Collection by Lee Loewen
Many full-time residents of the large, C-shaped hall constructed their “roll towers” using wood panels, steel structural frames, and glass windows or fabric curtains. “People were free to use the material they liked,” says Mätti.
Many full-time residents of the large, C-shaped hall constructed their “roll towers” using wood panels, steel structural frames, and glass windows or fabric curtains. “People were free to use the material they liked,” says Mätti.
In an affordable housing complex in Zurich, Mätti Wüthrich, Eva Maria Küpfer, Alex Popert, Gaba Lopes, and Katharina Riedl live in movable structures inside an open communal space called a “hall.” An arrangement traditionally found in squats, their home is the first legal example of hall living in Switzerland.
In an affordable housing complex in Zurich, Mätti Wüthrich, Eva Maria Küpfer, Alex Popert, Gaba Lopes, and Katharina Riedl live in movable structures inside an open communal space called a “hall.” An arrangement traditionally found in squats, their home is the first legal example of hall living in Switzerland.
In an affordable housing complex in Zurich, Mätti Wüthrich, Eva Maria Küpfer, Alex Popert, Gaba Lopes, and Katharina Riedl live in movable structures inside an open communal space called a “hall.” An arrangement traditionally found in squats, their home is the first legal example of hall living in Switzerland.
In an affordable housing complex in Zurich, Mätti Wüthrich, Eva Maria Küpfer, Alex Popert, Gaba Lopes, and Katharina Riedl live in movable structures inside an open communal space called a “hall.” An arrangement traditionally found in squats, their home is the first legal example of hall living in Switzerland.
Floor Plan of Project01 by Instead
Floor Plan of Project01 by Instead