Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Prefabrication experiments - 415 - S(dwellings) - The Prefab Bungalow

The automobile transformed territorial planning; leaving the city for its surrounding suburbs or countryside fostered demand for quickly built homes and subsequently for leisure dwellings. A by-product of Henry Ford’s assembly-line principles applied to housing, the small serially produced bungalow on site or in a factory suburbanized America and converted house building into a promoter-based commercial transaction. Tracts of flattened sites were seeded with small reproducible fully-furnished homes. The bungalow, a one floor dwelling designed for the nuclear family is the symbol and central focus of formidable off-site built failures (Lustron) and prolific onsite built successes (Levittowns). The American dream of the utilitarian affordable single-family dwelling produced in an industrialized process was perfected in North America and idealized in globalized literature.

 

German author Walter Meyer Bohe’s  Prefabricated Houses studied the bungalow, outlined its concepts and design parameters for the production of what was put forth as a flexible type for the masses. A published case-study defines a straightforward building strategy not linked it to any specific construction system, but to strict systemic dimensional coordination; generating a harmonized material supply chain, reduced waste and iterative optimizations - all serial production ideals.

 

The manufacturing process could feasibly be mechanized but could also allow site customization by sharing the same spatial elements and parts; An alphabet of components adapted to multiple schemes or arrangements.  Houses respecting the strict modular framework could be scaled and expanded over time using basic panels catalogued with design features including elements like doors, small windows, or even large curtain walls. Today’s term used to describe this type of customizable pattern language would be:  a platform approach to design and construction.  The representation manifests a no-frills structure deploying normalized planning principles articulated to a 125mm grid and a night-day segregation elegantly positioning all private spaces around a collective living space extended by an exterior garden. The central bearing wall reduces spans to a manageable 3,75 meters and even demonstrates the ability to assemble this clear-cut plan from two factory-built boxes. The 94 square meter scheme is a superb illustration of a small modern dwelling.    


Bungalow from Walter Myer-Bohe's Prefabricated Houses (1959)



 



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