Architects' 'enforced togetherness' : new design affordances of the home
Marco, Elena and Tahsiri, Mina and Sinnett, Danielle and Oliveira, Sonja (2022) Architects' 'enforced togetherness' : new design affordances of the home. Buildings and Cities, 3 (1). pp. 168-185. ISSN 2632-6655 (https://doi.org/10.5334/bc.189)
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Abstract
Lockdown impositions have impacted people’s lives, their health and wellbeing, changing the ways in which dwellings are used and occupied. Spaces within the home have had to be rapidly renegotiated, redesigned and resynchronised in ways not yet fully explored or understood. Social relationships in the home have shifted and adapted as a result of ‘enforced togetherness’. This study presents a rich snapshot of 23 UK designer-architects’ transformative lived experiences of lockdown, using an interpretative phenomenological approach. It identifies four critical socio-spatial affordances that are rooted in the physical and mental wellbeing of the architects/designers. ‘Individuality’ suggests the need for increased physical separation to be alone. ‘Communality’ denotes a need for household members to be together. Both individuality and communality are seen as two opposite dimensions of the socio-spatial affordance of the home. ‘Adaptability’ points to requirements for flexible, decluttered and versatile spaces to enable ‘vibrancy’ not ‘suffocation’. Finally, ‘connectivity’ encompasses the need for a strong connection between the indoors and outdoors. These dimensions must be considered in housing design, so new housing models can emerge. The use of interpretative phenomenological analysis, employing the architectural tool of drawing, is shown to be a useful approach for housing research. PRACTICE RELEVANCE The impact on households’ wellbeing as a consequence of Covid-19 lockdowns has led to new considerations for future housing design. In a post-Covid environment, the particular needs for housing have been transformed. The findings and insights from this study will help to reframe the existing conventions of housing design criteria (e.g. a reliance on defining space functions) toward a clearer set of qualities for inhabitant and household wellbeing. New housing criteria involving socio-spatial affordances of individuality, communality, adaptability, and connectivity are shown to be viable and highly appropriate. These new dimensions highlight how inhabitants’ wellbeing can be included in viable and affordable housing.
ORCID iDs
Marco, Elena, Tahsiri, Mina ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9338-0254, Sinnett, Danielle and Oliveira, Sonja;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 82924 Dates: DateEvent24 March 2022Published17 February 2022AcceptedSubjects: Fine Arts > Architecture Department: Faculty of Engineering > Design, Manufacture and Engineering Management
Faculty of Engineering > ArchitectureDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 26 Oct 2022 09:35 Last modified: 20 Dec 2024 02:07 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/82924