Project Description
Building Blocks is my proposal for an intervention into the flawed mega housing complexes built on the periphery of borders and cities in Mexico. The project emerged from Fernanda Canales’s Advanced Design Studio where we investigated communities struggling with issues of abandonment and insufficient infrastructure, explored new housing alternatives, and proposed pragmatic yet aspirational interventions. These mega housing developments are suffering from extreme bouts of abandonment because of their false promises, lack of resources, faulty water supply, and segregation from cities.
The proposal stems from collective research into vecindades, a housing typology found throughout Mexico City that weaves together experiences of domestic life through a central corridor where domestic labor can be shared. This research informed conceptual exercises that challenge norms through more flexible relationships between infrastructure and domesticity.
Building Blocks: An Incremental Housing Strategy derives from these collaborative explorations. The project focuses on Paseos del Vergel, a housing complex in Tijuana, Mexico that houses nearly 5,000 people, primarily single mothers with 3,000 identical homes scattered across steep and disconnected topography. The intense terrain impedes communal continuity and circulation between home and school, housing project and city. Moreover, faulty construction has caused a substantial portion of the homes to delaminate and collapse. Despite these issues, residents continue to personalize their spaces and bring life to the otherwise sterile development. Extending the ways that residents have already improved the development, my project seeks to learn from these adaptations and create formal and informal interventions that support this community making.
The project utilizes an incremental mixed-use housing strategy that invests across the entire site through a series of discrete improvements that current and future homeowners can make to their dwellings. By carving and adding into the existing grid, the project seeks to be neither top down or bottom up, but rather serves as a portfolio of critical interventions and a catalogue of possibilities that allow plug and play improvements based on residents’ own needs and desires.