The subtropical row house charrette


Autoria(s): Kennedy, Rosemary J.
Data(s)

2008

Resumo

Current urban development in South East Queensland (SEQ) is impacted by a number of factors: growth and sprawl eroding subtropical character and identity; changing demographics and housing needs; lack of developable land; rising transport costs; diminishing fresh water supply; high energy consumption; and generic building designs which ignore local climate, landscape and lifestyle conditions. The Subtropical Row House project sought to research ‘best practice’ planning and design for contemporary and future needs for urban development in SEQ, and stimulate higher-density housing responses that achieve sustainable, low-energy and low water outcomes and support subtropical character and identity by developing a workable new typology for homes that the local market can adopt. The methodology was that of charrette, an established methodology in architecture and design. Four leading Queensland architectural firms were invited to form multidisciplinary creative teams. During the two-day charrette, the teams visited a selected greenfield site, defined the problems and issues, developed ideas and solutions, and benchmarked performance of designs using the Australian Green Building Council’s Pilot Green Star Multi-Unit residential tool. Each of the four resulting designs simultaneously express a positive relationship with climate and place by demonstrating: suitability for the subtropical climate; flexibility for a diversity of households; integrated building/site/vegetation strategies; market appeal to occupants and developers; affordability in operation; constructability by ‘domestic’ builders; and reduced energy, water and wastage. The project was awarded a Regional Commendation by the Australian Institute of Architects.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/48286/

Relação

http://www.subtropicaldesign.org.au/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=101&Itemid=93

Kennedy, Rosemary J. (2008) The subtropical row house charrette. [Exhibition/Event]

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Design

Palavras-Chave #120100 ARCHITECTURE #Urban Development #Subtropical Design #Subtropical Rowhouse #Sustainability
Tipo

Creative Work