SOCIAL DWELLINGS IN GdG
From an architectural and spatial perspective, the dwellings are structured through three parallel bands.
The first band accommodates access, circulation, and service areas, including the laundry room, kitchen, and bathroom. This infrastructural strip concentrates the technical and functional components of the dwelling, establishing a clear organizational backbone.
The second band contains the main living spaces, where everyday domestic activities take place—rest, leisure, work, and other forms of daily life. It is composed of three rooms that can operate independently or be combined, allowing for varying degrees of openness and continuity.
The third band, located closest to the façade, forms a continuous relational space linking the different rooms. This linear space can be appropriated by each room as an extension or understood as a shared collective area—a space of possibilities rather than a strictly defined program.
As the bands approach the façade, their architectural and spatial definition progressively dissolves. This gradual loss of rigidity enables a more adaptable domestic environment, allowing inhabitants to adjust and reinterpret the space according to their changing needs.















