In which ways can “technology” be a driving force for the transformation of housing,
today?
Tatiana Švecová,Arquitectura La Salle, Universitat Ramon LlullOctober 15, 2010
Technology is the usage and knowledge of tools, techniques, crafts, systems or methods of organization. The word technology comes from the Greek technología (τεχνολογία) — téchnē (τέχνη), an 'art', 'skill' or 'craft' and -logía (-λογία), the study of something, or the branch of knowledge of a discipline.
Since the onset of different discoveries and inventions, different technology sources have come to the forefront and have known to affect the lifestyle of humans. The progress in technology is responsible for the advancements in the fields of manufacturing, transportation, medicine etc.as well as housing. For example, with the usage of electricity, life became easier and improved the efficiency of people all around the world.
In other words, the most important contribution of technology to
society is making the lives of common people much easier and helping them achieve what was previously not possible.
Different ways of impact of technology on housing
www.lansdowne-photography.co.ukwww.cityproject.sk
In other words, the most important contribution of technology to
society is making the lives of common people much easier and helping them achieve what was previously not possible.
Different ways of impact of technology on housing
Smart houses / comfort / not necessarily visible
Design/ shapes/ forms / High Tech
www.cityproject.sk www.lansdowne-photography.co.uk
Intelligent /smart houses
A smart house is a house that has highly advanced automatic systems for lighting, temperature control, multi-media, security, window and door operations, and many other functions. A smart home appears "intelligent" because its computer systems can monitor so many aspects of daily living.
www.iqrf.com
monitoring (measurement, displaying, ...) sending messages about the state checking response to the situation (rain, frost, ...) simulation of presence in a flat solving exceptions (illegal penetration, fire) comparison to required state and executing required operations or
sending a warning via SMS or e-mail in case of aberration
For such automatized building there is a possibility of controlling even remotely. In addition to this, the system can perform even additional functions:
Video door phone Camera systems Alarm systems Solar panels
High Tech architectureHigh-tech architecture, also known as Late Modernism or Structural Expressionism, is an architectural style that emerged in the 1970s, incorporating elements of high-tech industry and technology into building design.
Characteristics of high-tech architecture have varied somewhat, yet all have accentuated technical elements. They included the prominent display of the building's technical and functional components, and an orderly arrangement and use of pre-fabricated elements.
HSBC Main Building, Hong Kong Lloyd's building, London Pompidou center, Paris www.galinsky.comwww.rtaflondon.com.forum.skyscraperpage.com
Nowadays talking about technology and its impact on architecture
and housing – nothing is impossible - Urban skyscraper farms- Floating eco-cities- Glowing solar towers- Turbine-driven skyscrapers- Magnetically levitated wind collectors
Example – design od apartment building / scyscraper using modern technologies
www.archiinspire.com
Lilypad Project
The idea is to create a series of floating self-sufficient ocean-going eco-city islands. Each one would be able to house 50,000 residents and would support a great deal of biodiversity. Collecting pools located in their centers would gather and filter water for use on board. These would be places for adventurers and refugees alike as water levels rise around the world and threaten many, particularly island, habitats.www.weburbanist.com
Eco Factor: Housing project designed to generate renewable energy.
10 Raison architectshave drawn inspiration from the magnificent Eiffel Tower to design a futuristic housing high-rise for Zaabeel Park in Dubai. The plan focuses on the use of sustainable materials and renewable energy generators to lower the carbon footprint of the high-rise.
www.weburbanist.com
Bibligraphywww.weburbanist.comwww.archinspire.comwww.greatbuildings.comwww.iarf.comwww.smarthouse.com.auwww.automatedbuildings.com/newswww.intelligenbuildings.com
What is “vernacular” housing, today?
Tatiana Švecová,Arquitectura La Salle, Universitat Ramon LlullOctober 15, 2010
Definitions / quotesIn 1964 the exhibition Architecture Without Architects was put on at the Museum of Modern Art, New York by Bernard Rudofsky. It was Rudofsky who first made use of the term vernacular in an architectural context, and brought the concept into the eye of the public and of mainstream architecture:
"For want of a generic label we shall call it vernacular, anonymous, spontaneous, indigenous, rural, as the case
may be."The Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World defines vernacular architecture as:
...comprising the dwellings and all other buildings of the people. Related to their environmental contexts
and available resources they are customarily owner- or community-built, utilizing traditional technologies. All
forms of vernacular architecture are built to meet specific needs, accommodating the values, economies
and ways of life of the cultures that produce them.
