Are these sky-high vertical villages the homes of the future?
Cities in the sky could be the future of housing
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The rise of vertical communities
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In countries such as Singapore and Hong Kong, where city populations are vast and rapidly rising, innovative solutions are needed to tackle space shortages. By building up, these developments allow residents to retain valuable private living space in a cramped city, while also offering collective areas to socialise. A new take on the standard tower block, the vertical village seeks to create active, community-oriented living while minimising isolation.
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The rise of vertical living spaces
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The Interlace, Singapore
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One such building is the award-winning Interlace by architectural firm OMA, which was named as the best building on the planet at the 2015 World Architecture Festival. The design features an innovative collection of horizontal apartment blocks stacked in hexagons around eight external courtyards. It's been hailed as a "trailblazer for contemporary thinking" for its clever integration of indoor and outdoor space.
The Interlace, Singapore
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The Interlace, Singapore
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The Interlace, Singapore
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The Interlace, Singapore
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The structure is composed of 31 apartment blocks, stacked six storeys tall and it's 70 metres wide. The stacking allows light and air to flow through the building, creating a more open city landscape. There's also a mixture of internal and external environments with shared and private outdoor spaces on multiple levels.
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The Interlace, Singapore
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Building a sustainable future
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The Hyperion, New Delhi
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The Hyperion, designed by Paris-based architecture practice Vincent Callebaut and agroecologist Amlankusum, is intended to help solve environmental pollution. The pair have suggested it should be built outside New Delhi, to be completed by 2022.
The Hyperion, New Delhi
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The Hyperion, New Delhi
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The Hyperion, New Delhi
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The Hyperion, New Delhi
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Combined with wood, a steel and concrete substructure was also chosen for its stability. In this location, the architects needed to ensure the building would be earthquake resistant. The finished structure, shown here in renders, looks like nothing else on Earth but could be the future of housing in our ever-growing cities.
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Space-efficient housing solutions
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Space-efficient housing solutions
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Vertical living spaces
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What about inside these vertical villages? Well, privacy and space come at a premium, but architects have worked with interior specialists to create homes that are pleasant to live in, with the maximum amount of personal space possible. This bedroom by KNQ Associates from the Interlace development shows the interplay of space, light and modern design and technology.
Vertical living spaces
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Vertical living spaces
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Vertical villages in the West
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After his success with Interlace, Ole Scheeran revealed plans for a pair of skyscrapers in Vancouver, Canada this year. The Barclay building is designed in a similar way, with irregularly stacked glass boxes interlaced with greenery.
Vertical villages in the West
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Vertical villages in the West
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Architecture and natural spaces
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Vertical villages are designed to be reactive to the environment they’re built in, and that's certainly the case with this community in Liuzhou, China, built by Dutch architecture firm MVRD. Central to the design of these 2,700 new homes was the need to protect the city’s limestone mountains from further erosion and pay homage to the landscape. The answer came in a string of different units, some high rise, some low, that spread over the mountains containing vertical villages and more traditional dwellings.
Architecture and natural spaces
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Architecture and natural spaces
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The Cloud Corridor, Los Angeles, USA
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The Cloud Corridor is a "future concept for residential design in Los Angeles", according to its architects MAD. It’s just one of several virtual village ideas in development by the architects and put nature centre stage in this famously urban city.
The Cloud Corridor, Los Angeles, USA
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The design reorients the streets vertically, with nine interconnected residential towers that redistribute the city to connect disparate neighbourhoods into an upright village, complete with public spaces and gardens in the sky.
READ MORE: Incredible hidden homes in the world's tallest skyscrapers
The Cloud Corridor, Los Angeles, USA
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Urban Forest, China
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Urban Forest, China
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Urban Forest, China
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Retirement villages in the sky
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Retirement villages in the sky
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In New South Wales, Australia, an inquiry into retirement villages recommended integrating seniors’ apartment into high-rise residential developments. This would allow retirees to benefit from the modern design and technology of these buildings, as well as ease isolation by connecting them with the infrastructure of major cities.
READ MORE: 8 of the best retirement villages in America
Vertical Village, Paris, France
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Europe, too, is catching up with the vertical village trend, with big plans to rejuvenate the Paris suburbs. This year, architect Sou Fujimoto, Nicolas Laisné and Dimitri Roussel of illustrious French architect firm Compagnie de Phalsbourg won a competition to build a new mixed-use development in Paris with a design titled simply 'Vertical Village'.
Vertical Village, Paris, France
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Vertical Village, Paris, France
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The future of vertical buildings
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There are plenty of fantastic and imaginative buildings already built, or at least in the design or building stages. But what about further into the future? How are architects going beyond this first iteration of a vertical village? Evolo, a trade architecture magazine runs a regular skyscraper competition, challenging dreamers to take these concepts to the next level.
What's next for vertical villages?
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What's next for vertical villages?
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Planning for the future
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Vertical villages have been lauded for their ability to tackle the demands of a growing population, delivering high-tech solutions for our cramped living situation. Such projects propose an optimistic remedy for modern living, which has become overcrowded, unsustainable and for many, isolating. Here's hoping the way we live in the future will help marry comfortable, spacious living, with our basic human needs for community and company.
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