What is the role of the architect in 'homemaking'?
'The State of Alextendra' discovers ways to extend Neave Brown’s iconic Alexandra Estate into the 21st century by redefining 'homemaking', and proposes a form of affordable housing that reacts to changing tenant needs and identities. The project creates a utopic vision of a form of housing that allows tenants to continually readapt their environments using local, recycled materials.
The State of Alextendra firstly challenges the form of housing and discovers ways to allow tenants within Alexandra Estate to grow and modify their flats using temporary structures to rearrange the listed components of the iconic estate. It provides new opportunities for flat extensions (called 'Alextensions') whilst retaining the estate's historic value.
On a site adjacent to Alexandra Estate the project reveals how tenants can sustainably have a leading role in the process of their own homemaking. This challenges the traditional process of delivering housing schemes by introducing a 'market-esque' typology that believes people should live in homes, not in housing units.
Celebrating the everyday: a community laundrette, a swimming pool, a recycling bin area and a workshop where tenants build components for their extensions using local recycling.
The mixed-tenured community trade modules of space amongst each other so they can adapt their flat conditions to suit their different needs, tastes and income levels.