmb5tm
Ho
Dengxiaoping introduces the Four modernizations and Open Door policies
Resident identity card promulgated.
Shenzhen Economic Zones are setup
Shenzhen Stock Exchange begins formal operations
Fourteen coastal cities are opened to foreign investment
The one Child Policy is implemented
Villagers conditi transfer
First foreign exchange trading centre opens in Shanghai
Chinaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s population reaches 1bn
19
19 96
19 95
19 94
19 93
19 92
19 91
19 90
19 89
19 88
19 87
19 86
19 85
19 84
19 83
19 82
19 81
19 80
19 79
19 78
19 77
0
GDP=Rmb37tm Beijing 2008 Olympic Game
China overtakes Germany as the world’s largest exporter
GDP=Rmb20tm
Government announces a US$568bn economic stimulus package
GDP=Rmb10tm
One Child policy is relaxed
SARS virus outbreak hits HK and Guangdong
China becomes a member of the WTO Macau reverts to Chinese rule
China signs trade agreement with 10 SE Asia countries(ASEAN)
ong Kong reverts to Chinese rule
New rules allow individuals to trade certificate treasury bonds Asian Financial Crisis
20 10
20 09
20 08
20 07
20 06
20 05
20 04
20 03
20 02
20 01
20 00
19 99
19 98
99 7
meet certain ions can be red to citizen
China had one of the world’s largest and most advanced economies prior to the nineteenth century, while national product per capita remained average in global terms. The economy stagnated since the 16th century and even declined in absolute terms in the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, with a brief recovery in the 1930s. Economic reforms introducing market principles began in 1978 and were carried out in two stages. The first stage, in the late 1970s and early 1980s, involved the decollectivization of agriculture, the opening up of the country to foreign investment, and permission for entrepreneurs to start businesses. However, most industry remained state-owned. The second stage of reform, in the late 1980s and 1990s, involved the privatization and contracting out of much state-owned industry and the lifting of price controls, protectionist policies, and regulations, although state monopolies in sectors such as banking and petroleum remained. The private sector grew remarkably, accounting for as much as 70 percent of China gross domestic product by 2005. The success of China’s economic policies and the manner of their implementation has resulted in immense changes in Chinese society. Large-scale government planning programs alongside market characteristics have reduced poverty, while incomes and income inequality have increased, leading to a backlash led by the New Left. In the academic scene, scholars have debated the reason for the success of the Chinese ‘dual track’ economy, and have compared them to attempts to reform socialism in the Eastern Bloc and the Soviet Union, and the growth of other developing economies.
1980
1985
1990
2000
Shenzhen
City Land
Local City Government Government Property Land Expropriation Collectively Property Village Collective
Agriculture Land
Undeveloped Land
Public Construction Land
Construction Land
Collective Land
Residential Land
Binary structure of urban and rural
Binary Structure of Urban and Rural Economic Reform Village
Most agriculture land are expropriated by city government City Goveronment
Others owned by village collective They build multi-story houserent them to city’s flooting population
City Land
Mix Together City
During the urbanization process those orginal farmer groups reformed into new corporations. In 1992 all villagers become city residents. The old village lands were acquired by the city for urban development, but a portion of the land they formerly owned was returned to the old villagers for their own housing and commercial use. Those returned lands formed the residetial areas that are “village in the city¡±. They are new neighborhoods of the ex-villagers. Which are very different from the old villages, which are currently the sites of high rise buildings. There is a big contrast in both from and urban structure between the ex-villager’s dwellings and the rest of the city. The ex-villager’s neighbourhoods contain many problems because of uncontrolled development and ignorance by the city. Many of these “villages amidst the city” have become troubled neighbourhoods.
Village in City
Village Administrator
Development Requirement Binary Structure system
Lacking of Planning and regulation The patriarchal Clan Idea
Village in City
Development Requirement
Lacking of Planning and regulation
Government
4 Reason Formed village in city
Improve Economic Environment
Villager
Compensation and Resettlement
Village in City
Developer Government Benefit Economic Improve Environment
Collective Villager
Sustainable Compensation development and Resettlement 4 influence of society
“Square grid” type lot dividing and the square shaped housing type has resulted in the evenness and fragmentation of the public spaces. Shenzhen’s high speed growth has attracted a Village in City large number of laborers from other regions of China. The low rent apartment has become a huge market and source of income for the ex-villagers. This then drives the ex-villagers to expand their houses both horizontally and vertically by adding, remodeling and reconstructing. The original space rule has Developer Collective been broken and the space between houses has been reduced Benefit Sustainable to less than one meter. The “handshaking” buildings are everydevelopment where. Some housing have reached 10 stories with elevators. The average FAR has reached 4. It makes the rapid decline of environmental quality and result the trouble of neighborhoods.
Member of village in City
With Village Membership
Without Village Membership
With Capital Administrator
Common Villagers
Without Capital
Small owner Leasing
White Color Blue Color
Others
Population Structure Urban issue High building density, lack of city utilities. Fire engine accessibility. And insufficient public space and community service facilities. The houses have very limited sunlight and ventilation. The out door space are fragmented and tiny; they lack a sense of order and safety. It is also difficult to make full use of the street level commercial space. Social Issues Due to the overall low living conditions in the “villages amidst the city”, these areas become a shelter for low income and non-resident laborers. Also due to loose management, there are always social problems such as crime, drugs, and prostitution in these areas. Political Issues With all statistics contradicting the other areas of the city, there “villages amidst the city” have become a sensitive political issue for the city officials who want to a higher standard city.
ARCHITECT IN RURBAN
EARTHSONG ECO-NEIGHBOURHOOD
Auckland, NEW ZEALAND
Robin Allison(main founder) 1995-now Size:
16,188 m2
Purpose:
Living, Recreation, Leisure, Community
Typology: Suburban Managerment: Membership
Description: Earthsong is an innovative urban cohousing development in west Auckland, New Zealand, and a model of socially and environmentally sustainable urban living. The scheme was started in 1995 and the community was finally established in 2008. The community is located in a suburban area in Ranui with convenient transportation and public services. 32 families are living here, sharing a common house, farmlands and some facilities. A resident need to be a member of Earthsong before purchasing or renting the house here by following a series of steps. Focus groups are founded by members to deal with different issues. The proposals from focus groups would be discussed in full group meeting to make consensuses. The sustainability is reflected in both environment and social relations. All the buildings are built with local materials like earth and wood. Passive solar system and rain water collecting system are used to lower down the energy consumption. A small eco-environment is created in the community to realize the permaculture(permanent argriculture). Cars should be parked outside the community to create a pedestrian friendly environment to offers more spaces for daily interaction and kidsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; playground. A common meal is hold twice a week as the most important community activity. Earthsong is also dedicating to sharing their knowledge and experience to public and scholars by offering tours, seminars, workshops and etc.
