A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Summary: The coastal village of Happisburgh in North Norfolk is falling into the sea. The cliffs, dunes and sea defence structures that protect this predominately low-lying county and its extensive freshwater Broads from inundation cannot contend with the force of rising sea levels and climate change. Government policies that allow coastal retreat by failing to intervene with an active policy such as a Shoreline Management Plan, have conspired to leave the village undefended from the action of the sea and the wind. Questions/Aims/Objectives: The Retreating Village looks at the threat of coastal erosion. The project questions whether vulnerable territories can remain occupied and considers how, if so, this occupation might be manifest. The project aims to propose an architectural language of representation and investigation that inhabits the disintegrating territory. Contexts: The project exists in the design research context of conceptual architectural design. Sustainability, climate change, alternative energy, dynamic landscape management and landscape retention schemes are considered, and also the historic context of peripatetic villages. Methods: Normative orthographic demonstrations of architectural space are avoided, and instead drawings utilize multiple viewpoints to emphasis disintegration. A lexicon of architectural devices allow the building to accumulate as the landscape retreats. Models in three scales exhibit the process of collapse and the architecture as it shifts to new ground.
Summary: The coastal village of Happisburgh in North Norfolk is falling into the sea. The cliffs, dunes and sea defence structures that protect this predominately low-lying county and its extensive freshwater Broads from inundation cannot contend with the force of rising sea levels and climate change. Government policies that allow coastal retreat by failing to intervene with an active policy such as a Shoreline Management Plan, have conspired to leave the village undefended from the action of the sea and the wind. Questions/Aims/Objectives: The Retreating Village looks at the threat of coastal erosion. The project questions whether vulnerable territories can remain occupied and considers how, if so, this occupation might be manifest. The project aims to propose an architectural language of representation and investigation that inhabits the disintegrating territory. Contexts: The project exists in the design research context of conceptual architectural design. Sustainability, climate change, alternative energy, dynamic landscape management and landscape retention schemes are considered, and also the historic context of peripatetic villages. Methods: Normative orthographic demonstrations of architectural space are avoided, and instead drawings utilize multiple viewpoints to emphasis disintegration. A lexicon of architectural devices allow the building to accumulate as the landscape retreats. Models in three scales exhibit the process of collapse and the architecture as it shifts to new ground.
Front fulcrum hanging basket retreating device and retreating method thereof
European Patent Office | 2023
|