DSC03274.jpg

mass support

a radical new way of thinking about mass housing…

 
 

Mass Support: Building Frameworks of the Stichting Architecten Research (SAR)

Between 1964 and 1990, the Stichting Architecten Research (Foundation for Architectural Research, or SAR) proposed a radical new way of thinking about mass housing, one that would fuse the efficiency of industrial construction with the flexibility of user customization. Initially led by John Habraken, the first dean of the TU/e’s Department of the Built Environment, the SAR suggested new functions for the construction industry, for households, and, crucially, for architects. Rooted in a deep commitment to research and observation, the SAR conceived the role of architecture as negotiating between communal responsibility and individual control.

For over 25 years, the SAR advocated for this vision through a variety of means: SAR members published articles, entered design competitions, taught at architecture schools, and delivered speeches and in-office presentations. In the Netherlands of the 1960s, these ideas resonated with a society facing a serious housing crisis that demanded large-scale, rational, and industrial solutions. In the 1970s and early ‘80s, SAR’s vision converged with a desire to democratize housing and offer opportunities for participation.

This exhibition surveyed both the context and the outputs of the SAR, presenting a selection of drawings, models, project photos, and texts that tell the story of this bold experiment to reshape housing production and, eventually, to reimagine architecture and industrial construction more broadly.

 

date

June 16 - July 30, 2022

 

venue

TU Eindhoven

 

Team

Sergio M. Figueiredo

Catja Edens

Jorn Konijn

Simon Rabyniuk

Cassim Shepard

Andreea Sofineti

Vincent van Spaendonk

with

Koen van Dijk

PARTNERS

CASA Vertigo



 

 
 
 
 
 

photos by Norbert van Onna, Cassim Shepard and Anna Zambrini

 
 

other installations

Spitzer School of Architecture at CUNY

March 21 -

May 7, 2023

 
 
 

related

The Legacy of the SAR

Public Conversation