The Borneo Post

Architects, refugees team up on tiny houses in Berlin

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BERLIN: Troubled to see a long queue of asylum seekers shivering for hours on a winter’s day outside Berlin’s notoriousl­y chaotic registrati­on centre, Van Bo Le-Mentzel decided to take action.

“I fetched my drill and collected some wood that I found randomly in the streets and brought it to the line where people were standing there bored to death and we just started building,” the architect told AFP.

The end products were pintsized playhouses that children could crawl into for shelter as well as break up the monotony of the endless wait.

It also marked the birth of the so-called Tiny House University, a project bringing together architects, designers and refugees to experiment with innovative ways to house a population in need.

“We are trying to create new kinds of housing forms in society in which it’s possible to live and survive without having land or money,” said Le-Mentzel.

The tiny house trend emerged several years ago, largely in the United States as people chose to downsize their living space out of environmen­tal or financial concerns.

In Berlin, it has been given a twist for contempora­ry needs.

For a start, Le-Mentzel’s team which includes six refugees, is collaborat­ing with the Bauhaus Archiv to build 20 tiny houses occupying 10 square metres (100 square feet) each.

Together, the houses will form a temporary village on exhibition until March 2018.

Some will serve as lodging, while others are destined to be a library, cafe, workshop or community centre. — Reuters

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