Squatters
50M
PREPARATION 1992-1994
1994-1997
1998
Eco-village group Robin Allison Mission Statement Vision Group
Cohousing concept Task groups WENCP(Waitakere EcoNeighbourhood Cohousing Project)
Initial Organising Agreement Lawyer & Accountant Legal & Financial Cohousing Agreement
2001
2001.12
2003
Construction Units Facilities
First 3 households
More residents Construction & Community life
CONSTRUCTION
1998-1999
1999
1999-2000
Land: an old orchard in Ranui CNZL (Cohousing New Zealand Ltd)
Hire architect Bill Algie Design Brief Coordination & Negotiation Development team
Land purchase Earthsong Eco-Neighbourhood
2004
2005
2007-2008
Earthsong Centre Trust (educational body)
Common House
Completion
ORGANIZING SYSTEM
Eco-Education
Property owned by PUBLIC LAND
PRIVATE LAND
CONSTRUCTION
Shared by
BEGIN WITH A BUDDY
Proposal Decision Mode
Familiar Paticipate $ 100
Decision Making mode
Decision Making mode*2
Agreement $ 2000
Consensus
Urgent 75% mojority vote
Membership System
RESIDENTS
I have an interpersonal difficulty that is preventing my full participation. I have a process observation, eg. the discussion is off the subject.
I agree with the proposal at hand.
I wish to acknowledge someone or something.
I have a question to be answered before I can make a decision.
I have a question, or need clarification.
I have a serious reservation, but I am not willing to block consensus. I am entirely against the proposal and will block consensus.
I can provide clarification. I have a comment or opinion.
I am neutral or basically for it, with some slight reservation.
COHOUSING
PRIVACY COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION SHARING TRUST
RELATIONSHIP SAFETY
PERMACULTURE (PERMANANT AGRICULTURE)
ECOSYSTEM DIVERSITY CO-EXIST
PRODUCT RESOURCE
WASTE
SELF-SUSTANING
TRANSFORM
NON-TOXIC ORGANIC CYCLE
PRODUCT RESOURCE
WASTE
ENVIRONMENTAL
Design and construct a cohesive neighbourhood whose layout, buildings and services demonstrate the highest practical standards of sustainable human settlement.
SUSTAINABILITY
City Water Supply
â&#x20AC;&#x153;Trashâ&#x20AC;? Waste Tank
Compost Toilet
(only one in front of the common house now)
Compost Bin Pond
Overland Stormwater System
SOLAR HEATING
SORTED DUSTBINS
WATER COLLECTION TANK
WOOD INTERIOR
COMPOST BIN
WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM
PLANTS NEXT TO PAVEMENT
POND
COMPOST TOILET
SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY
Develop and foster a living environment which uses clear communication, decision-making and conflict resolution guidelines that promote tolerance, safety, respect and co-operation.
A typical workday Breakfast
Go to work
Morning
Carpool
Work
How is the day?
Dinner
Work out
Sleep
Breakfast
Morning
Farm work
Hanging out
Cook team
Common meal
Coffee/Tea
Chat
Sleep
A typical weekend
SUSTAINABILITY EDUCATION
Assist in education and public awareness of sustainability by demonstrating and promoting innovative community design and environmentally responsible construction. Public Tours Evening Seminars
Tours by Request
Eco Venue Hire Working Bees
RURAL STUDIO
Alabama, United States
D.K. Ruth and Samuel Mockbee,1993 Purpose:
Educational, Politics, Social, Recreation
Typology: Managerment:
Description: Rural Studio is an off-campus design-build program of Auburn University. The program, established in 1993 by D.K. Ruth and Samuel Mockbee, gives architecture students a more hands-on educational experience whilst assisting an underserved population in West Alabama’s Black Belt region. In its initial years, the Studio became known for establishing an ethos of recycling, reusing and remaking. In 2001, after the passing of Samuel Mockbee, Andrew Freear succeeded him as director. Since that time, Rural Studio has expanded the scope and complexity of its projects, focusing largely on community-oriented work.
text
The Rural Studio philosophy suggests that everyone, both rich or poor, deserves the benefit of good design. To fulfill this ethic, the Studio has evolved towards more community-oriented projects. Projects have become multi-year, multi-phase efforts traveling across three counties. The students work within the community to define solutions, fundraise, design and, ultimately, build remarkable projects. The Studio continually questions what should be built, rather than what can be built, both for the performance and operation of the projects. To date, Rural Studio has built more than 150 projects and educated more than 600 “Citizen Architects.” 50M
1990s
1992s
2001
2002
Founded by architects Samuel Mockbee and D. K. Ruth
Samuel first set out withh tweleve Auburn University architecture students
Samual “Sambo” died
Hugely important for rural studio’s stability was the unversity’s commitment of $400,000 annually to studio.
Needy clients List of them Interviewing them by students Select one client Funding by
Donate Auburn University
Architecture students
2nd year student Help design and build a house
Government
5nd year student stay at the studio an entireacadmice year desing and building a community project
Organizations
Human resource institute
Projects
Professors
Assignments
Grades
MVRDV
Rotterdam, Netherland
Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries, 1993 Size:
Purpose:
Gallery 9446 m2 Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology: Highrise Managerment: Autonomy
Description: The practice engages globally in providing solutions to contemporary architectural and urban issues. A highly collaborative, research-based design method involves clients, stakeholders and experts from a wide range of fields from early on in the creative process. The results are exemplary, outspoken projects, which enable our cities and landscapes to develop towards a better future. The products of MVRDV’s unique approach to design vary, ranging from buildings of all types and sizes, to urban plans and visions, numerous publications, installations and exhibitions. Built projects include the Netherlands Pavilion for the World EXPO 2000 in Hannover; ‘Flight Forum’, an innovative business park in Eindhoven; the Silodam Housing complex in Amsterdam; the Matsudai Cultural Centre in Japan; the Unterföhring office campus near Munich; the Lloyd Hotel in Amsterdam; the Ypenburg housing and urban plan in The Hague; the Didden Village rooftop housing extension in Rotterdam; the music centre De Effenaar in Eindhoven; the Gyre boutique shopping center in Tokyo; a public library in Spijkenisse; an international bank headquarters in Oslo, Norway; and the iconic Mirador and Celosia housing in Madrid. Current projects include a variety of housing projects in the Netherlands, Spain, China, France, the US, India, Korea and other countries; an energy efficient office building in Paris, France; a central market hall for Rotterdam, the Netherlands; a culture plaza in Nanjing and museums in Hangzhou, China and Roskilde, Denmark.
map
Project Distribution
Question_whether classical centralized planning is still needed in times of increased individualization and if instead of a self-organized city can be imagined Critique_gets too perfect and hence predictable Liberation_Freeland is proposed as a radically liberated place where
you have the right to define your own living place
Revolutionary_step away from government, inhabitants can create their own neighborhoods including public green, urban agriculture, and roads
Responsibility_it is not complete anarchy and exist outside law, it is
based on common sense: you can do whatever you want, but do not harm others; you can do everything you want, but yo have to organize everything by yourself
Organically_over a stretch of time as needs change and neighborbood grow
Open ended_this project is a never-ending cycle of building and cannibalizing architecture as needs change, which is already an organic process in the built environment
Almere Oosterwold
Question_How could 20000-30000 new dwellings be distributed in Almere Hout outside Amsterdam? How to use the existing (natural) qualities of the site
Critique_the process of building theown house in the Netherland is a struggle Less Interference_a minimal intervention into natureâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s processes, and affoorestation, rather than deforestation Distinctive Spatially Cluster_create a generous tapestry of forest that is easy for everyone to reach, and to avoid the scrubby wastelands so typical of newly developed areas Organically_by gradually adding roads and infrastructure according to the grid, the municipality can slowly develop the area by replacning greenspace
Almere Hount
Question_How can we escape from this claustrophobia while working within the difficult constraints of the site? Critique_1990s giant construction compromise leads to an
environment that are neither urban or rural or even suburban, but rather to houses with very small gardens and claustrophobic environments
Attraction_create intense water-focused environment as a way to increase the attraction of the neighborhood and position it to compete better with others
Archipelago_as many different living environments as possible on each group of islands Experimentation_they allowed investment in another island that allowed for new experimental environments. Different architects have worked within the masterplan to further maximise its architectural diversity.
