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052-0661-26L 14 Credits BSC D-ARCH

Architectural Design V-IX: (GD A. Solanellas Teres / M. Meister / C. Van Noten)

Please register ( ) only after the internal enrolment for the design classes (see ). Project grading at semester end is based on the list of enrolments on 28.10.2026 (valuation date) only. This is the ultimate deadline to unsubscribe or enroll for the studio.
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Last Updated: 2026-06-03 00:07:21

Abstract

This semester explores “Soft Permanence”: buildings as temporary resting places for materials — not fixed, but moments in a longer chain of transformations. Using a catalogue of more than 100 reused components, we will design collective housing in the Limmattal, rethinking architecture as cycles of reuse and transformation, and exploring new forms of dwelling.

Objective

Designing with a catalogue of reused elements Designing with limitation as a productive constraint Exploring principles of design for disassembly Typological design and plan making Exploring alternative forms of living Reflecting critically on permanence in architecture Model making and 1:1 prototyping

Resources

Literature

What if the most permanent architecture is one that can be easily reused? As buildings face obsolescence through changing needs, we can rethink permanence by adapting and reusing elements with attention to energy, resources, and carbon impact. The logics of extraction are shifting: resources are no longer drawn solely from nature but increasingly from human-made repositories, with our buildings themselves becoming future mines containing reserves of materials. With the notion of Soft Permanence we suggest that permanent architecture is not fixed but open. Buildings do not end as waste when they become obsolete. Their components are waiting to re-enter the material cycle, to find new contexts and new lives. Projects are therefore conceived with the assumption they may one day be moved, altered, or disassembled. They become temporary resting places for materials—moments in a longer chain of transformations. The semester begins with a catalogue of structural components. Prepared in advance, it lets us dive directly into design with what is at hand. The catalogue contains over one hundred components collected from buildings across Switzerland. Some are already dismantled and stored; others still stand but are scheduled for disassembly. Designing in such a way subverts the familiar process. Instead of starting from abstraction, projects grow inductively—from fragment to whole. From the outset we engage with material reality. Elements are not abstract quantities awaiting manufacture but tangible materials to be visited, measured, and reimagined in new constellations. In today’s construction industry of abundance, where almost anything can be fabricated, the catalogue introduces a different yet productive condition: limitation. This semester’s task is to design a collective housing project in the Limmattal, a key territory of Zurich’s future densification. Here we will explore how designing with a catalogue—and the idea of buildings as temporary resting places—can generate new forms of living and challenge norms of dwelling.

General Information

Language
English
Levels
BSC
Frequency
Semesterly recurring

Examination

Type
graded semester performance
Ultimate deadline for changing enrolments for this course is 28.10.2026, 24:00 h.After this date it is strictly forbidden to enrol for the course or to delete the enrolment!

Course Components

Type Title Time & Place Hours
exercise Architectural Design V-IX: (GD A. Solanellas Teres / M. Meister / C. Van Noten)
No teaching on October 20 and 21 (Seminar Week)
No time listed 16 h weekly

Offered In