Towards a new individual place: A self-sufficient community
Guillem Pascual Perelló. Barcelona, Spain
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Name of work in English
Towards a new individual place: A self-sufficient community
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Name of work in original language
Community, privacy and confort
Prize year
Young Talent 2018
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Work Location
Barcelona, Spain
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Author/s
Guillem Pascual Perelló
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School
Barcelona School of Architecture - Polytechnic University of Catalonia.
Barcelona, Spain
Young Talent 2018 YT Shortlisted
Towards a new individual place: A self-sufficient community
Community, privacy and confort
Program
Collective housing
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Labels
Social · Master plan
Housing is the reflection of the entire society. Improving the housing, the way of living will change. Change their way of life and you will change the world. Nowadays, if all of the people inhabiting the Planet Earth would consume as well as the Spanish average, three planets will be needed. Three. And there is only one. One. Is possible to change that?
Manuel lives on the third floor. His birthday was last week and he was given a painting, but he has no drill to hang the painting. So he stays with his friend Julia, who lives on the other side of the city, to lend him the drill […] But let’s go back to the building where he lives. On the second floor lives Marga. Marga has a drill that she hardly uses, but Manuel does not know that because they have only met a couple of times at the hall.\nIn some neighbourhood communities, the hall of the building is the only meeting place between neighbours. We propose to leave the prevailing individualism in the current world; to build citizenship with the good design of these passages turning them into an extension of housing. The act of growing food is not less important. Its role is to give the first step to a good interaction between neighbours.\nConsidering that the composition of current family homes is not uniform, housing must be projected according to this ambiguity. It is for this reason that the authority over housing is open to debate. In this community you can choose if you prefer to live on the ground floor, on a permanent home, a temporary shelter or co-living with 3 more households.\nBut, why a self-sufficient community? Three facts. First, 80% of the investment throughout the lifetime of a residential building is dedicated to maintenance; just 20% is the initial investment (construction itself). On the other hand, 33% of our income is spent on household consumption (rent, electricity, etc.) and 66% of our environmental impact is directly related to housing activities. What is proposed is to reverse the situation. Instead of us working for our home, let our house to work for us.\nThe strategies propose a return to vernacular concepts reduction through passive systems of the energy demand to a minimum -8,20KW/h year m2-; 40% saving in grey water separation; raining water storage; crops on the roof increasing the thermal inertia and also guaranteeing a protection from the unwanted summer sun; and a wooden structure, detachable, recyclable, etc. To sum up, establishing a community that does not impair the environment but restore it.