Vast urbanizations in developed, developing and under-development countries have one common denominator: an immediate need for quality housing. Housing the billions: never before were those involved in architecture and construction confronted with such a challenge. A one-fits-all solution seems unthinkable since most mass housing schemes in the past failed and originated in dictatorship or total absence of power. Based on an analysis of one of the housing experiments of the past, the Soviet Microrayon, Volume proposes a new prototype. A housing block, which is custom-made but mass-produced and conceived via open source standards.
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[...] Post | Pani vrs. Le Corbusier Just arrived Volume 21: THE BLOCK and while discovering it’s fascinating content, we stumble upon one of Supersudaca’s [...]
[...] the notion of ‘collective’ with the notion of ‘massive’ Via Volume #21 “The Block” which in the face of rapid urbanization and the need for large scale housing requirements of [...]
[...] this picture, you wouldn’t think of Volume as cornerstone. But ‘The Block’ issue (Volume #21), produced in parallel to the International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam in 2009, was [...]
Guilt has been effectively used to control and manipulate the masses. But it can also be the start of a change for the better: awareness, concern, action. Engagement and guilt are never far apart. Engagement is sublimated guilt. We can build on guilt, but can we build with guilt? Is guilt a material to design with?
This unique Volume bag was conceptualized by Daniel van der Velden and Maureen Mooren. Though originally conceived as T-shirts, we couldn't resist re-publishing this text now that it is again so actual.
Explore the vast archive of Volume and its predecessor Archis. All the issues since 1993, their covers, full tables of content and a growing amount of articles are online.
[...] Latin America`s parallel history as occident`s laboratory backflash” como suplemento a la edición #21THE BLOCK de la publicación [...]
[...] Post | Pani vrs. Le Corbusier Just arrived Volume 21: THE BLOCK and while discovering it’s fascinating content, we stumble upon one of Supersudaca’s [...]
[...] the notion of ‘collective’ with the notion of ‘massive’ Via Volume #21 “The Block” which in the face of rapid urbanization and the need for large scale housing requirements of [...]
[...] el #21 de Volume con el insert de LA Colective de Supersudaca. Una historia paralela de Latino América [...]
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[...] (NAI Rotterdam) and published in Open City, Designing Coexhistence – SUN Publishers, and Volume magazine, issue [...]
[...] this picture, you wouldn’t think of Volume as cornerstone. But ‘The Block’ issue (Volume #21), produced in parallel to the International Architecture Biennale Rotterdam in 2009, was [...]