Grounds for Coexistence
Collaborative housing, Europan 16
arrival
A high speed train approaches Honefoss. The magnetic pull of the big city, Oslo, defines hierarchies and expands, pushing inhabitants to new perimeters, forming an ever larger radius of influence. The inhabitants of Hjertelia will be a mixture of those city people who found freedom during the pandemic through online work, those who are tired of fighting real estate prices, and those--wherever they started--who seek a slightly different format for living. All of them arrive at Hjertelia convinced by the impulse to coexist with nature and each other.
strategy: a stacked ground
The border condition at the site--not truly city, not fully countryside--provokes a different approach to density. A productive farmland landscape should not be subsumed to stand alone houses surrounded by lawns, or housing blocks of intense anonymity. Imagine the farmland should rise by 6 meters, and under this elevated ground, life could flourish. Our approach is to stack the traditional models of farmland, domestic space, and work, one over the other to foment contemporary synergies between them. We neutralize the footprint of the house by sandwiching it between two productive grounds.
inclusive synergies
Density creates opportunities for metabolic cycles to link a richer, more heterogeneous, mix of activity. Clusters of three or four stacked units activate the space in between as they key site for interaction and exchange amongst inhabitants. The social tableau of the in-between encourages a model of cohabitation, where density forms human space but remains permeable to non-human inhabitants. Against the existing diagram of the residual forest, we strive for a vision of the forest as threads through a tapestry.
co-habitation
To de-center the human is to adopt a framework of inclusivity in which the human is one species amongst others. The fundamental idea of cohabitation is to acknowledge the larger ecosystems beyond the anthropocene. From trout to birds, foxes, humans and deers, the interstice between dwelling clusters becomes a strongly interwoven ecotone these species inhabit. Grounds for Coexistence maps the degrees of movement and filtration between ecosystems, and makes use of these natural networks to create dwelling spaces which are inclusive to all. The contact of the architecture to the ground defines degrees of permeability, whether elevated paths, light timber structures on piles, or a softscape. As a general rule, all anthropocentric environments benefit from ecological services, but this project explicitly recognizes the value of ecosystems in creating better environments for people and aims to provide a symbiotic habitat for all species in return. For example, systems such as grey water recycling can be adapted to become wetlands in which reed plants help with the filtration process, in turn creating a habitat for local species such as frogs, badgers, or ducks. The filtered water is then reused for the irrigation of permaculture gardens, small crops, or hydroponic systems to become fully integrated metabolic cycles. The aim is to understand every intervention and activity as a neuron within a network that must provide positive feedback into the ecosystem. We strongly believe this framework for thinking is the frontier in the discourse of sustainable urbanism and building. This is the next step to inclusive, participatory urbanism--we should take it now!
regenerative fabric
Within the greater fabric of Honefoss featuring centralized networks of stand alone houses and decentralized networks of housing blocks, Hjertelia offers a distributed network of dwelling clusters. As the region prepares for the future, the project is able to adapt itself to three scenarios: point interventions (A), extensive growth (B), and contraction (C). These scenarios could be divergent or linear, but Hjertelia functions as a prototype which can adapt itself to more or less growth.
connected community: roles and circularity
A heterogenous population is the operative backbone of our proposal. Stacked units can remain in the domain of a single user whose requirement to live, create, and produce can take place across the three levels, or the stacked units can be shared by a mix of users according to their needs. In the case of a single user, take a family of four with a permaculture garden on the roof, and who run a farm to table bistro on the ground floor. However, it is impossible to stop the cycle there: this family will sell surplus vegetables at the weekend market, their organic waste will go to a neighbor in their cluster who has a composting bin on her roof, and gives some of the fertilizer back to them. Their other neighbor is a web developer who helped them with their website and happens to be their best customer at lunch time. The feedback loops become more complex and expand the radius of influence when a stacked unit is in the domain of multiple users.
social dwelling clusters
A dwelling cluster is the basic kernel of our proposal. The in-between space is the site of direct associations between units which define a micro neighborhood. This nucleus is key to establishing a scale of intimacy between neighbors. The size of a cluster, the composition of paths that traverse it, and the treatment of ground between units, promote definition in the programming of such public spaces. Larger clusters promote activities such as weekend markets, sports fields, community rallies, or wetlands. Smaller clusters promote activities such as playgrounds, picnics, gardening, restaurant terraces, or simply a good place to read a book. As a proposal for an urbanistic typology, the social dwelling cluster is the smallest unit required for a working prototype. When clusters are grouped into a larger community, a single stacked unit participates in two or more unique dwelling clusters, thus creating a dynamic network of life. Compared to a traditional courtyard typology, the adjacencies of clusters and the ability of a single unit to experience two or more discrete micro neighborhoods, gives rise to the unscripted energy of city life with an entirely different context.
transformative kit of parts
While a dwelling cluster is the basic unit of our proposal at an urban scale, the stacked units themselves are built in the modular logic of timber construction. The ideal span of a single module optimizes the efficiency of the material used in construction, and provides a configurable, adaptive grid which is appropriate for multiple use typologies. Four modular aggregates are proposed,
from small to extra large, with the ability to fit a single family or become subdivided into efficient units. The structure is then modified by a catalogue of added elements: exterior stairs, balconies, parasols, and a catalogue of different roof configurations. This array of roof structures activates the plane of the elevated farmland into a zone where the output of the extensive farmland
of the existing site is concentrated into highly productive systems such as hydroponic tanks, greenhouses, and photovoltaic panels. The catalogue also addresses the concern to reconcile an architectural figure with ecologies by offering habitats for migratory birds, and structures for the growth of wild plants. Each add-on gives the user freedom to specify their dwelling to their needs.
construction: assembly & disassembly
The logic of modularity is taken to a material logic for the assembly and disassembly of timber structure. Timber as a tectonic construction allows not only for a scenario of growth and ease of fabrication, but also allows for the scenario of contraction in which the site can become reabsorbed by the forest. Beyond the sustainability of timber building elements as a renewable resource, more importantly, it is a flexible constructive system which allows us to imagine the project as whole to have a sustainable life cycle.