Thursday, March 28, 2019

Hong Kong High-Rises Containing Multi-Story Homes

Laurence Grigorov, as director of a residential property development company, constantly looks for inspiration from international architectural designs and trends in order to keep the development projects that the company is involved in, relevant and modern. Laurence Grigorov is well aware of space constraints around the world especially in modern dense urban areas and believes that novel and creative methods and designs are required to cater for future urban growth.
A new proposed project by Chicago studio Kwong von Glinow has caught Laurence Grigorov’s attention as it deals directly with this issue.
Apartments are made up of rooms stacked on top of one another in this extreme vertical housing proposal titled Tower within a Tower, the scheme tries to solve an issue that is typical in traditional "pancake stacks" of apartments – the lack of opportunity for neighbourly activity.
Kwong Von Glinow's proposal, which won a challenge to create new housing typologies for Hong Kong, reimagines the apartment unit as a collection of spaces stacked on top of each other vertically rather than arranged on a horizontal plane.
Each customisable apartment would be assembled off-site from a selection of modules, chosen according to the needs of future inhabitants. These units would then be brought to the site and stacked on top of each other to form an apartment building. Each successive floor of every unit would have a smaller footprint, causing the vertical apartments to take on a pyramid-like appearance and opening up space between the upper floors of the homes.
Alison Von Glinow, co-founder of the studio alongside Lap Chi Kwong, emphasises that the spaces between units have been opened up to foster community amongst the building's residents. "We realised that corridors are often an unused space," she said. "In Tower within a Tower, means of access double as a space for communal activity."
The pyramid-like arrangement of rooms in each living unit would create an internal network of corridors and landings between the homes. "Sometimes these spaces could be used as private balconies for owners of the tower units, or they could be be used communally as gardens, or places where people can hang their laundry between units," explained Von Glinow.
The modular proposal has been designed to offer residents of the buildings flexibility in the design of their homes. "The units would be assembled and brought to the site, and then more or less stacked on top of each other" Von Glinow said. "The interior could be manufactured level-by-level off site, almost like a custom kind of container box."
"The interiors are very simple fit-outs that allow the resident to customise their space in their own way."
This project is part of Dezeen x MINI Living Initiative, a collaboration with MINI Living exploring how architecture and design can contribute to a brighter urban future through a series of videos and talks.

Words and photo courtesy of www.dezeen.com