Holistic regenerative design: the Common House by Common Practice

Author: Charlotte Taylor and Will Hawkins

Date published

2 September 2024

Price
Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free
The Institution of Structural Engineers The Institution of Structural Engineers
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Holistic regenerative design: the Common House by Common Practice

Tag
Author
Charlotte Taylor and Will Hawkins
Date published
2 September 2024
Price
Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free
The Structural Engineer
Author

Charlotte Taylor and Will Hawkins

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 102, Issue 9, 2024, Page(s) 22-28

Date published

2 September 2024

Author

Charlotte Taylor and Will Hawkins

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 102, Issue 9, 2024, Page(s) 22-28

Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

This article examines how The Common House project in Bridport, UK, has its roots in the four key principles of regenerative design.

Update

This article was updated on 18 September 2024 to include details of the project team.

Synopsis

In the August 2023 issue of The Structural Engineer, Oliver Broadbent and James Norman presented the principles of regenerative design, and Will Arnold and Phil Isaac discussed how structural engineers can achieve this in buildings through designing for place, circularity and reuse, material choices and knowledge transfer. However, while the article gave example projects for each of these aspects of regenerative design, it noted that case studies that can be considered exemplars in all four areas at once were lacking.

The Common House is a community gathering space and the heart of the Hazelmead co-housing development in Bridport, Dorset, UK. Featuring a locally sourced timber frame, straw-bale wall panels, and concrete-free foundations, its construction was also a catalyst for long-term social engagement and ecological conservation.

The authors believe that the Common House project design process has roots in the four areas outlined above. With a quietly revolutionary vision for its surrounding land and communities, the Common House is a rare case study representing a holistic approach to regenerative design.

Through conversation with designers Common Practice, this article examines the transformative potential of developing construction projects as strategies to empower local communities, support continuous-cover forestry, protect endangered crafts, minimise fossil carbon emissions and promote biogenic carbon storage, and make construction sites spaces of care and support.

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Pages:
22-28
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

Tags

Timber Project Focus Issue 9

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