Ypenburg Project
2010 2010 2013 2011 2004 2012 2013 2013 2013 2005
Q Question Critique
Prototype
Architect’s Role
Disciplines
Community
Typology
A101 URBAN BLOCK NEW HOLLAND ISLAND CAEN PRESQU’ILE ALMERE OOSTERWOLD MONTCEAU-LES-MINES ALMERE FLORIADE MADLA-REVHEIM URBAN HYBRID THE GARDENS OF ZARYADYE YPENBURG PROJECT
2011 2005 2005 2003 2006 2005 2006 2007 2008 2008 2009 2008 2009 2009 2010 2010
VERTICAL VILLAGE NEW LEYDEN PATIO ISLAND HAGEN ISLAND DIDDEN VILLAGE
BASTIDE-NIEL
JARDIN DE DESCARTES
NATURAL NEIGHBORHOOD
TEGEL FIELDS
ALMERE 2030
ROTTERDAM MOUNTAIN
ECO-CITY MONTECORVO
CITTA SOSPESA
HOMERUS QUARTER
ALMERE HOUT
KAMIPEN FLOODPLAINS
PROCEDURE DISTRIBUTION
CS ARCHITECT STUDIO Carin Smuts Purpose:
Lainsburg, SOUTH AFRICA
Culture, Politics, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology: Highrise Managerment: Inhabitants
Description: CS Studio Architects is an Architectural practise located in Cape Town, Sea point. The practise is run by an exceptional women known as Carin Smuts, whom in all her works tries to achieve a holistic and sustainable design solutions in order to create a balance between social, economical and environmental aspects. The Multipurpose Centre is located in a small town known as Laingsburg. This town is situated in a semi-dessert region known as the Great Karroo. The weather conditions could be described as extreme, ranging from very hot, to very cold- even snow in surrounding areas. With temperatures often exceeding 30 degrees on an average day and rainfall at a low of 150mm per year. The topography with which Laingsburg is surrounded, consists of fossilised mud stone and a unique white quartzite band which runs across the velds leaving tell tale signs of continental drift. The design process in which the Multipurpose Centre followed was a very unique and interesting one. It all started with the Laingsburg floods of 1981. The small town experienced a flood which changed the lives of many people, both in a positive and a negative way. The most important thing is that the architects wanted to incorporate locally trained people in metal- work and electrical skills during the construction process. The two existing shed like buildings were taken apart and recycled. The roofs were extended to become single, mono-pitched roofs with large overhangs creating outdoor shaded areas at different times of the day.
The existing roofing material was re–used as vertical cladding to the spine of the building, as well as on the newly created first floor office component. The metalwork executed by the local trainees that were trained by Willie Bester, was a very rewarding process. All the buildings’ handrails were made from farmyard scrap and painted a blue purple for decorative purposes. A clear reference from many locals was that the floodwater of 1981 raged through the town like ‘an angry red bull’. The result was the request by the community to paint the building a symbolic red.
Kommogas
Cradock
Lainsbu rg
Swele temba Nyanga Kuils river
Multi purpose centre,Blikkesdrop on ocean view,
Multi Purpose Centre, Cadrock
Multi Purpose Centre, Westbank
STRATEGY: Value addition to Users
USER
Primary User- Inhabitants of Area
ADVANTAGES
ADVANTAGES
Social - Expose them to the public - Helping them get the social acceptance - Education for children and youth
Physical - Housign - Education facilities - Infrastructure - Day care/ Preschool - Market Places - Multipurpose activities
Secondy User- General Public
Economical - Profession - Alternate ways of earning money - Product making Technical - Education - Training on recycling
Social - Improving their quality lives - To cretate knowledge about constrction methods - Make them self-sufficient
Physical - To make a better environment - To use local materials - Discover new cultures Economical - Discover new lands
OBJECTIVE
Uplifting Community life status
Building Spaces in the building will over the time change into working spaces of the community Flexible spaces will act as facilitate spaces
Bridging the gap between general public and inhabitants
Community Life style change Product makers Product developers Likewise they will have thorough knowledge and their life status will go up
General improvement of the area
Public Change of attitude towards the resident community
Context Proper community spaces + Good residential area + that will accompany their liflong habitual pattern + Reusable resource materials + Working and dumping spaces + Sanitary Landhill
ARCHITECTURE FOR THE HUMANITY Sustainable architecture should improve the lives of people and community
ECONOMY
SOCIETY
SUSTAINABILITY
ENVIRONMENT
ARCHITECT’S VISION OF SUSTAINABILITY
NEW ETHIC IN ARCHITECTURE
Environmentally friendly
Eco-friendly materials
Waste Management
SUSTAINABLE SUSTAINABLE ARCHITECTURE ARCHITECTURE
Energy generation
PEOPLE INTERACTION
Smart technology
LOCAL MATERIALS LOCAL DETAILS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
LOCAL PEOPLE LOCAL LABOUR
ARCHITECT/CLIENT RELATIONSHIP TYPICAL
RATIONAL
NEW ARCHITECTURAL APPROCH: Collaboration ARCHITECTURAL APPROCH
COMMUNITY
COOPERATION ARCHITECT/COMMUNITY
IMPROVE PEOPLE LIFE
KNOWLEDGE MOBILIZATION
COMMUNITY
COLLABORATION
ARCHITECT ARCHITECT
COMMUNITY CENTRE SCHOOLS RESTORATIONS HOUSING
- SMALL BUDGET - SMALL TOWN - NO TRADITIONAL MONUMENTAL STRUCTURE
SOCIAL INNOVATION
DAWID KLAASTE MULTI PURPOSE CENTRE
Location: Lainsburg, Western Cape Date: 2002 -2005
The colour choice of ‘red’ was an influence from one of the descriptions of the flood by one of the visctims whom described the flood as a “raging red bull”. The cladding is made up of the iron roof sheets recycled from previous buildings.
Models made by the community
Parapet made with recycled materials
ZOLANI MULTI PURPOSE CENTRE
Location: Nyanga,Western Cape
Exterior wall, mosaic
Date: 1997-2002
The gym
ONOBUNTO MULTI PURPOSE CENTRE
Location: Zweletemba, Worcester Western Cape Date: 1990-1998
The gym
WESTBANK PRIMARY SCHOOL/MULTI PURPOSE CENTRE
Location: Langa, Western Cape Date: 2006 - 2008
Work spaces for the community
BLIKKIESDROP ON OCEAN VIEW, MULTI PURPOSE CENTRE
Location: Cradrock, Estern Cape Date: 1982- Present
Exterior wall, mosaic
Home for all Toyo Ito 2013 Purpose:
Public Space
Typology: House anagerment: Toyo Ito & Associates
Description: â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;architecture. possible here? home-for-allâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; responds to architecturein the modern era by re-evaluating its aesthetic and formal definition within the context of a site currently undergoing a revitalization. a series of potential projects are displayed atop bases made of solid wood planks. natural timber columns seem to hold the pavilion from the open courtyard below, echoing the the schemes of each dwelling anchored amongst a series of vertical pillars. fullsize panoramas of the host city after the tsunami create the setting as a backdrop to the environment.
