Is It Possible to Build a Home for $1,000?
By Dawn Wotapka- Ying chee Chui
- This house, with the roof removed, was designed by Ying chee Chui as a part of MIT’s “1K House” project.
That’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.
- Ying chee Chui
- The interior of the low-cost house designed by Ying chee Chui.
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.