Event
Six Takes on Housing After the Neoliberal Turn
Mar. 03, 2023
1:00pm to 7:00pm
MD Anderson Hall, Farish Gallery

Presenters: Emanuel Christ (Christ & Gantenbein, Basel; ETH Zurich), Sophie Delhay (Sophie Delay Architecte, Paris, EPF Lausanne), Simon Hartmann (HHF Architects, Basel; Karlsruhe Institute of Technology); Éric Lapierre (Experience, Paris; EPF Lausanne); Oliver Lütjens (Lütjens Padmanabhan Architekt*innen, Zurich; Harvard GSD); Christian Inderbitzin (Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin Architekt*innen, Zurich; Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)

Respondents: Scott Colman (Assistant Professor, Rice Architecture), Andrew Colopy (Associate Professor, Rice Architecture), Albert Pope (Professor, Rice Architecture), Troy Schaum (Associate Professor, Rice Architecture), Brittany Utting, (Assistant Professor, Rice Architecture), Jesús Vassallo (Associate Professor, Rice Architecture)

Panelists: Kevin Batchelor (Hines), Ryan LeVasseur (Rice Management Company), Elaine Morales (Connective/Houston Community Land Trust), George Ristow (University Architect), Eva Thibaudeau (Temenos CDC)

 

Friday, March 3 – 1:00-6:00pm

  • On Efficiency | Presenter: Oliver Lütjens (CH), Respondent: Brittany Utting (Assistant Professor, Rice Architecture)

  • On Adaptability | Presenter: Simon Hartmann (CH), Respondent: Andrew Colopy (Associate Professor, Rice Architecture)

  • On Typology | Presenter: Emanuel Crist (CH), Respondent, Albert Pope (Professor,Rice Architecture)

Friday, March 3 – 6:00pm

  • Roundtable | More Than Fifteen Years–What About Houston?

    • Kevin Batcherlor | Senior Managing Director, Hines

    • Ryan Levasseur | Managing Director, Real Estate Development, Rice Management Company

    • Elaine Morales | Director, Partnerships & Policy, Connective; Board Member, Houston Community Land Trust

    • George Ristow | University Architect, Rice University

    • Eva Thibaudeau | Chief Executive Officer, Temenos CDC

    • Reto Geiser (moderator)  | Rice Architecture

 

Housing is a universal challenge, and yet it is often perceived as a narrowly defined problem, dominated by such forces as a rationalized construction industry, restrictive policies and codes, or volatile real estate markets and their supporting instruments. Without a doubt, the housing question is intricately tied to global economic as well as local sociocultural and political forces. With an interest in the potentials of housing as an architectural challenge, this symposium will showcase the work of six architects active in and around Switzerland. It will offer perspectives on housing that transcend the frequent divide between social responsibility and profit maximization, reflecting programmatic and formal speculations that are responsive at all scales, and address technical and cultural challenges in architectural terms.

Housing is all too often neglected as a design problem in the United States. Its advancement is left to investors and developers, who treat housing as a commodity, to be depreciated over only fifteen years. The shifting dynamics of this market are particularly evident in a polycentric urban agglomeration like Houston, the fourth largest and one of the most diverse cities in the United States. In demand are revised models of inhabitation that offer attractive housing opportunities for all social strata, in proximity to workplaces and public infrastructures, and consequently with a reduced dependency on the car as a mode of transportation. What if we designed and built more responsibly, with fewer resources, and for a shared future beyond the cycle of fifteen years?

This symposium aims to expose local architects, stakeholders, as well as students to alternative approaches and research on the housing question. The critical assessment of the discussed models and practices, and their potential adaptation and adoption under the crucial consideration of local socio-economic, political, environmental, and cultural forces, will contribute to an expanding discourse on contemporary dwelling in Houston and beyond.

 

For information regarding visitor parking on the Rice campus, please visit parking.rice.edu.

More Than Fifteen Years: Six Takes on Housing After the Neoliberal Turn, is organized by Associate Professor Reto Geiser with the Consulate General of Switzerland
in Atlanta, in partnership with Presence Switzerland, Swissnex in Boston and New York, and with support from Schindler, and Rice Architecture.

Join the sessions with us streaming live on YouTube.

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