Rikuzentakata, JAPAN
Timeline 2011
Great Japan East Earthquake
2012
55th Exhibition Venice Bienale
2013
Push Prototype into Practice
As a prototype to show the idea To offer a place for villager to live after earthquake
Possible future typologies for Japanese coastal city
Build a 1:1 modle for the exhibition then move to Japan take a long time
canceled
Derectly build in Japan Derectly help villager
Leader Architects
Government
Rebuilt Family
Cluster Type Post Desaster Recunstruction
Community
Building Type
Temporary Housing Facilities
Small Shared Spaces
Physical Level
Function Basic Needs
Interpersonal
Safe and Security
Land's Memory and
Charactor
Typology Modernist
Traditional
Unified
Coolaberate
Participation
Mental Llevel
Architects
Reside
“making”
“livin
discuss design building process
design fund collecting Timeline
Great Japan East Earthquake (2011)
Goal Leader
13th Exhibition Venice Biennal (2012) as a prototype
Built (2013)
Architects Community
Building Type Function
Temporary Housing Facilities Basic Needs
leading others
influnce next generati
Rebuilt Family Government
donating
Small Shared Spaces
Post Disaster Reconstruction
Interpersonal Connection
Physical Level Mental Level
design building process
Toyo Ito design fund collecting
Exhibition Venice Biennal 2012) as a prototype
Built (2013)
donating leading others influnce next generation
Sou Fujimoto
Architects
ll Shared paces
Post Disaster Reconstruction Physical Level
personal nnection
Mental Level
Memories d Relying architecture
onal Habitat
instrument for economics
original meaning hibition Venice Biennal Built place to make people gather 012) as a prototype (2013) social tool
Architects
Architects
Residents
“making”
“living”
discuss design building process
design fund collecting donating leading others influnce next generation
ask people learn their tradition create a space reflect their needs keep the tradition
Design Process
Connection
Space Form
fishman's opinion
environment
communication
landscape
design
Home for All Lighthouse
understanding their needs
traditional space formation method
everyone's idea
local space atemosphere
functional needs
local material
Activities in the Pavillion Fishing
Gathering
Rsst
Communication
Lighthouse
Celebration
Kitchen
JAPAN
JAPAN
Koji Tsutsui & Associates Size:
Community Scale
Purpose:
Relief, Culture, Social,
Recreation, Leisure Typology: Courtyard Management: Autonomy
Description: Young architect, Koji Tsutsui is a native of Japan. After graduating from the Bartlett School of Architecture in London, he set up his practice, which has since operated in many countries throughout the world. Much of his work surrounds the role of the architect as encourager of social interactions; his body of work exemplifies this through careful formal explorations.
This formal exploration began with a school and orphanage in 2006 but has since been applied to other housing variations, ranging from single family housing all the way up to the scale of a village. In 2011, when Northeast Japan was devastated by an earthquake and subsequent tsunami, he envisioned a plan for a relief village which fosters a sense of community and encourages growth.
200KM
Tohoku Region
http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects17_Tohoku02.html
The key element to the his many designs is the clustering of program (boxes) in plan, around a central meeting space (typically a voided space). Sometimes this central area is used as a church, other times it is used for teaching, but what is always constant is that it promotes social interactions among those who inhabit the structures. In addition to the social aspects of his formal experimentation, expansion and adaptability are also key to each design. Each building design can be added on indefinitely by either adding another single unit or even clusters of units. Lastly due to the non-fixed plan orientation and use of lightweight materials, the structures can adapt to topographical concerns with little difficulty.
Architectâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Role
Collaborate
Cluster
aid during crisis
aid during crisis
central space
encouraging social interactions
community support
encouraging social interactions
public/private partnership
community support
community support
+
adaptability
experimentation
+
public/private partnership
meaning of family
+
expansion
experimentation
meaning of family
+
Social
?
Expansion
Adaptability
cluster
central space
encouraging social interactions
encouraging social interactions
community support
community support
location
meaning of family
public
structure
promote idea generation
private
material
promote collective problem solving
population
construction method
learning
experimentation
poverty
meaning of family
experimentation
cluster
+
expansion
InBetween House
Mill Valley House
Karuizawa, Nagano, Japan
Mill Valley, California, U.S.A.
Private Residence
Private Residence
School & Orphanage
2009-2010
2009-2012
2006-
+
+
+
+
+ +
School & Home for HIV Orphans Rakai, Uganda, Africa
+
Mission in Haiti
Tohoku Housing
Tohoku Village
Haiti
Northeast, Japan
Northeast, Japan
Church, School, Orphanage
MultiFamily
MultiFamily
2009-
2011-
2011-
+ +
+ +
+
+ +
+
+
Entry http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects13_Inbetween01.html
Floor Plan http://maxusoloqo.opx.pl/mj-ervin-and-associates.php
single family
add rooms
InBetween House
+
Interior http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects13_Inbetween05.html
+
+
Aerial http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects14_Mill%20Valley01.html
Floor Plan http://afasiaarq.blogspot.com/2013/08/129-koji-tsutsui-associates.html
single family
Mill Valley House
add more single family units
+
+ +
Porch Space http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects14_Mill%20Valley02.html
Courtyard Space http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects10_Orphanage01.html
Floor Plan http://www.garciabarba.com/cppa/escuela-en-rakai-uganda/
cluster of units around central space
School & Home for HIV Orphans
add more clusters
+
Cluster http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects10_Orphanage02.html
Church Interior http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects11_Haiti01.html
Floor Plan http://archleague.org/2012/10/koji-tsutsui/
cluster of units around church
Mission in Haiti
add more clusters
+
Church Roof http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects11_Haiti02.html
+
Courtyard Aerial http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects17_Tohoku01.html
Floor Plan http://archleague.org/2012/10/koji-tsutsui/
cluster of units around central space
add more units
Tohoku Housing
+
+ Courtyard Space http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects17_Tohoku02.html
+
+
Village Cluster http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects12_TohokuVillage01.html
cluster of units around central space
add more clusters
Tohoku Village
+ +
Courtyard Space http://www5.famille.ne.jp/~kt-aa/website/Projects12_TohokuVillage02.html
+
HUANG SHENG-YUAN
Yi Lan, TAIWAN
Field Office Architects Location
Yilan County
Size:
2143.6251 km2
Boroughs:
1 city, 11 townships(3 urban, 8 rural)
Population:
458,378
Huang(Hwang) Sheng-Yuan: Born 1963, Taipei, Taiwan, graduated from Tunghai University Dept. of Architecture and received his M. Arch. with Honors from Yale University, 1994 settled down in Yilan. 19 years of practicing in the field, he is currently the Principal of Fieldoffice Architects, and also the mentor of Field School, initiated architectural actions with a group of young architects from all around, gradually expanded to the diverse re-development of the local ecology, waters, and the urban space. Field Office Architects: Concomitantly residents and experts, who have chosen Yilan, Taiwan, as their home, because of the unprecedented opportunity to effectively apply their energies, invigorating them to be freed from constraints and anxieties and to focus with confidence on their own living inspiration to innovation as they strive to build their imaginary eco-paradise of interconnected life throughout the villages and countryside of Yilan where there is no central theme and no urgency in demanding that future development should conform to a fixed and inflexible master plan, but that with enough nutritional energy inputs, it is possible to see the wildest of dreams come to fruition, and connection, and creation, as organic architecture branches forth and spreads roots deep in the living communities, to envelop limitless creative vistas of potential in a living web and tree of life.
