Is It Possible to Build a Home for $1,000?
By Dawn WotapkaThat’s the challenge architects at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology tried to tackle. They recently unveiled the first prototype from the “1K House” project, an effort to produce low-cost homes in poor areas and regions struck by natural disaster. While the tiny price tag wasn’t possible, the mission remains noble.
“There is a huge proportion of the world’s population that has pressing housing needs,” says Tony Ciochetti, a professor with the Cambridge, Mass., school’s Center for Real Estate. “Can you build affordable, sustainable shelter for such a large population?”
The prototype, dubbed the Pinwheel House, was designed by Ying chee Chui, a 2011 graduate of MIT’s Department of Architecture. Measuring 800 square feet, it was constructed in Mianyang, part of China’s Sichuan province.
The house boasts a modular layout with hollow brick walls with steel bars for reinforcement and wooden box beams. It is designed to withstand a magnitude 8.0 earthquake.
MIT’s project shows that plenty of hurdles remain before any home can be manufactured for $1,000. “If it were easy, somebody would have done it,” Mr. Ciochetti points out.