Thursday, November 7, 2024

Prefabrication experiments - 444 - Mass Affordability - 05 - Rational flexibility


Providing accessible and affordable dwellings requires the rationalization of expenditures through a coherent spatial, structural and functional organization along with efficient material use optimizing each square centimeter of built form. This parsimonious vision outlines the fundamental aspects of the “core-house” as a tool for expandable growth based on user needs and agency. Controlling costs through service core principles has been applied to single-family dwellings with some success (https://prefabricate.blogspot.com/2018/12/prefabrication-experiments-182.html). These same ideas have also been applied to office towers or multi-unit residential edifices to offer opportunities to moderate construction costs while offering systemic adaptable planning.

 

Typified by a 10 storey multi-unit prototype built in France in the early 1970s by the modernist architect sibling team of Luc and Xavier Arsène-Henry, the Montereau residential core-tower borrows from 20th century office building organizations and blends it with adaptable housing design. The pinwheel plan is configured around a vertical circulation core. From the centre point, long spanning concrete slabs structure 4 radiating unit-spaces per floor arranged on a 900 mm grid. Each rectangular flat 13.5m x 6 m is then articulated to the floor plan by a mechanical vertical conduit used for plumbing and electrical service distribution. 

 

Around these service hubs, each unit can be composed to relate to two different orientations with multiple configurations. Further, core-adjacent spaces can be fitted-out by occupants using the predetermined 0.9x 0.8 m channel as an evolving planning device. An exterior balcony bounds the floor plate providing exterior spaces for each apartment. All rooms and living spaces’ dimensions are a multiple of the 900 mm grid and were divided by prefabricated stressed skin panels held in place by removable compression screws making spatial arrangements flexible, malleable and adaptable. Architects envisioned typical floor plans for each occupant to adopt or modify according to their own living patterns. 

 

Not designed specifically with low cost in mind, the frugal planning was geared toward changeability. However, the same principles that make the space flexible, free and open floor plates, unfinished spaces, repeating mechanical cores, a rigorous structural grid, standardized interior systems along with predetermined parameters to control change can also help reduce construction costs. 


Montereau flexible planning scheme


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