Huang Sheng-Yuan
Field Office Architects
The Role of Architect
General Way
Huang Sheng-Yuan nature
Client
habitat
medium human
claim / require
serve / obey to
Architect
politican
Architect
passive
community
active
The Strategy of Architect
WHO
Architectural AMBITION
habitant
HOW
Regionalism
Imitation
Quality / Performance
Link
Possibility
Emptiness
Strategy 01. IMITATION
Concrete Imagecy (Representation) Regional Nature Space Imagecy (Abstract)
Leeks
Ornament
Roof for Sanxing Town Hall 1997-1999
Roots
Structure
Shih-fang Yang Memorial Garden 1997-2003
Mountain
Structure
Trees
Structure
+
Jiaosi Administrative Center Regeneration 1995-2002
Ornament
Diu Diu Dang Forest 2001-2007
+ Form
+ Interior Space
Strategy 02. LINK
1994 Politican + Policy
Proposal + Performance
2014 A
$$
B
$$
Proposal 01 0%
$$
C
$$
D
Link Together
90%
Proposal 02 99%
Community
Huang:
^~^
^0^
^0^
0%
^~^
99%
90%
^O^ ^0^
Most projects cannot serve the commnuity 100% well due to unforseen factors and limit of funding. By linking two projects together, it is able to let government to fund the former one for a good reason. On the other hand, both projects benefit from each other and can reach a high level performance.
Kamikaze Aircraft Shelter Museum
Luodong New Woodsland (Elevated Track Park)
Jiaosi Administrative Center Regeneration
Luodong Cultural Working House
Strategy 03. EMPTINESS
1994
2014
A
Politican + Policy
FUNDING
Protect Emptiness
Architect & Proposal
B
Raise the Cost
C
Nonlinearity Shape
REMOVE
D
ADDITION
Waste
Proposal Unable
Reduce the MAX capacity of structure
COLLECTIVE SPACE
Community
Huang:
FUNDING
The power of emptiness is that it offer collective place for people to get together, that is, it offer infinite possiblity about how to use it. Emptiness is a valuable resource under nowadaysâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; congestion culture.
Strategy X. PATIENCE 1994
Politican + Policy
2014
A
$$ nonsurpport
B
$$ nonsurpport
C
$$ surpport
D
$$ finish
Architect & Proposal
Community
Huang:
surpport Public architecture is a result of the efforts of masses. Politician will step down sooner or later. Time is on the side of public and euqality.
Jiaoxi Guizhulin Basketball Court, Jiaosi Gui Zhulin Chicken Barn, Jiaoxi Guizhulin Hereitary Compound Addition, Jiaosi Zhulin Nuirsing Institute, Roof for Sanxing Town Hall, Sanxing Zhang Residence, Exhibition Extension for Yuanshan Martyrsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Shrine, Paifang for Taiwan National Day, Greater Yilan County Nursing Institute, Yilan Social Welfare Center and West Bank Bridge, Jiaosi Administrative Center Regeneration, National Center for Traditional Arts Apprentice Dormitory, Shih-fang Yang Memorial Garden, Historical City Cultural Alley by Yilan Riverside, Dongshan River Sluice Gate Bridge, Jiaosi Civic and Public Health Center, Zhuangwei Zhang Residence, St. Camillus Center for Mentally Disabled Children,
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
Yilan Riverside Green P Diu Diu Dang Forest,
Project Ratio
Luodong New Woodsland (Elevated T
10/37
23/37
Link
Public & Culture
Cherry O
Kamikaze Aircraft Shelter Museum,
STRTEGIES DIAGRAM
Luodong Cultural Working House (Luodong New Wo
Duration
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 >10
1993-1997
Yu Shyi-kun
1997-2005
2005-2009
2009-2014
Liu Shou-cheng
Lu Kuo-hua
Lin Tsung-hsien
Architects VS. Politician
1994
2014
Field Office Architects
3
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
Renovation of Yilan Railway Warehouses, Yixing Road Pedestrian Space Regeneration,
Path, The Renovation of Yilan Distillery,
Track Park), Shipai Jinmian Observatory Platform,
Orchard Cemetery Fly-over Bridge,
oodsland),
Jin-Mei Pedestrian Bridge across Yilan River, Yilan Eslite Bookstore, St. Camillus Nursery, Public Lavatory by Dong Shan River Sluice Gate, Camphor Historical Park Renovation, Corridor D of Cherry Orchard Cemetery, Diu Diu Dang Bicycle Lane under Railway, Nu-Zong Rd. Pedestrian Sidewalk, Fieldoffice Dormitory (housing renovation),
LIU KUO-CHANG
Tai-nan, TAIWAN
Opening-United Studio Location:
Tainan
Size:
2,191.6531 km2
Boroughs:
1 city, 37 districts
Population:
1,883,493
Density
854.917/km2
Kuo-Chang Liu
Description: Kuo-Chang Liu and his Opening-United studio The principal of OU Studio and UO Architects, Kuo-Chang Liu holds a Masters of Architecture degree from National Cheng Kung University and is a faculty member of She- Te University and teaches design curriculum at the National Cheng Kung University. OU Studio and UO Architects both are design teams based in Tainan, Taiwan. The team â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;S Studio was self-renovated by the team members, transformed from a dilapidated hundred-year old building. The studio has continually paid attention to research and practical issues of architectural theory and practice, with projects in areas such as spatial installations, furniture, interiors, architecture, landscape and community development.
Tainan City/Blue Print The Outdoor Installation 2004 The memory in Wall
Liu Kuo-Changâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Regionalism
memory Architect
Activation
old space story
modern
Projects: 01. Blue Print Installation: old space
physical
private
present
memory
new blue painting
virtual
pubilc
history
future
02. An-ping Tree House: An abandoned house. An old banyan. They merged into one during the long period of history.
Before Reconstruction Habitant: donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t want to approach it.
Government: want to remove it.
Kuo-Chang Liu Design a tour stair and lane to allow people go onto the rooftop of the house.
After Reconstruction Habitant: enjoy visiting it to experience the magic of nature. Government: make it as an tourists attraction. Gain profit to feedback the community.
LIU: A good collective space can inspire people to explore it and experience it.
Blue-print facade
Hsieh Ying-Chun Rural Architecture Studio Size:
Village Scale
Purpose:
Pose-disaster Reconstruction, Culture, Relief
Typology:
Modern Vernacular Residence
Management: Government & Autonomy
Description: Over 70% of the world’s population make their homes in rural areas. Under prevailing conditions of rapid economic development, traditional lifestyles and values are falling by the wayside: the results – new houses of reinforced concrete, brick, and tile – are costly, vulnerable to earthquakes, bad for the environment, unreasonable. Architecture professionals are out of their depth in this sphere. Moreover, the issue of sustainable development ultimately concerns tests of survival for humanity as a whole, challenging both generally-understood operational models in contemporary architecture as well as contemporary notions of value, even aesthetics… With these predicating thoughts, Hsieh Ying Chun andhis team proclaim that modern architecture is not a narrow matter of technology; for it necessarily involves considerations of economic, sociocultural, and environmental issues. Through the use of local source materials, lowcost building strategies and appropriate technologies, as well as the design of Hsieh’s new, open, structural systems, the team has considerably lowered costs and technological thresholds. Peasant farmers are able to participate in their own modern home-building projects that also adhere to green, energy-saving, low-carbon standards, and vouchsafe the rights of members of this disadvantaged group to live and to work with dignity. At the same time, design requires flexibility; architecture must reflect the diversity of different regions and cultures.
