A conceptual design proposing 5.000 new homes for Sarriguren, Spain.
Sarriguren Housing Proposal
Region
Northern Spain
Timespan
3 weeks
An alternative plan to add 5.000 new homes to the Valle de Egues.
Services
Design Process
The original housing development proposal seeks to expand into green fields next to Sarriguren. However, what we gain in housing, we lose in natural space. So is there an alternative that can add the needed housing without encroaching too heavily on this green area?
PSIS approved housing expansion plan for Sarriguren.
Involving the People
Beyond failing to respond to the local climate, these buildings lack input from the people who actually use them. Through my research, I found no benches around the block, few ground-floor businesses, and an interior courtyard visible from the street but inaccessible to it. The combination of these design choices tells street-users that they are not welcome here.
Throughout the design process, I used video to surface these pain points and invite viewers to make guided decisions about the final facade redesign. The goal is to build understanding among city-users so they feel greater agency when engaging with the buildings appearing in their city. Two designs were presented of which, viewers voted on their favorite and I then developed the design and cost breakdown in later videos.
The bigger issue is that housing demand needs to be met but it should not be at the expense of the pride people have for their place. Long term this risks a place people feel disinvested in and therefore leads to it’s deterioration instead of it being a place that slowly improves over time. People who feel attached to what has been built in there community will continue to invest in it’s maintenance. Zebra block housing prioritizes short-term profit over the long-term resilience that sustains a community's social and economic wellbeing.
The outcome of using social media to build support and understanding around building projects demonstrates two things:
people want to participate in the design of their cities
designers are capable of responding quickly to real-time feedback
Used with intention, social media can make the design process more efficient and engaging for everyone involved without sacrificing deadlines or falling short of stakeholder expectations.
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