The pressure on affordable housing supply is continuously increasing. Accumulating shortages are overwhelming, construction costs are ballooning and productivity stagnating. These challenges affect the provision of everything from single family dwellings to collective urban blocks. Conventional construction and its supporting supply chains are inconsistent, new building construction requires long drawn-out permitting procedures and developing unbuilt sites is wasteful compounding environmental challenges.
Densifying existing neighbourhoods and infrastructure can reduce pressures associated with delivering entirely new tracks. Retrofitting, reusing, and adapting existing buildings that are less than optimally occupied can be explored as levers to provide housing opportunities: Building over strip malls, adapting disused commercial buildings, repurposing high vacancy office towers can relieve pressure on new lot and infrastructure planning.
Hacking existing open-plan buildings with simple structural systems or grids potentially also decreases pressure on permitting processes. Most commercial floor plans based on a 7,6-meter grid could be redesigned into loft spaces as has been demonstrated time and again by transforming factory buildings in gentrifying industrial neighbourhoods. However, the complexities of adaptive reuse are not specifically linked to architectural potentials or structural challenges (which can sometimes exist with new seismic or even fireproofing constraints) but to mechanical transformations. Office and open-floor plates were rarely designed for the required multiple service networks needed to juxtapose flats, most were planned with one centralized service core.
To address these opportunities and challenges, Kit Switch https://www.kitswitch.com , an industrialized service core producing start-up is developing flat-packed industrialized wall-packs for fitting kitchens and baths into existing buildings. Panelized with coordinated distribution of power, water and HVAC equipment, these service-cores streamline fit-outs by standardizing and modularizing typical dimensions, distributions and connecting them to vertical chase elements that are cut or drilled into existing floor plates. While these modifications can be time and resource intensive, they imply much less extraction and resource use when compared to new builds. Costs as well as gains of retrofitting existing infrastructure should be weighed against the important carbon footprint of producing new concrete, steel, aluminum and all other materials that go into the erection of equivalent buildings.
Image from the Kit Switch website |