Taiwan, CHINA
The Power of People
Central Urban 10%
Rural Area Population 62% County Cities 28%
HIGH URBANIZATION
LARGE AGRICULTURE AREA
LARGE AGRICULTURE PEOPLE
The Amount of Houses Built 4 Times In Rural Area
In City
Similar Rural Building
All Savings Spend on Such Buildings
Architects Invovle
No Architects Invovle
Abandon Vernacular Buildings & Lifestyle
Need to be EMPOWER Unsafety
People Lose Their Power
Intersubjectivity Environment: Green Building Technology, Civilian, Lifestyle SUSTAINIABILITY
Economic: Low Cost, Self-construction Society: Collaborate, Diversity, Combine with Culture & Tradition Architects’ Limit Involvement
OPEN SYSTEM
a City of People Built by People for People
Public Platform Typology
local Space Form Local Meterial Local Construction
Simple Construction Principles INTERSUBJECTIVITY Local Residents’ Participation
aesthetics
Job Creation Culture Extension Collectivist Aspirations Recover From Disaster
CAPTION
CAPTION
The Ita Thao Resettlement Community
Traditional Belief
Terrain & Environment
Ritual Space
Collective Working
CAPTION
Recreate Sprit of Community
CAPTION
Reconstruction of Yangliu Village in the Sichuan Earthquake Disaster Area Light Steel Skeleton
Design Construct
+
Local Building Custom Local Stone
1st Floor
Plate wire mesh concrete
2nd Floor
Plank
3rd Floor
Local People
Architects Local People
Local People
Flexibility Diversity
CAPTION
Personality
Economy Depend
CAPTION
CAPTION
Tribal Reconstruction after Taiwan’s Devastating Flood Unemployment
Relocate
Culture Stock
Local People
Architects
Materials Processing
Simplify Construction Principles
Assembly
Simplify Tooling
Construction Lifestyle Culture
Platform — Light Steel Structure
Recover Commuity
CAPTION
Reduce 40% Cost
Belief Environment
Job Creation
Light Steel Skeleton
Tibetan Nomad Residence
Ferroconcrete
High Cost
Resistant to Great Earthquakes Light Steel Skeleton
+
Local Materials Local Details
Reduce Steel & Concrete Consumption Reduce Cost Self-construction
CAPTION
rural urban framework Joshua Bolchover and John Lin Rural Urban Framework (RUF) is the research and design collaborative between Joshua Bolchover and John Lin. The objective of our work is to engage in the rural-urban transformation of China through built projects, research, exhibitions and writing. Rural Urabn Framework research and design work addresses the process of urbanization in rural China with a focus on the sustainable development of Chinese villages. It is a multidisciplinary studio which brings together students and professionals. Founded in 2009, it has developed 10 building projects and participated in international exhibitions, such as the Venice Biennale 2010 and the Chengdu Biennale 2011. Its projects include the design of school buildings, a village community center, a hospital, and a sustainable house prototype in China. Located in rural areas of Shaanxi, Jiangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hunan, and Guangdong provinces, they integrate local and traditional construction practices with contemporary sustainable technologies. Those projects are recognized and published widely. The Qinmo Village School and Taiping Bridge Renovation projects received the AR Awards for Emerging Architecture in 2009 and 2010.
A
B
C
D F E
G
H I J M K L NO P Q
A : Shijia Village B : Linzidi Village C : Jintai Village D : Angdong Village E : Taiping Village F : Yongxin Village G : Tongjiang Village H : Luk Zuk Village I : Mulan Village J : Changliu Village K : Qinmo Village L : Yanzhou, Village M: Rural Village N : Factory Village O : Contested Village P : Urban Village Q : Suburban Village
Urban Village
Factory Village
Suburban Village
Contested Village
Rural Village
Urban Village
Suburban village
Conteseted Territory
Cycle of Development Extinction :
Rise of the Middle Class
Farmer VS Developer
Development of Loop Holes
New Leisure Landscaples:
Rural Capitalism
Rural and Urban Citizenship
Golf Theme Parks and
Abandoned Structures
Hukou Policy
Bourgeois Villas
SECONDARY SCHOOL
Island Urbanism
RECYCLED BRICK SCHOOL
Yongxin Village
Yanzhou Village
Tongjiang Village
Factory Town
Degraded framland
Village Community
From Agriculture to Industry
Loss of Agriculture
Modernity and Tradition
Gated Communities
Land Pollution
Rural Livelihood
Floating Population
Agriculural Sustaninability
Generation Gap
BRIDGE RENOVATION
New PRIMARY SCHOOL
old Primary SCHOOL
Taiping Village
Qinmo Village
Qinmo Village
Secondary Cities
Highway Urbanism Rural Industry Generic Construction Highway Urbanism
YONGXIN SECONDARY SCHOOL PROTOTYPE
Jiangxi, China
The Jian county schools are 4 secondary schools with a total of 3,300 students and 1,800 live-in students from nearby rural areas. The design is a school prototype that can be adapted to different program requirements and different site conditions. The initial strategy is to create a perimeter building that frames a large courtyard. This wall, much like a traditional old city wall contains the inner public life of the school. Additional public and social functions of the school such as the library, the canteen, the art block and the administration building, push into this space activating the courtyard.
Prototype
Administration Block
Secondary School
Library Block
Art Block
Canteen Block
Dormitory
YANZHOU ISLAND MASTERPLAN Yanzhou Island masterplan is a concept and design for a new eco-recreational park. The goal is to convert a historic village, its farmlands and fishponds located on an island in the Pearl River Delta into a diverse leisure landscape. The strategy seeks to create many different â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;islandsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; of programs hidden within the existing rural landscape. Different programs respond seasonally as well as to tidal changes in the delta. Existing fishponds, temples and village houses are incorporated into the design as well as new programs for a spa, garden/restaurant, clubhouse, hotel and various floating islands accessible by boardwalk. The goal is to enhance and maintain the character of the rural village and adapt it into a sustainable recreational destination within the PRD.
Concept of Program
Guangdong, China
TONGJIANG RECYCLED BRICK SCHOOL Responding to the prevalence of demolition in rural areas this project proposes a strategy for recycling old buildings into a new primary school in Tongjiang county. The project brief required replacing an existing school building with a new building and expanded program. Our proposal for the demolition of the old building was to reuse the rubble as a growing medium and insulation on the green roof. In the meantime, traditional â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;greenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; bricks no longer manufactured were collected from demolition sites of old houses in this historic region. These bricks were used as a large screen wall and ground paving for the school. The project demonstrated a way to recycle old material into a new prototype for a sustainable school building.
Recycle
Jiangxi, China
TAIPING BRIDGE RENOVATION
Guizhou, China
The TaiPing Bridge Project was a two-year reconstruction and surface renovation project of a historic 300 year-old bridge. The project addresses the sustainable development and rapid urbanization of rural Chinese villages. It attempted to reconcile the long history of the existing masonry construction with modern techniques of pre-cast concrete. Though the primary task was to repair a collapsed arch, the larger problem was how to revitalize the once important and historic location. Precast concrete was used to rebuild the arch as well as pave the bridge. Bridge pavers were custom designed to transform into planters at various scales as well as seating. In this way the bridge was re-programmed as a public space.
