Urbanization, population migrations, political instability and economic crises engender globalized pressures that make suitable and sustainable housing provision one of the most imperative challenges of the 21st century. The generative potential of manufacturing applied to housing supply provides a renewed topic for reforming longstanding productivity issues in conventional construction. The ten next posts will look at some of industrialization's successful strategies for responding to vast housing crises of past eras.
The expansion of populations on a new continent in the early and mid 1800’s outlined requirements for everything from houses to barns, to places of worship and everything in between. The mass adoption of light timber framing, specifically the balloon frame, in the midwestern part of the USA soon branched out to every part of America. As opposed to heavy post and beam construction with complex joinery to ensure stability and durability, the cruder framing required only milled timber and cut nails to create buildings of any type and shape.
Sometimes attributed to George W. Snow, a Chicago carpenter, the light timber frame was not invented but evolved through shared knowledge and the collective simplification of traditional half-timber construction. The system characterized by two-story vertical studs democratized through simple techniques, nailed assembly, is strengthened and stabilized through structural redundancy. Vertical, horizontal and diagonal bracing members placed close together in a filigree box frame streamline supply chains from forestry to mill to suppliers, builders and consumers. The system’s no-frills D-I-Y quality became an integral part of Americana, used to build pattern buildings, cottages, cabins, A-frames, and provided the basis for the most successful application of low-cost manufactured housing principles: the mobile home.
Today’s version of the balloon frame, known now as the platform frame is still one of the most economical and generalized building structural archetypes. Included in panelized structures or modular volumetric structures, the mass production of cheap, standardized, well recognized and available building components is a central principle of lowering costs. The design flexibility from the same simple parts also displayed light-framing as a model the world over for low-cost and low-tech building.
left: Balloon Frame; right: mobile home framing |
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