
Learn some-more at: moma.org Home Delivery: Fabricating a Modern Dwelling is both a consult of a past, benefaction as well as destiny of a prefabricated home as well as a structure plan upon a Museum’s empty west lot. Not given a mid-century House in a Garden array has MoMA built occupiable indication buildings to denote ? la mode issues to a public. The fives homes erected upon a empty west lot have been written by Kieran Timberlake Associates (Philadelphia); Jeremy Edmiston as well as Douglas Gauthier (New York); Horden Cherry Lee Architects / Haack + Höpfner Architects (London/Munich); Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Architecture as well as Planning / Associate Professor Lawrence Sass (Cambridge); as well as Oskar Leo Kaufmann (Dornbirn, Austria). The exhibition, as well as a concomitant Web site (www.moma.org/homedelivery), arrangement a routine of architectural pattern as well as prolongation in next to magnitude with a tangible finish result.
You’d have? to be pretty small to live there comfortably.
Is the house still for show? Is it located in N.O.? Because I would like to see it in person, if? it is in N.O. This is amazing!
@phillippibeard Firmware Update 1.04: Fixed – sagging porch.
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As with anything new, the question is: Will it withstand the test of time? The only way to find out is to construct a couple hundred of them in New Orleans and come back in a century to see if there a flaw in? the design.
Im? thankful that i do have a home to live in but i want one of these just for fun!!! lol
Nice concept. Allows for? quick rebuilding after major disasters.
physicaldesignco
(dot)
com?
Can you buys these? is so, where would you find a seller? Fairly interesting product, it would be? very useful for camping establishments.
~Cm
Take it back, pigs and dogs? are intelligent animals.
what about if you had no house. if? you had no roof over your head at all. would you still not live in one of these?
Great idea, but? how weather proof is this concept?
All? that bale out money inept corporate heads and the solution for the New Orleans disaster is a ply wood box how many years after the fact? Okay, I give up…
Well, I? see we now have the obligatory racist pig-dog response.
I? want one
chinese/japanese architecture traditionally was made of interlocking parts. ? In the states we never really picked that up. When the industrial revolution came around, we were thinking mass produced houses and mass produced goods. No one ever thought of having a building like this though (or it never caught on)
the forbidden? city in beijing is made out of interlocking parts
I’d like? to see one of these after a year of being lived in and exposed to the elements. The video did not impress me and if I was to make a decision based just on that, I would never live in one of these.
Great Idea put a cardboard house in hurricane central…?
You cite the? people being “colorful” but if they were less concerned with adorning themselves and getting drunk they would have things rebuilt already. I’ve never found degeneracy attractive, but I guess those are the sorts that think New Orleans is something special.
if the glue used in making the fiberboard/wood-board is waterproof, the whole thing will be. Besides, I think this is meant to be clad in clapboard or? at least vinyl siding. I mean, look at the roof… of course there will be something covering that… otherwise it would just leak! I love the concept.
Now that’s? what I call forward thinking. That is the way to go for it is far more cost effective and stronger than the other method of building.
when you? make it waterproof and hurricane proof you’ll be a genius for sure.
I’ll? take two!
Is it waterproof? Sealing out moisture from the end cuts of laminates AND between the thousands of seams in this design looks like and impossible? task to me.
Thankyou, William Gibson, for bringing yet? another fascinating video to my attention.