TA: Zeel PatelFrom Utopias to Heterotopia: Migrant Housing: Values of Time, Density, Culture & Energy
The course introduces the concepts of `housing-for-mass’ across space and time. The evolution of housing settlements through linking and stacking; their processes, determinants/generations, and resulting patterns are to be explored in their respective contexts exploring the balance between order and complexity. The idea, here, is to create an adaptive habitat for migrant communities associated with the very dynamic and socially interactive live-work environment. Here, “adaptability” is visualized and represented as a real space which is accommodating people from diverse cultures and traditions over a period of time. The spaces, thus created, should have their characteristics; the occupants should have the opportunities to alter these spaces in certain extended patterns. Eventually, this fluctuating habitat, over time, should be able to maintain a balance between generated orders and identified contextual complexities. The students have to learn to analyze and identify issues with the linking and stacking of modular housing units. This helps them in planning and organizing various ensembles in response to the open spaces and adjacent urban context and to explore housing structures, cluster orientations, and formations by balancing the underlying orders and complexities.
Studio Unit
Exe-1 & 2A: Case Studies | Site Visit | Site Documentation
Exe-2b: Deciphering And Analyzing Tangible and Intangible Aspects of the Settlement
Exe-3A: Urban Insert: Retain, Relocate and Redesign | Conceptual Master Plan idea
Exe-3c & 4A: Individual Inferences | Identifying modular unit | Modular unit linking and stacking exercise on selected site | Response to open spaces & various built fabrics
Exe-4B: Group Master plan | Housing ensembles on the site | Edge Response