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Design Concept
The proposal suggests an architectural solution for
a family unit which satisfies the needs of the individuals
as well as provides a place of nurturing for the family,
with the following concepts derived as a resolution
to the dilemmas analysed above.
Overlapping program
The daily life of the family is generalized as: living,
dining, working, playing, sleeping. In conventional
household arrangement, these five categories are defined
by partitioning of particular function 'rooms'. Through
the swinging of the partition walls, each program is
no longer dependent to a confined room but can be 'overlapped'
beyond the constraints of time and space. Flexibility
is allowed by the expansion and contraction of functional
spaces which actively response to the ever-changing
spatial need of each family members.
Axis of hierarchy
Traditional spatial hierarchy along axis is to be re-captured
in contemporary living. Two perpendicular axis are defined
representing the dynamic pattern of relationship between
family members and man/nature.The longitudinal axis
expresses the hierarchy of roles, lining up the life
program from family gathering to self performing. The
latitudinal axis is the axis of control and privacy,
from the fully conditioned rooms defined by the floating
walls, through the landscaped area, to the street beyond
the unit.
Landscape to harmonaze
Landscape is used to dissolve the individuals to the
family, the self to the nature as a harmous whole. The
courtyard in a traditional China House is represented
with a lawn which extends the full length of the unit
and ties the individual rooms to the family zone, and
the family to time and nature. The grass absorbs sunlight
during the day and nurtures to place for the family
gathering at night. The lawn, defined by the Walls in
accordance to the spaces between, are redefined with
the displacement of the Walls over the years. The marks
each definition leaves accumulate as the family grows,
giving traces to the history of development.
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