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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

One Home For All the Homeless by Andjela Karabasevic

 
June 4th, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Andjela Karabasevic

This project envisions one mega structure  that will house all the homeless people on our planet. It spreads continuously through  the cities, fields and waters, only facilitating bare living necessities, and significantly increasing life quality in general, and therefore the overall rate of productivity.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic 

  • Architects: Andjela Karabasevic
  • Project: One Home For All the Homeless
  • Year: 2013
  • Status: Competition
  • Award: D3 Housing Tomorrow 2013 – SPECIAL MENTION – dystopian vision

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Over 2.6 billion people around the world do not have access to adequate sanitation, while around 100 million have no housing whatsoever. These are all just assumptions, while the real numbers are much worse, and impossible to track. An unimaginable percentage of our society struggles to survive and doesn’t even have a remote possibility to experience more of their life, and yet we remain indifferent, presumably secured and untouchable.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Power, wealth and progress of one Nation is promoted by resolving one of the major problems it has caused to the Society. To give part of the sky to the poor. By diminishing its own flaws, the city becomes even stronger. Instead of trying to reach the highest point on the sky, the cities will compete in areas of their sky they are willing to give up in order to improve their society. This wall would become a new indicator of a city’s power. Every city gets a certain length of the wall. The longer the wall, the greater the city.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

The structure occupies minimum amount of the expensive land, but a significant percentage of our sky. It is a wall of infrastructure, a vertical field of voids, offering numerous places to sleep, maintain hygiene, cook and store food, store belongings, and to get one’s own permanent location on the world map. Plus endless empty space around it, the priceless sky, which paradoxically turns it into one of the most luxurious living spaces in the world.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

It is dimensioned and occupied according to its genetic code. Once the occupant has become independent to join the Society, he leaves.  When there are no more occupants left, it is either  to be torn down, reconnecting the humankind to the sky, or  to remain indefinitely, and with its monumentality  pose as a daily reminder to the ignorant society of the problem it  actually resolves.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

With no beginning nor the end, people all around the world are gathered into one single structure. Unlike Superstudio’s Continuous Monument of 1969, which it was inspired with, it is not  about globalization and loss of identity, it is about nourishing millions of identities that have yet to develop.

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Image courtesy Andjela Karabasevic

Category: House




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