HARBOUR HEAVEN
Taking into account the need to fill the gaps that are generated between the large nuclei, the opportunity arises to create a temporary habitat, which allows me to develop my interest in the application of plastic materials in greenhouse architecture while responding to the high demand for decent housing for seasonal workers in the area.
In this case, it is the Prouvé technology that serves as the impetus for the start of the individual project. From the repetition of 3 detailed sections that serve as support for the structure to which the polycarbonate is anchored, 3 elongated flexible modules emerge that house spaces intended for commerce, habitat and production related to greenhouses.
In addition to proposing an outdoor cultivation design adapted to the free space between the modules and equipped with rural post-its that facilitate the storage of supplies, a series of squares are generated that also count with urban post-its and not only act as neighborhood common spaces but also guarantee commercial activity.
Varying in section and size depending on the number of people who inhabit them, the modules meet the temporality factor thanks to a flexible support that allows them to grow or decrease depending on the months of the year to adapt to high and low growing seasons. In this way, we facilitate the stay for seasonal workers who must remain close to them during the harvest season by creating a plastic, light and adaptable architecture.
In this case, it is the Prouvé technology that serves as the impetus for the start of the individual project. From the repetition of 3 detailed sections that serve as support for the structure to which the polycarbonate is anchored, 3 elongated flexible modules emerge that house spaces intended for commerce, habitat and production related to greenhouses.
In addition to proposing an outdoor cultivation design adapted to the free space between the modules and equipped with rural post-its that facilitate the storage of supplies, a series of squares are generated that also count with urban post-its and not only act as neighborhood common spaces but also guarantee commercial activity.
Varying in section and size depending on the number of people who inhabit them, the modules meet the temporality factor thanks to a flexible support that allows them to grow or decrease depending on the months of the year to adapt to high and low growing seasons. In this way, we facilitate the stay for seasonal workers who must remain close to them during the harvest season by creating a plastic, light and adaptable architecture.
- 00 - Description
- 01 - FRONT COVER
- 02 - CONT. DRAWING PART 1
- 03 - Video