Rural Social Activities
Before
After
QINMO PRIMARY SCHOOL + COMMUNITY CENTER
Jiangxi, China
The Qinmo Village project is a long term, strategic project that has involved several different donors and multiple stakeholders over the course of the last six years to encourage environmental and economic self-sustainability. In 2006, the Green Hope Foundation selected Qinmo Village, a poor and remote village in Guangdong Province, as the site for a new school with an emphasis on environmental education and good practice. As this village had not damaged its agricultural land with chemical fertilizers or pollutants, there was also an opportunity to help villagers grow organic products that could be sold in the Hong Kong market. The project began with the construction of a new school building and was followed by the conversion of the old school building into a hybrid community center and demonstration eco-farm.
Agriculture
Qinmo Village
Organic Farming Workshop
Old School Community Center
Old School
New School Students’ Playground
Villagers’ Events
New Rural Houses in china Anonymous Architects & Workshop Anonymous Architects was founded by Wang Hao in January 2011. “Anonymous” is a common word for all Chinese traditional craftsmen, no matter they humble or great. Those anonymous artisans use their hand, which reflect their soul, create a variety of constructions used from residential to government office. Therefore, Anonymous Architects inherited a kind of “unknown” or “hidden” state, using independent thinking as well as variety modern and traditional constructional techniques and improve the usage of traditional materials, building works with unique style. Anonymous Architects adhere to the philosophy that design should start from creating small residents, and strongly reflect the concept of “housing is art” in their residential works. Anonymous Architects resist straightforward modernism, and explore all kinds of possibilities that small scale villages mix and develop with urban. So the focus of Anonymous Architects is suburb and new style Chinese villages.
Architects
Anonymous
Thinking
Method
Apply
Construction Techniques
Improve
Usage of Traditional Materials
Resist
Modernism
Explore
Villages and Urban
Design
Architecture
Small Housing
Type
Architects & Workshop
New Village
Site
Surburb
Theory of New Rual Houses Rural Area
New Architecture Agriculture
Wealth
Citizens
Indigenous
Architect
Stock Raising
Rationality
Forestry
Aesthetics
Industry
Freedom
Transportation
Interesting
Construction
Logic
Business
Primitive
Catering
Hierarchy
Service
Symbolism
Room Rate
Spirit
Pollution
Simplicity
Food Sercurity
Emotion
Knowledge
Life
Experience
Prefabricate
Curiosity
Handwork
Freedom
Low Cost
Structure
Space
People
Time
Materials
Budget
Anonymous Architects & Workshop
Wang Hao
Village Chunxiao, Ningbo, Zhejiang
Study
Design
City Shanghai
Study
Work
Oversea Germany
“Trilogy of back home”
West / Modern
Oriental / Traditional
Conflict
Amalgamation/Introversion
Ku House
Wang House
Ke House
2006
2009
2010
China
Zhejiang Chunxiao
Ke House
Ku House
Wang House
Chunxiao
Chunxiao Town, Ningbo
Ku House Anonymous Architects & Workshop construction Time :
2007 - 2009
Size of Site:
89 m2
Size of Construction :
180 m2
Typology :
Rural House
Owner :
Wang Bo
Cost :
1,000,000 RMB
Constructors :
Local brickies and Villagers
Bedroom
Stair
Chunxiao Town, Ningbo
Wang House Anonymous Architects & Workshop construction Time :
2010 - 2013
Size of Site:
150 m2
Size of Construction :
220 m2
Typology :
Rural House
Owner :
Wang Hao
Burdget :
300,000 RMB
Constructors :
Local brickies and Villagers
Elevation
Corridor
Livingroom
Stair
Bedroom
Atrium
Chunxiao Town, Ningbo
Ke House Anonymous Architects & Workshop construction Time :
2011 - 2013
Size of Site:
200 m2
Size of Construction :
550 m2
Typology :
Rural House
Owner :
Wang’s husband of mother’ sister
Constructors :
Local brickies and Villagers
Courtyard
Daylight ( Outside )
Stair
Daylight ( Inside )
Museum of Handcraft Paper
Xinzhuang Village, Yunnan, CHINA
TAO â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Hua Li 2010 Size:
Purpose:
361 m2 Culture, Social, Recreation
Leisure Typology: rural Managerment: Autonomy Description: The museum of handcraft paper is located in a field next to Xinzhuang village under Gaoligong Mountain of Yunnan, a world ecological preserve area in southwest of China. The village has a long tradition on handcraft paper making. The museum project is a part of the plan for preservation and development of traditional resources, in which papermaking will be preserved as cultural heritage and contribute to community growth. To exhibit the history, technique and product of paper making, this museum consists of exhibition space, bookstore, work space and guest rooms for artist and visitors. The site is next to the main road entering the village. The museum functions like a preview window of the village, in the sense that the whole village will function as a big museum because each home in village will open to the visitors showing papermaking process. The museum is thus conceived as a micro-village, a cluster of several small buildings. The building scale is in concord with adjacent village and landscape. The spatial concept is to create a visiting experience alternating between exhibition inside and landscape outside when visitor walks through the galleries on ground level, so as to provoke an awareness of the inseparable relationship between paper making and environment. On second level, there is an open work space and meeting room. Through an outdoor stair, one can walk up to roof terrace with a view to the bamboo roofscape of galleries below, and a glass roofed veranda space facing east where one can have a panoramic view to Gaoligong mountain.
Xinzhuang Village
Sustainable Long history of paper making Losing tradition resources
Need to be concerned
Open to public
Preview window
museum
Design goal
Investor Head of village
Theory
Design
Visual
Executor
Scholor
Architect
Photographer
Master carpenter
Relocate/buy old house for museum
Preserving the paper-making tradition
Persuaded
Build a new contemporary museum
Design without site plan
make models Structure model
Study model
Construction
Construction Process
Nature way
Hand-making paper
Exhibition
Use local construction way
Museum
use local material
Landscape
Mountains
Environment
Design principle
The spatial concept is to create a visiting experience alternating between exhibition inside and landscape outside when visitor walks through the galleries on ground level, so as to provoke an awareness of the inseparable relationship between paper making and environment. Through an outdoor stair, one can walk up to roof terrace with a view to the bamboo roofscape of galleries below, and a glass roofed veranda space facing east where one can have a panoramic view to Gaoligong mountain.
Susta history of paper making Losing tradition resources
traditional timber system Structure
Nail less timber
Roof
furniture
Bambo
vocano stone Paper
Local Resources
Wall
Need to be concerned
The building is designed with traditional Chinese wood structural system featuring nail-less tenon (SunMao) connection, which can be skillfully built by local builders. Local materials such as fir wood, bamboo, volcano stone and handcraft paper are used for exterior finish, roof, floor and interior finish respectively. With time passed, these materials will worn and fade into a more harmonious color with the landscape. These living materials hint a sense of time on building.
