Livable Low-carbon City

13: the future of single family homes

January 26, 2023 Michael Eliason Season 1 Episode 13
13: the future of single family homes
Livable Low-carbon City
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Livable Low-carbon City
13: the future of single family homes
Jan 26, 2023 Season 1 Episode 13
Michael Eliason

Two years ago, a German newspaper ran a piece hinting that Green Party Bundestag member Anton Hofreiter was calling for a ban on new single family homes. Hofreiter had not been calling for a ban on single family homes, but rather an end to subsidies that cater to sprawling detached single family homes, as well as the lower energy efficiency standards they were required to meet, compared to attached homes. 

After this, the Wuestenrot Stiftung - a foundation focusing on arts, culture, education, and questions around the future - published criteria for a design award on future-oriented single family homes. 

In this week’s episode, we’ll be talking about some of these projects, and what we believe the future of single family homes in the U.S. will be.

Further reading...

Catch  Mike Eliason's piece on Seattle's single family zoning history on the Urbanist.

Larch Lab's page on Baugruppen, with several links and examples.

Bauen im Luecke, a single family home slotted into an 11'-6" wide parcel between two buildings in a perimeter block in Koeln, by Wolfgang Zeh.

Alles Unter einem Dach - a 24 home family friendly, multigenerational, low energy mass timber baugruppe in rural Bayern, by Arc architekten.

Oosterwold co-living, a 9-unit baugruppe outside Almere, by Bureau SLA and ZakerMaker.

The  Wuestenrot Stiftung's publication on the winners and entrants for the future-oriented single family home (pdf, German).

Lastly, to stay up to date with what Michael Eliason is doing at Larch Lab, be sure to sign up for newsletter updates.     

Show Notes

Two years ago, a German newspaper ran a piece hinting that Green Party Bundestag member Anton Hofreiter was calling for a ban on new single family homes. Hofreiter had not been calling for a ban on single family homes, but rather an end to subsidies that cater to sprawling detached single family homes, as well as the lower energy efficiency standards they were required to meet, compared to attached homes. 

After this, the Wuestenrot Stiftung - a foundation focusing on arts, culture, education, and questions around the future - published criteria for a design award on future-oriented single family homes. 

In this week’s episode, we’ll be talking about some of these projects, and what we believe the future of single family homes in the U.S. will be.

Further reading...

Catch  Mike Eliason's piece on Seattle's single family zoning history on the Urbanist.

Larch Lab's page on Baugruppen, with several links and examples.

Bauen im Luecke, a single family home slotted into an 11'-6" wide parcel between two buildings in a perimeter block in Koeln, by Wolfgang Zeh.

Alles Unter einem Dach - a 24 home family friendly, multigenerational, low energy mass timber baugruppe in rural Bayern, by Arc architekten.

Oosterwold co-living, a 9-unit baugruppe outside Almere, by Bureau SLA and ZakerMaker.

The  Wuestenrot Stiftung's publication on the winners and entrants for the future-oriented single family home (pdf, German).

Lastly, to stay up to date with what Michael Eliason is doing at Larch Lab, be sure to sign up for newsletter updates.