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Creating homes instead of apartments

Basic information

Project Title

Creating homes instead of apartments

Full project title

Creating homes instead of apartments – The IHP method in socially-aware residential building design

Category

Prioritising the places and people that need it the most

Project Description

The primary aim of the residential building sector should be to provide people with real homes. Failing to do so results in many unsustainable buildings. A new design method, based on the results of the SUSOSTA project at the University of Cambridge, can help stakeholders create apartments that truly meet the needs of their residents. This design approach uses experimentally collected occupant preference data to ensure that rooms have right sizes and flats have the best, most adaptable layouts

Geographical Scope

Cross-border/international

Project Region

Budapest, Hungary

Urban or rural issues

Mainly urban

Physical or other transformations

It refers to other types of transformations (soft investment)

EU Programme or fund

No

Which funds

ERDF : European Regional Development Fund

Description of the project

Summary

Hungary is experiencing a housing crisis. Apartments sell easily irrespective of how good they are, leading to a natural decrease in quality. Many low-quality residential buildings are being built, which cannot provide residents with comfortable and adaptable living spaces. Consequently, these buildings experience rapid obsolescence, which makes them highly unsustainable. Unfortunately, it is almost impossible to filter out these solutions, as it is difficult to objectively measure how good an apartment is at the design phase. Parametric and data-based design approaches are frequently applied in shape-optimisation problems. These tools could also be used to find living spaces that meet the needs of the many. The SUSOSTA research project at the University of Cambridge investigates how to make standardised residential buildings more sustainable. The project has developed a design method called the Ideal Home Puzzle (IHP), which can determine the most preferred layouts and room sizes for different apartment sizes by applying space syntax tools to unbiased user preference data. While the project’s main goal was to aid informed decision-making about what homes are worthy of mass production, the IHP method can also be used to monitor the quality of any residential building. The current proposal’s goal is to develop a design tool for industrial practice based on the IHP, and, in turn, help all stakeholders create high-quality homes. The existing database of user preferences will be able to help designers choose optimal layouts and room sizes. Moreover, the project aims to develop an open-source plug-in for architectural design software, which could draw on the database to evaluate design solutions instantaneously. The project location is Hungary, where the initial data collection took place, but the general idea could be implemented anywhere, upon the collection of a new dataset. The results will be publicly available and presented at workshops focusing on sustainability.

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Key objectives for sustainability

This project aims to support stakeholders in creating apartments that can really serve as homes by implementing a data-driven design strategy that considers the real needs of building occupants. High-quality apartments can retain their value much better, as residents live in them longer. Having such apartments on the market would increase sustainability because residential buildings could operate longer without extensive renovations and would not be treated like disposable consumer products. It would extend the life expectancy of these buildings and reduce their ecological footprint, in line with the EU waste directive. By expanding the current dataset, the project also aims to probe whether it is possible to mass-produce residential buildings also in line with sustainability principles. The optimisation potential of standardisation could be harnessed by mass manufacturing or mass-customising such buildings. First, this would allow prefabrication to become more widespread in residential construction, which would increase the industry's productivity and reduce construction waste. Second, it would also create an opportunity to reduce embodied carbon by using optimised load-bearing structures.

Key objectives for aesthetics and quality

People-centred design methodologies help designers see their usual design process from a new perspective. As we start thinking about how to make our residential buildings cosier and smarter, we have already made a huge step towards making these buildings more aesthetically pleasing. The outlined design methodology can help us be more aware of what a well-equipped apartment is like and the ideal room sizes for people to find places for their personal belongings and hobbies. Who wouldn't want to live in an apartment that can be adapted to their specific needs, where they can easily roll out a yoga mat, where the entire family has space to take off their shoes at the same time, and where there is a designated place for a dryer, coats, and even the used glassware that's waiting to be recycled? But, as designers tend to compromise on the quality of living spaces due to, among others, pressures on time and attention, having such an apartment frequently becomes impossible right at the design desk. We aim to raise the quality of apartments beyond functionality. A home shouldn't be all about making compromises and struggling to find places for the most common everyday items. The spaces of our homes should fit the demands of modern life, enhance their residents' well-being, and help them fully recharge. If stakeholders put a greater emphasis on these issues, we can fundamentally alter how our industry creates residential buildings. The current project would help in this transition by providing an initial database of unbiased preference data on layouts and room sizes and an Evaluator Plug-In that could provide instant feedback on how much a design fits the preferences of people. The dataset can be further increased or refined to reflect the needs of specific social groups, and the Plug-In can also compare layouts with any predefined arrangement. With these tools, improved quality of experience can be achieved.

Key objectives for inclusion

The right to decent and adequate housing is a basic human right. However, today, housing crises are emerging in many European cities. Students, young families, and working-class people, essential to the cities’ functioning, are increasingly being pushed out of the centres into suburban real estate. It is extremely difficult to combat such social trends, but the ideas in the current project would help architects do what they can within their power to overcome the housing crises. In many cases, the quality of an apartment depends only on attention and goodwill. In a new development, the design fee is almost negligible compared to the entire construction cost. It raises the question: why should not we take the time to make something truly worth building out of concrete and steel? Building low-quality housing solutions take the place of projects that would truly mean a solution for large families, new graduates, and especially the poorest, who are desperately searching for adequate housing. The tools created by this project can help designers and decision-makers ensure that the homes that are built serve the needs of the people, no matter whether we are talking about a high-end downtown estate or an affordable housing project on the outskirts of the city. Adaptable, high-quality homes reduce the need for new housing, and a general increase in housing quality would most affect those social groups who cannot choose apartments freely from the market. Therefore, this project can help make a small step toward a more just and inclusive future.

Physical or other transformations

It refers to other types of transformations (soft investment)

Innovative character

This idea is about delivering only the buildings that we truly need. With the developed tool, architects, developers and even authorities could evaluate design solutions from the perspective of expected resident satisfaction and thereby avoid creating apartments that do not meet the needs of the majority or are, in fact, predictably substandard. On the one hand, constructing fewer poor-quality buildings will make the industry more environmentally sustainable. On the other hand, increasing the quality of residential buildings ensures that the most disadvantaged people can get better housing. In addition, quality housing also provides residents with an environment that helps unwind, crucially contributing to their mental and physical health. Thus, by raising the quality of homes beyond mere functionality, the project would impact both the environmental sustainability and the inclusivity of the housing industry.

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