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Cultivating Architecture

Part 2 Project 2013
Donn Holohan
University College Dublin | Ireland
This architectural thesis acknowledges that we survive on this planet as a consequence of our interaction with a set of co-dependent and synergistic organic systems. As in nature, a building cannot have one function, nor can it characterise a linear system of production, consumption and waste. It must form a symbiotic relationship with its neighbours and with the environment as a whole. The validity of architecture should be the measure of its success in this regard - any constructions that are inconsistent with our ecological systems will ultimately prove destructive and thus could not be considered ethical.

Our duty as architects is to develop a rigorous and moral framework which precedes the design process. This thesis is in search of a rationale by which architecture can be made ethical and respond simultaneously to the legacy of the built environment, whilst also addressing the social and environmental problems which are result of deficiencies within our collective philosophy.

Architecture should, both on a micro and macro level, respond to the opportunities presented by the site and reflect the limits imposed by an ecological reality. The configuration of resources and the existing social systems should define the activity therein, rather than a perceived need or arbitrary plan based on an unquestioned adherence to an existing framework. As architects, we should become the facilitators of good systems - questioning at every stage the ethical and moral value of both the framework within which we work, as well as the structures that are a product of that intangible construction.

By utilising a waste stream and an abandoned building, it is theoretically possible to create a living system with zero energy requirements which creates employment, provide homes, produces food and offers a range of social services that cost the community nothing in their maintenance. This also reduces the requirement for the huge investment in energy it costs to retain the current status quo. The cultivation of the environment in which one lives also fosters an intense relationship with both the seasonal and the temporal, thereby restoring a semblance of balance with the natural order.


Tutor(s)
Ms Sheila O'Donnell
Emmett Scanlon
2013
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