National Repository of Grey Literature 5 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Baugruppe in Rosice u Brna
Vantová, Klaudia ; Navrátil, Václav (referee) ; Suchánek, Radek (advisor)
This thesis is concerned with designing an architectural solution for housing that merges individual needs with community support. It draws on insights into the growing individualism and loneliness in contemporary society, as well as the tradition of home ownership and its impact on perceptions of safety in homes. The thesis aims to identify ways to create an environment that promotes sharing and community bonds while respecting the need for privacy. Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
Baugruppe in Rosice u Brna
Ondrušová, Alica ; Janďourek, Jiří (referee) ; Suchánek, Radek (advisor)
This work is dedicated to the problem of unaffordability of housing in modern cities and seeks for solutions using the participatory baugruppe method. The issue of availability of housing is part of the complex and dynamic organism of every urbanized environment. The aim of the work is to examine why housing is unaffordable for many residents and how we can help them. We are looking for ways to overcome the barriers that still prevent people from accessing affordable and quality housing. The baugruppe participatory housing method, which involves the community in the process of designing and building their housing, appears to be a promising way to achieve this balance. It is necessary to find a balance between the effort to preserve the authentic form of the urban environment and the need for new, current solutions in the field of residential architecture. The baugruppe method can help us create a sustainable and inclusive urban environment where all residents can find a home.
Baugruppe in Rosice u Brna
Pokrivčák, Marek ; Hendrych, Jan (referee) ; Suchánek, Radek (advisor)
The Baugruppe project in Rosice aims to show new possibilities of living in the centre of a small town. An important aspect before and during the design process was the study of the concept of participatory living, based on which the design itself could be adapted to in a way that would correspond best to the needs of the predicted community and the context of the place. The result of this diploma project was the verification of feasibility of the project in the given place.
How will we live together?
Wintner, Roman ; Kocián, Václav (referee) ; Kratochvíl, Jan (advisor)
In my thesis How We Will Live Together I deal with the phenomenon of participatory housing. The first phase of the thesis is a research in which I analyse types of community housing from abroad, I examine the history of collective housing in the Czech Republic. I focus on different possibilities of participation within housing, which I demonstrate with real examples. I try to point out the still insufficient support of similarly oriented projects that could have a positive impact on the development of the housing issue in the country. In the second phase of the thesis, I develop a characterization of a fictive group of people, a community, on which I try to demonstrate the functioning and feasibility of a participatory housing project and the bottom-up model. The result is an architectural design on the site of the former sugar factory in Šlapanice, taking into account the interests and needs of the site and the community. It is a kind of reflection pointing out the possibilities and variability of the implementation of such a project in specific Czech conditions. I am basing my ideas on a foreign model, which I am trying to transfer to the territory of a more relaxed development. An important consideration in the work is given to the questions of the future in connection with housing. In the project I am working with the design of 5 different buildings, one of which also serves as a common centre for the community. The buildings are characterised by different approaches to design according to the individuality of the group of owners. I bring further considerations of possible functioning through the different zoning of the plots without strict subdivision and the different approach to the use of cars. As a paradoxical response of future housing, I bring a return to tradition and customs similar to the village environment. Not only in connection with cultivation, poultry farming, escape from hecticness, but especially with an orientation towards real values and healthy relationships, which can be mediated precisely by participatory housing.
How will we live together?
Wintner, Roman ; Kocián, Václav (referee) ; Kratochvíl, Jan (advisor)
In my thesis How We Will Live Together I deal with the phenomenon of participatory housing. The first phase of the thesis is a research in which I analyse types of community housing from abroad, I examine the history of collective housing in the Czech Republic. I focus on different possibilities of participation within housing, which I demonstrate with real examples. I try to point out the still insufficient support of similarly oriented projects that could have a positive impact on the development of the housing issue in the country. In the second phase of the thesis, I develop a characterization of a fictive group of people, a community, on which I try to demonstrate the functioning and feasibility of a participatory housing project and the bottom-up model. The result is an architectural design on the site of the former sugar factory in Šlapanice, taking into account the interests and needs of the site and the community. It is a kind of reflection pointing out the possibilities and variability of the implementation of such a project in specific Czech conditions. I am basing my ideas on a foreign model, which I am trying to transfer to the territory of a more relaxed development. An important consideration in the work is given to the questions of the future in connection with housing. In the project I am working with the design of 5 different buildings, one of which also serves as a common centre for the community. The buildings are characterised by different approaches to design according to the individuality of the group of owners. I bring further considerations of possible functioning through the different zoning of the plots without strict subdivision and the different approach to the use of cars. As a paradoxical response of future housing, I bring a return to tradition and customs similar to the village environment. Not only in connection with cultivation, poultry farming, escape from hecticness, but especially with an orientation towards real values and healthy relationships, which can be mediated precisely by participatory housing.

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