A few years ago, Swedish student housing company AF Bostäder stuck a young woman from the city of Lund inside a tiny house-box--not even 10 meters squared. (Click Image To Enlarge)
HOUSING IS EXPENSIVE. SO WHY NOT HAVE STUDENTS LIVE IN CUBES THEY CAN AFFORD? THAT'S THE IDEA BEHIND THE "SMART STUDENT UNIT."
A few years ago, Swedish student housing company AF Bostäder had a young woman from the city of Lund inside live in a tiny house-box--not even 10 square meters large--to test the idea of a cheap, cheerful, and environmentally friendly “smart student unit" that included a toilet, kitchen, and bed. Linda Camara of Tengbom Architects, the company behind the 2013 iteration of the living pod--a petite vision in pale wood offset with lime green plant pots, cushions and stools, says.
“I think she still lives there.”
It was to test the idea of a cheap, cheerful and environmentally friendly "smart student unit" that included a toilet, kitchen, and bed. (Click Image To Enlarge)
"I think she still lives there," says Linda Camara of Tengbom Architects, the company behind the 2013 iteration of the living pod--a petite vision in pale wood offset with lime green plant pots, cushions, and stools. (Click Image To Enlarge)
The premise for the cube, which has been in the works since 2007, is reasonable enough -- students live and die on cheap housing, but everyone needs a toilet. (Click Image To Enlarge)
The premise for the cube, which has been in the works since 2007, is reasonable enough: students live and die on cheap housing, but everyone needs a toilet. It’s taken six years to whittle the tiny houses down to the current cross-laminated wooden test model form. The large kitchen was squirreled away in the original blueprint, but Tengbom redesigned it as the prime area after student feedback. The current space-efficient design, complete with a patio and vaulted sleeping area, lowers standard rent rates by 50%--music to the ears of any economically bereft twentysomething.
It’s taken six years to whittle the tiny houses down to the current cross-laminated wooden test model form. (Click Image To Enlarge)
The current space-efficient design, complete with a patio and vaulted sleeping area, lowers standard rent rates by 50%--music to the ears of any economically bereft twentysomething. (Click Image To Enlarge)
Swedish housing regulations require student apartments to cover a minimum of 25 square meters, but Tengbom’s cubes, designed for students at the University of Lund, are the first known exception. (Click Image To Enlarge)
Swedish housing regulations require student apartments to cover a minimum of 25 square meters, but Tengbom’s cubes, designed for students at the University of Lund, are the first known exception. Camara says.
“We have a huge lack of student units in Sweden. Social sustainability is to get more cost-efficient buildings fast and with high quality.”
"We have a huge lack of student units in Sweden," says Camara. "Social sustainability is to get more cost-efficient buildings fast and with high quality". (Click Image To Enlarge)
The units are built with cross-laminated wood sourced from Martinsons, a local manufacturer. (Click Imge To Enlarge)
The small surface area of each unit, combined with minimal transportation costs for local renewable construction materials, drives down the units’ carbon footprint. (Click Image To Enlarge)
And students won’t be freezing their socks off. "To endure the Swedish winter we need to insulate them," says Camara. "Cross laminated wood is enough for other types of houses or in warmer climate". (Click Image To Enlarge)
The units are built with locally sourced wood. The small surface area of each unit, combined with minimal transportation costs for local renewable construction materials, drives down the units’ carbon footprint. And students won’t be freezing their socks off. Camara says.
“To endure the Swedish winter, we need to insulate them. Cross laminated wood is enough for other types of houses or in warmer climate, and the final version must last for 100 years at least.”
Each cube arrives on site as an Ikea-style flat pack--the test model took less than a week to put together.
Camara and the team at Tengbom will roll out a mini village in 2014, with an initial test run of 22 units arranged in blocks of eight. She’s thinking of ways to develop the project so tiny towns pop up on university campuses across Sweden, although Camara can’t promise that every unit will come with the swish green hammock hanging from the kitchen’s pseudo-ceiling in the prototype. She says.
“The design you see here is like a concept car. This is the dream version--and we will fight to make it real.”
The current smart student unit prototype is available for viewing until December 8 at The Virserum Museum in Sweden. For the Swedish students holding keys to the inaugural cube rollout, pooping, eating, and sleeping like a high-functioning hamster could be the new definition of the good life.
COMMENTARY: The rapid rise in housing construction costs has driven up housing prices everywhere, not only in Sweden, but in all developed countries. This often means higher rents, and Sweden is proof of this trend. Linda Camara of Tengbom Architects, the firm that designed the first prototype for the "smart student unit" pod, appears to be on the right track. I like minimalist design, functionality and practicality of the pods. It is probably too confining for some individuals, but would be a perfect place for deep concentration and studying. I could certainly see how some universites might flock to such a concept. The shift to smaller, minimalist apartments is already here, especially in countries with high population densities and a lack of living space. The pods do not take up a lot of room, and if each unit could be pre-fabricated, could be easily constructed by a couple of people in just a few days. The units should be comfortable in both winter and summer, so they will require good insulation to keep the people cool in summer an warm in winter. Looking forward to seeing the production model, and the finished product on university campuses throughout the world. Linda, good luck to you.
Courtesy of an article dated September 17, 2013 appearing in Fast Company Exist
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.