Friday, October 23, 2009

Housing - the future for the US - some insights

My new favorite magazine is The Atlantic; under its new ownership and editorial staff it continues to be well written and appears to me to be a voice of reason on our current global economy without the cheer leading, grandstanding or bs evident in so much of today's mainstream media.

THE FUTURE OF HOUSING STYLE

The lead-in to the article: "Houses of the Future" goes like this:
"Four years after the levee failures, New Orleans is seeing an unexpected boom in architectural experimentation. Small, independent developers are succeeding in getting houses built where the government has failed. And the city's unique challenges—among them environmental impediments, an entrenched culture of leisure, and a casual acquaintance with regulation—are spurring design innovations that may redefine American architecture for a generation." The houses featured are small and functional, and my guess is that the classic Greek Revival shotgun style house will become a favorite, despite the attempt to "upgrade the taste" of the populace with modernism by the various players. The author describes 5 house in the article, so be sure to follow the link map in the article to see the designs by the well-known architects. These are the efforts to which Brad Pitt is lending his star-power.

The article notes that the classic New Orleans style (pictured above) is by the New York architect William Monaghan, who grew up in New Orleans and both understands and appreciates the vernacular architecture. Check his website Build Now for other classic New Orleans plans.

THE FUTURE OF HOUSING SIZE

The small houses featured in the article are functional and above all affordable. It was most instructive to read
Witold Rybczynski's archived article from 1991 in the same publication "Living Smaller, the Advantages of a Small House". I wonder if he had any idea then of the McMansions that were to come. Recently, the Harvard Center for Housing Studies reported that new home sizes are slowly coming down in size, but it seems to me that their numbers are not yet significant.

THE FUTURE OF HOME OWNERSHIP

However, the most interesting article from March 2009 may be the most significant of all, as it relates to the future of housing - "How the Crash will Reshape America." Richard Florida discusses the winners and losers in the geographic lottery, the choices and opportunities as we reshape our economy and where we will live. The most interesting idea that he develops is his call for reducing our focus on home ownership, he sees renting as a much more flexible way to keep our economy strong and flourishing in the future. Renting will allow the population to follow opportunity much more readily than home ownership, moving forward. (In the past, when IBM stood for I've been Moved, home ownership was never a problem, because large companies simply bought up home at market value to remove any burden from their employees - times have changed.)

The concept entails sound thinking, and will have a major impact on interior finishes. We would be moving towards the European model, so industries must develop products that are movable like kitchen furniture instead of built-ins - a radical change for many material and product suppliers. There are many years to plan for this eventuality, but now is the time to plan ahead. - rather than let others countries become the winners like the Japanese automobile manufacturers became when the domestic manufacturers refused to build fuel efficient cars. (IKEA stands to become the go to cabinet manufacturer because they already know how to do this.)

We know that Washington needs more revenue, and whether and how fast this shift will happen, depends on who has the deeper pockets for lobbying to keep the tax write-offs for themselves and their customers.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Floating Homes

It is fascinating that two stories on floating homes came across my desktop several days ago, now they are everywhere. One is a new concept for New Orleans in conjunction the "Make it Right" project which was given star power by Brad Pitt featured in Metropolis Magazine. "Unfortunately, none of the returning Lower Ninth Ward residents has so far selected Mayne’s design to live in," according to the article. It looks like a shipping container tethered to a post, no wonder no one wants it. Yes, the "powers" in all their arrogance continue to try to push their ideas down people's throats - to no avail as is often the case. Save the shipping containers for Art Basel Miami where they function well.

In Holland, where threats of flooding are more severe than even New Orleans, NL Architects have sketched out a much more intriguing design - a live-in waterlily pad called water wonen = liquid urbanism. More information is available at
designboom, as the architect's website is under construction. IMHO, this exquisite shape based on nature holds more promise than floating shipping containers.