The blog will involve research and the presentation of materials in several formats addressing issues related to a forthcoming 282 Architecture Design Studio (in Spring). The studio will design accommodation for the PSU Social Practice Master of Fine Arts program. This program emphasizes community engagement through non-studio creative activities executed in the field.

1/29/2008

transmutable installations



I was thinking over tea the other day that as art students it would be interesting to attempt a series of spacial installations that reflect either a single expression or many as they relate to a social practice intervention.

Shipping Container Architecture



This particular project is called Future Shack, by Sean Godsell.
Here's an interesting resource for shipping container architecture...

Modular Buildings


Here's what wikipedia says about Modular Buildings...

Walking City - Archigram



Ron Herron, of Archigram, created this drawing based on a radical new idea for modern urbanism. Possibly because it was so implausible, Walking City became one of Archigram's best-known images. Despite its fastidious surface detailing, it is hard to interpret literally: Could a big aircraft undercarriage support a building? Could a landscape bear the load? Could Walking City paddle in the sea, as other versions of the picture suggested? Even read metaphorically, questions proliferated: Did Walking City come in peace? Nonetheless, it was a bold memorandum of forgotten modernist ambitions: to make collective dwellings, transcend national boundaries, build machines for living in, extend human dominion, alter everyday perception, bring people into contact with the elements, and simply to excite the public about the future.

Inter-Action Centre London - Cedric Price









The Inter-Action Centre is a multiple purpose community resources center providing a wide range of services. The complex is an extension of the work the Price was doing with the Fun Palace, where inbuilt flexibility or its alternative, planned obsolescense was part of the design process. The Inter-Action Center is similar in essence to the Pompidou Center, with the exception that the component parts are artless and cheap - on purpose. The idea was innovative, yet the architecture was casual. Price was seeking an architecture that was value-free.

Different components can be slid into place or removed; as is required by program and evolution. Shipping containers are used, as are manufactured houses, for classrooms, studios, workshops, eating facilities, etc.

Supershed and Pods - Rural Studio
























This series of pods contained under one shed roof was the living/study complex for the Rural Studio (Auburn University - Samuel Mockbee). The buildings are assemblages of found/donated/inexpensive materials. The students designed and built the structures including the shed roof which was supported by hefty timbers from a former railroad trestle. The last picture is of a house where the walls were created with large bales of shredded, corrugated cardboard waste.

1/28/2008

Harris (Butterfly) House - Rural Studio




The Rural Studio was a collection of Auburn University students that went into rural Mississippi and designed/built architecture for the neediest residents as a community outreach effort and learning exprerience. Guided by Instructor Samuel Mockbee, the students created this 600 square foot house for $25000 - using reclaimed wood and a tin roof. They students also supplied the labor to build the house.

1/27/2008

apples to applications...?




http://www.slovart.sk/buxus/images/obalky_velke/VB780107.jpg

bamboo architecture


I think that some really interesting things can be done with bamboo, which is readily available, cheap, and light while offering a wide range of design possibilities.



http://bambus.rwth-aachen.de/eng/reports/modern_architecture/referat.html

1/26/2008

Urban Tree/ Vertical Garden


This is an idea that really gets me thinking about the "Urban Filter/Garden". With this type of structure, you would be providing an ecologically friendly service to the community (O2), as well as maybe producing a far amount of shade in the summer months. For PDX, really all you would need to do is add a rain catchment system at the base that would provide fresh water for the plants.

1/25/2008

Strohhaus


Architect_Felix Jerusalem

Location_Eschenz, Switzerland.

Specifications_This home masterfully combines prefab with sustainable materials, primarily prefabricated strawboard panels that provide affordable, environmentally sound insulation. Jerusalem exploits the strawboard with translucent siding giving the structure a clean, modern aesthetic that showcases the material.



A corrugated plastic exterior protects the compressed strawbale which is structural and serves as the primary heat and sound insulation. Jerusalem used three variations of the strawboard throughout the design. Lightweight panels are in place for thermal and acoustic insulation, middle weight for interior walls and a heavy panel is used for structural elements. All are emission free, formaldehyde free and fully recyclable.

The clean lines of the exterior translate to the inside with a simple layout that serves three bedrooms, living room, kitchen, bath and loft - all with a bounty of natural daylight. Inside, Strohhaus takes advantage of the high solar thermal performance of concrete using the material for the home’s central core. The whole package sits just above the site on piers making less earthwork part of its lighter footstep.

yurt me...
















Yurts can be inexpensive, relatively simple to construct and transport. The issues around this type of structure is that they have a static nature with ambiguous internal spaces.

http://www.shelter-systems.com/lighthouse.html

super adobe!


Although "super adobe" structures are not necessarily transportable after erection they are relatively inexpensive, eco-friendly, easy to erect, and durable.

http://www.calearth.org/Emerg_files/KhaliliEmergShltr.pdf

Emergency shelter investigations



The engineering of cost and mobility of emergency shelters can be used for the application of Social Practices' spacial needs

http://www.design21sdn.com/competitions/7/entries/223/gallery



http://www.inhabitat.com/2006/11/10/prefab-friday-doorhouse-by-cubo-arquitectos/

inflatable temporary structures


Inflatable structures might be considered for easy transportation and quick set up. Cost of products start at around $950.

http://www.totalturfsolutions.co.uk/cc-sporting-structures.htm

1/24/2008

Hanover Expo - Peter Zumthor

















The Swiss Pavilion at the Hanover Expo is a great example of an ephemeral space that is constructed with no metal fasteners, but instead through tension and compression in the use of metal springs that hold everything together. The wooden components are basically stacked together and as they age, they shrink, change colors and emit wonderful smells. As the members need replacing, they can be re-used and/or recycled. The whole system is also seen as a metaphor for the nature of Swiss society.

Mason Bend Chapel




Design Firm_Rural Studio
Materials_Defective automobile windshields_Timber Framing_Fly-Ash Concrete Foundation

Elastic House





The Elastic houses are made for those who like instability and are precarious, who like to be awakened by the sound of the rain, those who like to sleep under overturned boats. So it is said by the designers, Blue Ant Studio.
Classification_Prefabrication
Design Firm_Blue Ant Studios.

The Markie
























The Markie is a fold out, mobile holiday house designed by Eduard Bohtlingk for a "Temporary Homes" design competition in 1985.


1/23/2008

Trustee and Savings Mobile Bank and Hospitality Facility
















Lorenzo Apicella designed this mobile customer facility for a bank in the UK. The appearance of this structure may not be what is needed in this situation, but the mobile/compacting ability of it is intriguing for our project.



NYC Mobile Campus


Todd Dalland of FTL designed these innovative mobile classrooms for the city of New York.

Museum of Moving Images














One of the first high-profile built commissions for Future Systems is perhaps surprising in that it was a relatively modest temporary 'tent' - yet this small structure is nevertheless of importance in that it incorporated many of the issues dealt with in their earlier work and exhibited an exciting image that was all the more potent for its realisation in built form. Indicated in the design are some of the ideas about practical, temporary and movable buildings. The building utilized a whole series of prefabricated components that it could be easily transported to site and erected with minimum effort to provide a sophisticated and very usable building.