
Housing: The Latest Architecture and News
Colonias Viladoms Houses / OAB
Songpa Micro Housing / SsD

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Architects: SsD
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Professionals: Mirae Structural Design Group, Kiro Construction
Pump House / Design and Research Institute of Shanghai Construction No.7

- Area: 24 m²
- Year: 2018
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Professionals: Shanghai Construction No.7Shanghai Construction No7
House of Future Contemporary / Studio In2

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Architects: Studio In2
- Area: 152 ft²
- Year: 2018
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Manufacturers: BoConcept, GUBI, QisDESIGN, SeedDesign
Dear Internet: Stop Placing Blame for Gentrification on an Architectural Style

This article was originally published by Common Edge as "Architecture, Aesthetic Moralism, and the Crisis of Urban Housing."
It may shock some people to hear this, but architecture is not urban planning. It is not transportation planning, sociology, political science, or critical geography. However, architecture, new-build apartment architecture specifically, has become a social media scapegoat for today’s urban housing crisis: escalating developer-driven gentrification.
Out of my own curiosity, I searched several academic databases for research that successfully correlates the architectural aesthetic of new build apartments with gentrification. While many writers and denizens of social media really want to blame today’s bland, boxy, cladding-driven style of multifamily urban housing for gentrification, I’m afraid the research isn’t there. In fact, one study featured in a paper on neighborhood early warning systems for gentrification cites historic architecture as one of five predictors of gentrification in the DC area.
Why Designing a Person's Home is the Most Challenging, Thrilling Task an Architect Can Face

This article was originally published by Common Edge as "Why Homes Are the Original Architecture."
Homes may be the most powerful projection of architectural value. Because shelter is essential for all of us, the home is architecture’s universal function. We’re all experts on what our own home must be, to us.
But architects often have a different view of home. Twenty years ago—during the recession before the last recession—I remember hearing an architect declare that he could earn a living designing houses until “real work came along.” Another architectural meme is the classic first job: designing a house for your parents.
Sunny Apartment / Very Studio | Che Wang Architects

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Architects: Very Studio | Che Wang Architects
- Area: 200 m²
- Year: 2018
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Manufacturers: HAU-CHENG, Home Boutique, Li Tsai Enterprise
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Professionals: Sustainable Building Engineering for Design Lab
The State of California is (Finally) Forcing Through Affordable Housing Laws, Overruling Municipal NIMBYism

This article was originally published by The Architect's Newspaper as "A wave of affordable and market-rate housing could soon wash ashore in California."
In recent months, legislators in California have begun a concerted effort to use state law to address the state’s ongoing housing crisis. The moves come amid worsening regional inequality that has pushed housing affordability outside the reach of many populations. Facing mounting pressure from a growing cohort of pro-housing YIMBY activists and increasingly grim economic and social impacts—including a sharp increase in the number of rent-burdened households and the number of individuals and families experiencing homelessness—state-level legislators have begun to take action where municipal leaders have thus far stopped short.
Unfolding Canvas / OFGA
From Affordable Housing to Climate Change, San Francisco Is a Microcosm of Global Urban Challenges

This article was originally published by Common Edge as "John King on San Francisco, Oakland, and the Challenge of Affordable Housing."
John King has covered the urban design beat for the San Francisco Chronicle for 17 years now. That’s long enough, in other words, to have written about a handful of economic booms and subsequent busts. But the Bay Area is a unique beast. No other region in the country has been as thoroughly transformed by the digital revolution. And it’s a transformation that continues to this day. Shortly before the New Year, I spoke to King about the fate of San Francisco, the Oakland renaissance, and his 4-month long fellowship in Washington, DC.
The Economics Behind New York's Micro-Apartment Experiment

This article was originally published by The Architect's Newspaper as "Are micro-apartments a revolutionary trend? Or are developers exploiting an out-of-control market?"
The situation was dire: People were flocking to cities for work, but scarce land and lack of new construction were driving up rent prices. Middle-income residents couldn’t afford the high-end housing stock, nor did they want to enter cramped—sometimes illegally so—apartments. Luckily, a new housing solution appeared: In exchange for small, single-occupancy units, residents could share amenities—like a restaurant-kitchen, dining area, lounge, and cleaning services—that were possible thanks to economies of scale. Sound familiar?
It should: It’s the basic premise behind Carmel Place, a micro-apartment development in Manhattan’s Kips Bay that recently started leasing. The development—whose 55 units range from 260 to 360 square feet—was the result of Mayor Bloomberg’s 2012 adAPT NYC Competition to find housing solutions for the city’s shortage of one- and two-person apartments. Back then, Carmel Place needed special legal exceptions to be built, but last March the city removed the 400-square-foot minimum on individual units. While density controls mean another all-micro-apartment building is unlikely, only building codes will provide a de facto minimum unit size (somewhere in the upper 200 square foot range). What does this deregulation mean for New York City’s always-turbulent housing market? Will New Yorkers get new, sorely needed housing options or a raw deal?
"Corridors of Diversity": Showcasing the Secret of Singapore's Public Housing Success

Singapore’s first Housing and Development Board (HDB) housing blocks were erected in November of 1960, in response to a severe lack of adequate housing for the country's 1.6 million citizens. Fast forward to 2017, and over 80% of the Singaporean population live in HDBs, with over 90% of them owning the home they live in. Often painted in vibrant colors, HDBs have a focus on community social spaces, more often than not maintaining the ground floor of the apartment blocks as open public space, exclusively for public meeting areas. These can include hawker centers, benches, tables, grills and pavilions where residents can socialize under cover from the hot Singaporean sun.
Convento Das Bernardas / Eduardo Souto de Moura

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Architects: Eduardo Souto de Moura
- Area: 8164 m²
- Year: 2012
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Manufacturers: CS Telhas
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Professionals: Estudos e Projectos Lda, A2P
LAPA BUILDING / João Tiago Aguiar, Arquitectos

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Architects: João Tiago Aguiar, Arquitectos
- Area: 420 m²
- Year: 2015
E589 Apartments / Albert Mo Architects

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Architects: Albert Mo Architects
- Area: 5000 m²
- Year: 2014
Housing and Shops Complex / Ameller Dubois

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Architects: Ameller Dubois
- Area: 7400 m²
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Professionals: Lasa, Atelier du Bocal, Bureau Plantier, CETBI, Floriot
WING Loft / Laboratory for Explorative Architecture & Design

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Architects: Laboratory for Explorative Architecture & Design
- Area: 236 m²
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Professionals: E T Engineering Ltd, Yat Sing Decoration Engineering Ltd

















