Project

The High Life

March 7, 2016

Project by SOM and CAMESgibson.

Contributors

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © David Schalliol.

The High Life is a proposal for novel domestic arrangements made possible by a new residential high-rise building type that allows the broadest range of housing options in the urban tower. Seeking to indirectly address some of the pressing problems of urban life in Chicago’s neighborhoods, this alternative building type is born from three bold ideas:

  1. A Transit-Oriented Development (TOD) zoning initiative within 900’ of all CTA and Metra stations in under-developed neighborhoods allows building heights of 450’ and unlimited floor area ratio (FAR) when unit price points are guaranteed to be representative of wealth distribution of the city as a whole.
  2. A small footprint “tree trunk” structure can allow for a flexible and inclusive range of housing types and lifestyles. Anything from micro apartments to the single-family house can be accommodated in a vertical aggregation of idealized and personalized dwellings at the density of the city.
  3. The tower’s systems and innovative structure are a neighborhood chassis that turns the building core into a new vertical public domain with privately owned cantilevered trays. This arrangement would operate the same way streets and city blocks are constructed with speculative lots being sold to individuals to do as they please (within the rules of the codes).

The range of flexibility and architectural character that this building type could assume is apparent in this presentation. The model offers a gracefully minimal version that allows the essential building principals to be understood through the tower’s composition of an additive manufactured compression core, outriggers, and self-actuating tension members with trays for idealized homes and gardens. Meanwhile, the drawing of a number of towers eludes to the proposal’s acceptance of a somewhat haphazard diversity and potential vitality common to socially and economically resilient neighborhoods.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © SOM and CAMESgibson.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © David Schalliol.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © David Schalliol.

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The High Life, BOLD: Alternative Scenarios for Chicago, CAB, 2015. © David Schalliol.

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TEAM

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM)
Brian Lee, Bill Baker, Andrew Obendorf, Benton Johnson, Anthony Dombrowski, and Jacob Gay.

CAMESgibson
Grant Gibson, Aura Venckunaite, and Drew Stanley.

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