Open
Xiaoquan Elementary School
Xiaoquan town, Sichuan Province, CHINA
TAO – Hua Li 2002 Site area: 8,900m2 Purpose:
Elementary School
Typology:
Low rise education building
Managerment: Government
Description: The old XiaoQuan Elementary School was severely damaged during the catastrophic 5.12 Sichuan earthquake in 2008 and was demolished afterwards. Supported by donations from several sponsors, the project is to build new school in the center of Xiaoquan old town. The program consists of main classroom buildings, classrooms for various activities, teacher’s office, student dormitory buildings, and dining hall. The new school will host more than 900 students. The design is conceived as a cluster of small buildings to create a micro-city like campus. The fragmentary instead of unified building composition creates many urban like place such us streets, plazas, courtyards, and steps at various scales. These places are intended to encourage diversified and spontaneous activities of children. Small-scale playful corners and labyrinth like space as passage and playground are created to provoke children’s curiosity and imagination. Through this, we also intend to continue the urban space memory of Xiaoquan town in the school building, so as to avoid completely losing the continuity of urban fabric during rebuilding process after earthquake.
Site
Rebuild
New fund
New Technolo
Historical t
Remain historical c
Local resource
Donate
5.12 Earthquake
Town destroyed
School needs to be rebuilt
Local Education department
Designer
Rebuild
Local constraction company
Taoism Buddhism
Confucianist Islam
Design goal
Xiaoquan
Origional Education
L
N
Donate
5.12 Earthquake
Town destroyed
School needs to be rebuilt
Designer
Local Education department
Rebuild
Local constraction co
Taoism Buddhism
Confucianist Islam
Xiaoquan 垡
Morality
ĺ?
Xiaoquan village is an old historical village of Chuanxi plain. It has more than 2000 years of history. This town is famous of filial piety and morality in history, and so it is now. The town has very many literati sites. With Taoism place, the Buddhist temple, Confucian temple and mosque, the culture here is very pluralism.
Origional Education The convenience of control
Filial Collectivity
Prison type
Less fun and creactivity
Origional Education
Modern Education
The convenience of control
perspective of children
Collectivity
Prison type
Less fun and creactivity The original school management model is always focus on the convenience of control. It has either collectivism or even prison type. It makes children become uniform, and lack of fun and creativity. But the modern education should be focusing on the perspective of children. Student is the key point of school. The design is trying to create meaningful space for children, Decentralize crowd children as group, to have more creativity and fun, promote more communication. Make this school become a small city with only teachers and students.
Creativity
Decentralize
Fun
Art room
Class room
Play ground
Communication Small city with teachers and students
Street
Square Court yard Stairs
For disaster area reconstruction is jumpstart development, because a lot of money, technology and consciousness come from outside, the town will sudden accelerate the process of modernization of local tradition. But we cannot just make a new beginning, or we may lose the Local diversity, and make disconnection of history. We still need to keep the culture and memory of this place. To remain the historical characteristic.
Rebuild
New fund
New Technology
New consciousness
Historical town Remain historical characteristic
Local resource
Designer
Local culture
Yuhu Elementary School Expansion Project
Lijiang, Yunnan, CHINA
Li Xiaodong Atelier 2002 Site area: 1,330 m2 Cost: $29,000 (RMB 235,000) Purpose:
Elementary School
Typology:
Low rise education building
Managerment: Government Description: The Yuhu Elementary School Expansion Project in the UNESCO World Heritage site in Lijiang, Yunnan, China is a community service project. The project is intended as a response to the local vernacular architecture through the basic comprehension of environment, social and building conservation. Appropriate to the unique site and the complexity of the subject matter, the investigations were conducted through multidisciplinary collaboration, probing into spatial conceptions in the domains of folklore, materiality, geomancy, ecology and finally architecture.
Site
Old Orphanage need to be rebuilt
Archtect
Rise fund 300000
construction
Stoped because Lack of fund
get 6 awards
finish
80000
Design goal
Structural performance
Lijiang sits in aregion of known earthquake hazard.Marry local stone construction to a new method of internalsteel reinforcement and a continuous concrete foundation.
Li believes that in such places vernacular building practices often develop in a way that gives enduring form and texture to the world. Thus in Yuhu he found “an almost perfect balance between landscape and human settlement.” In fact, “one feels strongly that the culture is actually part of nature,” he explains. But Li is also well aware of just how fragile such a balance may be. And this is nowhere more evident than in other parts of rural China, where the country’s opening to the outside has caused many similarly ancient dwelling patterns to be scrapped for the convenience and supposed prestige of more standardized, “modern” practices.
¥80000
Structural performance
Lijiang sits in aregion of known earthquake hazard. Marry local stone construction to a new method of internalsteel reinforcement and a continuous concrete foundation.
Spatial structure
By siting two buildings in a zigzag manner , Li was able to develop a new spatial vocabularythat fulfilled the need for “public” space.
Aesthetics
“To use unprocessed local materials to produce a contemporary visual effect.” In this case, local materials were limestone, cobblestoneand wood.
Town history of region
Building form
indigenous
Vernacular
Materials
Social background
School
environment conservation
Town history of region
Building form
indigenous
Vernacular
Materials
Social background
School
Education
Communication node
environment conservation
School Bridge Li Xiaodong Atelier 2008-2009 Site area: 240 m2 Cost: RMB650,000 Purpose:
Elementary School/ Bridge
Typology:
Low rise education building
Managerment: Autonomy Description: Located at a remote village, Fujian Province in China, the project does not only provides a physical function â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a school + a bridge, but also presents a spiritual centre. The main concept of the design is to enliven an old community (the village) and to sustain a traditional culture (the castles and lifestyle) through a contemporary language which does not compete with the traditional, but presents and communicates with the traditional with respect. It is done by combining few different functions into one space â&#x20AC;&#x201C; a bridge which connects two old castles cross the creek, a school which also symbolically connects past, current with future, a playground (for the kids) and the stage (for the villagers).
Pinghe, Fujian, CHINA
Pass Declining of old Tulou
Declining of old Tulou
Stage
loss of culture
Adults go out of town for work
Elive old community
Children are become hope and vitality
Pass
Future
Communication node
Elementary school
Communication
Sust
Promote the p
Class room Stage
library
Playground loss of culture
Adults go out of town for work
Elive old community
Children are become hope and vitality
Sustain a tradition culture
Pass
Future
Promote the protectionof the culture of Tulou
Communication node
Elementary school
Bridge
Class room Stage
library Playground
Bridge
Sustain a tradition culture
Promote the protectionof the culture of Tulou
The structure is created by two steel trusses that span the creek with the space between them housing the functions of the school. Suspended from the structure and running below it is a pedestrian bridge for the people of the village to use. Small and modern in design, with no reference to the areaâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s traditional building style, the school has nonetheless become the physical and spiritual centre of what was a declining village. Placed in such a way that it addresses its surroundings, the Bridge School connects the village together, providing a central, social space. The broader social aspect of the project was part of the brief, which was developed with the school principal and head of the village to answer community needs rather than simply those of a primary school. A public library separates the two classrooms and the ends of each classroom, or the two ends of the school can be opened up, creating open stages at either end of the building that are integrated with the public spaces outside. The stage at the northern end can be used for performances, with the toulou as a backdrop. The result is a project that has successfully invigorated the entire community.
Declining of old Tulou
loss of culture
Adults go out of town for work
Elive old community
Children are become hope and vitality
Pass
Future Class room
Stage
Communication node
Elementary school
library Playground
Bridge
Sustain a tradition culture
Promote the protectionof the culture of Tulou