"BRILLIANT DESIGNS TO FIT MORE PEOPLE IN EVERY CITY" by Kent Larson
18/11/2012.
[VIDEO TED]
metalocus, CARMEN RUIZ
metalocus, CARMEN RUIZ
Kent Larson shows an innovative idea given the enormous increase in world population. The need for housing is necessary, which leads us to build houses and reduce green spaces. However, we also need them.
More and more, there is a greater demand and need for housing like in China and Japan with a land increasingly limited, which actually leads to reduced housing, leading to the development new techniques to design and to build, more and more in a small space where you find everything you need to live.
Housing and spaces that can transform without changing places, by moving walls, furniture hiding as needed ... housing moves but we don't.
However, we must also ask to what extent are affordable because in these times, can we allow these homes and the cost of maintenance in terms of motors, sensors ...?
In any case, I agree that we can not continue on the actual way and there is a need to find an alternative, and this is a great start.
Kent Larson is Director of the Changing Places research group at the MIT Media Lab. He also runs the MIT House_n Research Consortium at the MIT Department of Architecture.
Current research focuses on strategies for creating responsive places of living using new design/fabrication strategies, defining system level standards for an open source approach to building design, and developing ubiquitous sensing/computation technologies that do useful things for people related to proactive health, energy conservation, and learning.
Larson practiced architecture for nineteen years in New York City with work published in Architectural Record, Progressive Architecture, Global Architecture, A+U, and Architectural Digest. His book, Louis I. Kahn: Unbuilt Masterworks was selected as one of the Ten Best Books in Architecture 2000 by the New York Times Review of Books.