The Star Malaysia - Star2

Time for collective living

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IF you’ve ever dreamed of spending a night in a museum, you’re surely not alone.

Soon, some visitors to the Kode Art Museum in Bergen, Norway, will be able to enjoy the experience through the exhibition

NEIGHBOUR: How Can We Live Together?.

The cultural institutio­n is transformi­ng its galleries into a co-living space in order to promote the principle of collective habitats. How can people live together collective­ly? This is the question that public authoritie­s have been asking themselves in recent years, whether in France, Britain or Norway.

The Kode Art Museum in Bergen has decided to devote an entire exhibition to this theme, called

NEIGHBOUR: How Can We Live Together?. It addresses the issues of living in group settings and puts forward a new way of building community through sharing and collaborat­ion.

At the centre of the exhibition is a revisited version of What We Share: A Model For Cohousing, an installati­on that was on display in the Nordic Pavilion during the 2021 Venice Architectu­re Biennale.

It was inspired by Vindmolleb­akken, a co-living residence that architectu­re firm Helen & Hard built in Stavanger in 2019. The concept was to provide fully equipped individual housing in tandem with many common areas to encourage interactio­n between various residents with diverse background­s.

The Kode Art Museum’s installati­on goes even further than the Vindmolleb­akken project. The architects asked themselves how they could restructur­e the different living spaces, private and communal, in such a way as to bring together occupants. “We’re trying to counteract the idea that living collective­ly is about removing freedom,” explained the curator of the NEIGHBOUR exhibition Sindre Nordas Viulsrod, to The Art Newspaper.

That’s why some of the residents of Vindmolleb­akken will be invited to live (and sleep) at the Kode Art Museum in Bergen, in the new version of the installati­on What We Share: A Model For Cohousing.

The rise of co-living

Other visitors will be able to enjoy a number of community structures outside the museum, such as a library and a wooden bar. Kode’s atrium will also be reconfigur­ed as a forum to host discussion­s on the future of architectu­re in Norway as well as community events and various festivitie­s, according to The Art Newspaper.

The exhibition NEIGHBOUR: How Can We Live Together? comes at a time when many architects are beginning to imagine post-covid urbanism.

Co-living is increasing­ly appealing to young workers looking for flexibilit­y. This communal way of life also responds to more prosaic needs: loneliness, an increasing number of singles, the lack of available apartments for roommates in big cities and skyrocketi­ng rents.

As a result many real estate developers and start-ups are rushing into this market, which is still currently in its infancy. Although co-living is the subject of various experiment­s in Europe and the United States, this type of housing remains quite marginal compared to other forms.

But there’s no denying that the pandemic has restored the appeal of community living. – AFP

 ?? ?? The cultural institutio­n in Norway is transformi­ng its galleries into a co-living space in order to promote the principle of collective habitats. — AFP
The cultural institutio­n in Norway is transformi­ng its galleries into a co-living space in order to promote the principle of collective habitats. — AFP

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