Australia's Anne Street Garden Villas Show 1 Way We Can Fix the Suburbs

2022-04-07 08:44:16 By : Ms. Lily Liao

Many cities are suffering from a housing crisis. There is a shortage of supply of affordable units for young people and even for older people wanting to downsize but stay in their neighborhood. Meanwhile, there are vast subdivisions of suburban houses that are underutilized, taking up big properties that could do so much more.

Anne Street Garden Villas—designed by Anna O'Gorman Architect and located in Southport, Australia—is a set of seven social housing dwellings. O'Gorman writes on Bowerbird that workshops with current social housing tenants "revealed a clear desire for nesting and being part of a community, while still having the sense of autonomy we get from a traditional freestanding home." So she has designed a village of small-scale homes.

Anna O'Gorman Architect writes on its website:

The most remarkable image of the whole project is this context plan, where the seven little houses back onto the rear of a cul-de-sac.

Looking on Google Maps, it appears the project replaced two detached houses in an area that is exclusively detached single-family dwellings: numbers 59 and 61 Anne Street.

Doing something like this is unheard of in North America, yet could and should be a precedent for intensifying and revitalizing low-density suburbs. It provides a mix of housing types and tenures right in the neighborhood. But after as architect Michael Eliason reminds us with this Seattle 1922 publication, this is not how people think in North America.

It's such an interesting site plan:

Another concern was adaptability: "As society changes, it is vital that social housing does too. Themes including working from home and the changing demographics of social housing residents emerged in the workshop, allowing us to better understand how these homes will be used both now and into the future."

There is so much fine detail in this project, like the screen wall made out of concrete blocks turned on their sides.

It's hard to imagine a project like this being built in North America, where all the new development happens on noisy and polluted main streets and the only reason single-family houses get knocked down is to build bigger single-family houses. 'NIMBY' (Not In My Back Yard) resistance to building social housing in the midst of a developed residential area would be an anathema. But O'Grady shows us a model that is different, building little homes instead of bigger buildings.

The Brisbane-based architecture studio concludes in a post:

There's lots more to read on O'Gorman's website, where she lists eight key strategies that could be applied anywhere:

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