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here is a well known complex habitant (1964-1967).....
Called
Habitat 67 - which is situated in Montreal-Canada.
HABITAT 67
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It's done by
Moshe Safdie, , C.C., B.Arch., LL.D. , F.R.A.I.C., FAIA (born July 14, 1938) is an architect and urban designer. He was born in the town of Haifa in what was then the British Mandate of Palestine, now Israel. He moved with his family to Montreal, Canada when he was a teenager, a move he disliked as a dedicated Zionist and socialist.
more info...
Moshe Safdie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Housing details & information..
The actual housing area contains 158 housing units in 20 types, ranging from a 1-bedroom 600 ft. square unit to a 4-bedroom house of 1,700 sq. ft. The houses were put together by the use of 354 modular construction units, each 17'6" by 38'6" by 10' high, precast of concrete. After casting, the modular units were taken to a finishing area, where kitchens, bathrooms, window frames, insulation, fixtures, etc. were installed. The unit - weighing 70-90 tons - was then lifted into place by crane.
info plus:
Expo 67 - Habitat - page 1
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Habitat '67 is a striking housing complex located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on the Quai Marc-Drouin on the Saint Lawrence River. It was designed by architect Moshe Safdie based on his master's thesis at McGill University.
It was designed to integrate the variety and diversity of scattered private homes with the economics and density of a modern apartment building. Modular, interlocking concrete forms define the space. The complex was built as part of Expo '67. The project was designed to create affordable housing with close but private quarters, each equipped with a garden. The complex was originally meant to be vastly larger. Ironically, the building's units are now quite expensive rather than "affordable" due to its architectural cachet. It is now a privately owned condominium complex since it was purchased by its tenants in 1985.
Safdie hoped that his vision of interlocking modules would become widespread. However Safdie's attempts to build similar structures elsewhere in the world all failed to be funded.
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Short documentery video about the project.
L’emblème de l’Expo revisité - Moshe Safdie, l’architecte d’Habitat 67 - Les Archives de Radio-Canada
a high resloution for the project just right here.
une version haute résolution ici:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...C_Montreal.jpg