Ronald Brunskill has defined the ultimate in vernacular architecture as:
...a building designed by an amateur without any training in design; the individual will have been guided by a series of
conventions built up in his locality, paying little attention to what may be fashionable. The function of the building would
be the dominant factor, aesthetic considerations, though present to some small degree, being quite minimal. Local
materials would be used as a matter of course, other materials being chosen and imported quite exceptionally.
Frank Lloyd Wright described vernacular architecture as
"Folk building growing in response to actual needs, fitted into environment by people who knew no better than to fit
them with native feeling".
Vernacular architecture is influenced by a great range of
different aspects of human behaviour and environment, leading to differing building forms for almost every different context; even neighbouring villages may have subtly different approaches to the construction and use of their dwellings, even if they at first appear the same.
Aspects - climate , culture,environment and materials, economic situation , lifestyle,traditions etc.
Toda hut, India Tibetwww.skyscrapercity.com www.tibetheritagefund.org
Igloo Rondavel, Cameroon
Jungle hut, Brazilwww.adventureland.com
www.traditionorale.ca www.en.wikipedia.org
Paul Oliver, in his book Dwellings, states:
"...it is contended that 'popular architecture' designed by professional architects or commercial builders for
popular use, does not come within the compass of the vernacular.„
Popular architecture vs. vernacular architecture
www.archdaily.com www.blog.100-mile-house.org
Contemporary Vernacular Architecture
On-nuch garage slum - the biggest garbage disposal area in Bangkok. Thehouse is built from carefully selected garbage and left over - metal boxes for snacks. The details are well thought, so well thought that we as an architect are amazed. The owner / builder of the house is a man of his 40s, who never built anything in his life before....
An excellent example of Contemporary Vernacular Architecture?
The detail of the opening of the house.
The roof tiles are made of the metal boxes cut into small pieces too.
The columns are reinforce concrete molded by the metal bins, without removing the mold afterward!
http://phiphi-design-workshop.blogspot.com
Ahwaz, Iran, Sandbag project
After extensive research into vernacular earth building methods in Iran, followed by detailed prototyping, was developed the sandbag or ‘superadobe’ system. The basic construction technique involves filling sandbags with earth and laying them in courses in a circular plan. The circular courses are corbelled near the top to form a dome. Barbed wire is laid between courses to prevent the sandbags from shifting and to provide earthquake resistance. Hence the materials of war - sandbags and barbed wire - are used for peaceful ends, integrating traditional earth architecture with contemporary global safety requirements.
Because the structures use local resources onsite earth and human hands they are entirely sustainable. Men and women, old and young, can build since the maximum weight lifted is an earth-filled can to pour into the bags. Barbed wire and sandbags are supplied locally, and the stabilizer is also usually locally sourced.
http://www.akdn.org/Architecture
Quinta Monroy, Iquique, Chile
The Chilean Government asked us to resolve the following equation:
To settle the 100 families of the Quinta Monroy, in the same 5,000 sqm site that they have illegally occupied for the last 30 years which is located in the very center of Iquique, a city in the Chilean desert.
http://www.elementalchile.com
If to answer the question, one starts assuming 1 house = 1 family = 1 lot, we were able to host just 30 families in the site. The problem with isolated houses, is that they are very inefficient in terms of land use. That is why social housing tends to look for land that costs as little as possible. That land, is normally far away from the opportunities of work, education, transportation and health that cities offer. This way of operating has tended to localize social housing in an impoverished urban sprawl, creating belts of resentment, social conflict and inequity.
http://www.elementalchile.comhttp://www.elementalchile.com
Bibligraphyhttp://phiphi-design-workshop.blogspot.comhttp://www.elementalchile.comhttp://www.akdn.org/Architecturewww.archdaily.comwww.blog.100-mile-house.orgwww.skyscrapercity.comwww.tibetheritagefund.org