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Housing Crisis: The Latest Architecture and News

The World's Most Expensive Cities in 2017 (And Why They Are So Expensive)

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As anyone who has recently attempted apartment-hunting in a major urban area will know, reasonably-priced housing can be difficult to come by for many and salaries don’t always seem to match the cost of living. This gap is contributing to housing crises in developed and developing countries worldwide. People are simply being priced out of cities, where housing has become a commodity instead of a basic human right. Financial speculation and states’ support of financial markets in a way that makes housing unaffordable has created an unsustainable global housing crisis.

Earlier this year the 13th Annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey was released for 2017, revealing that the number of “severely unaffordable” major housing markets rose from 26 to 29 this year; the problem is getting worse. The study evaluates 406 metropolitan housing markets in nine of the world's major economies and uses the “median multiple” approach to determine affordability. By dividing the median house price by the median household income of an area, this method is meant to be a summary of “middle-income housing affordability.”

Forget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future

In major cities around the world, buildable land is at a premium. At the same time, a continued trend of urban migration has led to a shortage of houses, inspiring a wealth of innovative solutions from architects and designers. Swedish firm Manofactory have literally taken housing solutions to a new level, questioning why we need to build at ground level at all.

Many animals, including birds, build their nests in trees, under roof tiles or in rock crevices above the ground. Humans already build simple nesting boxes for birds to live in, causing Manofactory to question why we can’t build nesting boxes for ourselves – a simple house with several rooms, windows, and climate protection. Pointing to the numerous cliff walls in cities across northern Scandinavia and elsewhere, Manofactory have designed the Nestinbox – a small wooden house with a steel structure to be mounted on sheer cliff faces.

Forget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future - SustainabilityForget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future - SustainabilityForget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future - SustainabilityForget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future - SustainabilityForget Treehouses - Cliffhouses are the Future - More Images+ 1

Deep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai

Deep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai - HousingDeep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai - HousingDeep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai - HousingDeep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai - HousingDeep³ Courtyard / Atelier Lai - More Images+ 38

  • Architects: Atelier Lai
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  650
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2015

Video: House Housing - "An Untimely History of Architecture and Real Estate"

House Housing, "An Untimely History of Architecture and Real Estate in Nineteen Episodes", was recently exhibited at Columbia University's Casa Muraro in Venice. Staged as an "open house" organised and funded by the Buell Center, the exhibition responded unsolicited to Rem Koolhaas's call to exhibitors at the 2014 Venice Biennale to focus on Fundamentals by exploring housing in nineteen "discrete episodes." In narrating these episodes, brought together from across the last one hundred years in a mixture of domestic media, the exhibition brought together a collection of excerpts from global processes.