Rural Dwelling/Living City II

SuperStudio 7

Rory Caithness, Teaching Fellow
Roisin Hyde, Teaching Fellow

 

This year the studio will continue to consider housing in both rural and urban contexts within Northern Ireland. In the first semester we will begin by Drawing Landscape. As a studio all year groups together will begin by looking at the rich tapestry of rural Northern Ireland as if from the air and mark the topography, rivers and edges which form the divisions of wild and agricultural land. We will make drawings of this landscape and compare it to others from around the world to better understand it. 

Sean Crilly

Sean Crilly


Following this we will explore series of small projects at Castle Ward — Camping Pods, Tiny Houses and Rangers Houses. Masters Students will masterplan these projects and conduct research on the site. Concurrently, Masters students will also be conducting an overview and analysis of various Rural Design guides such as Building on Tradition and investigating Dispersed Rural Communities (DRCs) within Northern Ireland. Through this we will define a series of sites in which to make proposals for ‘Clachan Style’ clusters of Dwellings. These homes will be remote, yet highly connected. 

“The word ‘clachan’, a derivative of the Scottish Gaelic, translates as ‘stone’ or ‘rock’ and is most commonly used in the North of Ireland, including the North West County of Donegal.”

The Clachan Housing Settlement Pattern in North West Ireland, J. William Carswell

 

Through an in depth precedent study we will uncover the essence of the traditional Clachan as a typology — controlled scale, intimacy, material consistency across all buildings, consistency of form and massing and each individual building having a sense of being part of a collective whole. This collectiveness generated a strong sense of community, and often the external spaces around the houses were shared and communal.

“Clachans... Such was the apparently random nature of their layout that in the words of one 19th century writer, they appeared to have fallen ‘in a shower from the sky”

UAHS Modern Ulster Architecture

In the second semester we will again shift our focus towards Belfast, our biggest city. This year we will consider the rural / urban peripheral edges where the city meets the countryside. Through analysis of highly sustainable emerging case studies in Scotland, England and elsewhere we will establish an agenda for a new way of living in an edge of City location. We will explore ideas for Live / Work, new sustainable methods of construction, along with new methods of connectivity (do we all need to own a car?). At the heart of everything we do will be fostering a sense of Community and Neighbourhood — as these are the fundamental ingredients for creating good places to live.


Samantha Gibson

Samantha Gibson



Reading Materials

STUDIO RESEARCH STATEMENT

Research Questions and Theme

The studio considers housing in both rural and urban contexts within Northern Ireland exploring issues such as depopulation in rural towns and villages and the lack of quality family and community orientated housing in the centre of our main city — Belfast. There is a high demand for new housing in Northern Ireland, and in particular social housing. Architects must be involved in this process to ensure quality and through discourse and dissemination our studio aims to make a positive contribution to this critical area of work. In the second year of the studio we are considering Dispersed Rural Communities (DRCs) and how we might make proposals for ‘Clachan style’ clusters of 3–6 dwellings. In the second semester we will again shift our focus towards Belfast, our biggest city. This year we will consider the rural / urban peripheral edges where the city meets the countryside.

Description and Methods

A key driver of the studio is the consideration of scale — exploring the context we are working in on the scale of the country (Northern Ireland) through drawings of the landscape, the scale of the city through figure / ground drawings through to the human scale of a room through the making of 1:20 physical study models. The basic structure of the studio itself sees each semester culminate in design projects which shift in scale as we move from rural to urban. Through these drawings and models, we develop our student’s abilities to shift fluidly back and forward between these scales, the city and the room. Precedent study is another critical aspect of our studio method — both of contemporary work and looking back to pioneering social housing projects of the 60’s and 70’s (in London in particularly) and further back again to traditional dwelling typologies. Our critical precedent study at present is the Clachan cluster, in particular those built up until the mid-19th Century in Ireland. Desmond McCourt’s Mapping of Clachans in Ireland c1840 is a key reference point evidencing the predominance of this typology at the time. These traditional Clachan clusters have gradually disappeared during the course of the 20th Century. Through an in depth study we will uncover the essence of the traditional Clachan as a typology — controlled scale, intimacy, material consistency across all buildings, consistency of form and massing and each individual building having a sense of being part of a collective whole. This collectiveness generated a strong sense of community, and often the external spaces around the houses were shared and communal. As we again shift from the rural to urban (or sub-urban) context half way through the year we hope this study of shared communal spaces from our Clachan precedent, the spaces in between the homes, might manifest itself in housing proposals on a bigger scale. Also, through analysis of highly sustainable emerging case studies in Scotland, England and elsewhere we will establish an agenda for a new way of living in an edge of City location. We will explore ideas for live / work, new sustainable methods of construction, along with new methods of connectivity (do we all need to own a car?). At the heart of everything we do will be fostering a sense of Community and Neighbourhood ± as these are the fundamental ingredients for creating good places to live.

Findings and Dissemination

The studios findings are ultimately recorded in the student portfolios. In the post-covid context we now have the ability to make a digital record of the portfolios and catalogue the work. Dissemination is by studio exhibition, online publication on social media and websites and, we hope, by our graduates going out into practice to put their findings into action.

MAKE THIS BIG.jpg

SuperStudio Imagery

 For more information on this SuperStudio, please contact Rory Caithness

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