Inevitably, the pandemic outbreak had us to live in a different lifestyle as a new norm. People live with new proximity between one another, keeping a safe and distant ‘gap’ apart physically. Indeed, the social distancing that prevents spreading of disease should never be ignored, but the social connection in a high-dense urbanity is equally important to individual mental health. This ‘gap’ of social relationship is often latent and ambiguous, is now becoming more prevailing at this critical moment.

Nevertheless, how could we rethink this ‘gap’ to disconnect people as a safety measure, yet connect them socially at the same time? This question forms the overarching foreground of this theoretical proposal, fostering new idea to reconsider the ‘gap’ between people and their living spaces. Taking affordable housing as a template, we anticipate a paradigm shift of collective living in affordable housing from a rigid and organized framework into an self-exploratory odyssey.

Analogous to the game of ‘snakes and ladders’, the architecture provides endless circulation with a series of alternating programme and alternating accessibility which initiate the disconnection within. This disconnection is dominated by a grid system that embraces the ‘gaps’ yet leaves a breathable space for the possibility of re-connection and human interaction. Amidst a gradually compact and fast-paced lifestyle within a city, the ‘gap’ is essentially vital for us to pause, ease, relief, and disconnect to connect once again.

Project Info


Project Type : Post-Pandemic Housing Design CompetitionLand Size : NilYear : 2021Location : ImagineryTeam : Yi Yang, Yiming, Wei JianAward : Spetial Mention

TRAA Post-Pandemic Housing Design Competition


GAPS: Disconnect To Connect

the Pandemic Outbreak in 2019

Prologue

The Concept

The "Disconnection"

The "Connection"

The Rendezvous of Disconnection & Connection

Conclusion

The Team

The End.