Ohana — Architecture Competition by UNI.xyz

UNI announces ‘Ohana’ — Architecture Competition to Challenge to design a flood resilient neighborhood in Lisbon, Portugal — UNI.xyz

UNI
5 min readApr 23, 2022

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Fig: 1 — Glaciers are melting at a faster rate in the last decades.

CLIMATE CHANGE AT ITS PEAK

Climate change is here. It is real now, more than ever. There was a time when this was posed as a theoretical threat but over a few years, its impact and tangible effects can be seen in different regions all over the globe.

Climate change is a complex and daunting challenge. There is evidence that proves that there is a fundamental change in people’s ideologies acknowledging this phenomenon and its urgency. Even though we are undertaking tackling measures, the speed and scale are insufficient to protect vulnerable communities from nature’s backlash.

Over the next 20–30 years, the gradual warming of Earth will create catastrophic patterns of extreme weather, melting polar ice caps, and rising sea levels. The oceans are rising at an accelerated rate posing an immediate threat of flooding to coastal regions. Can large-scale collective action help in fighting the effects of climate change?

Fig: 2 — Coastal communities are flooded more frequently these days and the intensity has increased too.

SHORELINE FLOODING AND RISING SEA-LEVELS

There has been a one-foot rise in sea level over the last century, on a global level. At this rate, by 2050, up to $106 billion worth of coastal property will likely be below sea level. Long-term mitigation actions are in place, but the shoreline communities in coastal regions are experiencing the effects of the rise, right now.

Coastal regions are dense, economic centers of human activity. The rise in sea levels poses threats of intense coastal storms and flooding in these regions. The shoreline infrastructure offers the first line of defense against coastal flooding, but they are also at high risk due to the low-lying land and there are no strategies to protect them.

The sea level is predicted to rise 9 inches by 2030, 21 inches by 2050, and 36 inches by the year 2070. Waterfront neighborhoods are vulnerable in this scenario and preventive measures are being taken to ensure the survival of these communities.

Fig: 3 — Investments are high along the coastline in major locations and passive solutions must be explored with future predictions.

DESIGN A FLOOD RESILIENT LIVING

Brief: The challenge is to design a waterfront neighborhood to be flood resilient in the event of a water level rise.

The neighborhood will be built on an at-risk site in a coastal city. The design must be an ideal form of construction that can be replicated in regions with similar issues. The design must respect the existing site features and topography.

The focus is to mitigate flooding through design and planning, not just depending on engineering solutions. The landscaping and design measures that are passive and natural are to be employed in the proposal. The floodways along the water edges can be barricaded with interventions.

Strategies implemented must cause minimal built infrastructure damage and displacement. The coastal community will be living modestly so interventions must be economical and sustainable by improving building performance with reduced energy and wastage.

OBJECTIVES

  • Resilient: The design must be able to mitigate floodwaters that may enter the land of the site.
  • Sustainable: Design must employ eco-friendly materials, materials, and local resources.
  • Modular: Some of the strategies can be implemented in coastal neighborhoods over the city, maybe country, retrofitting made possible for existing neighborhoods.
  • Context: The design must respond to the (existing) site conditions. The wider socio-cultural, economic and environmental settings are to be considered in the design approach.

LISBON, PORTUGAL

Lisbon is a peninsular city that lies on the River Tagus. It is a well-known tourist spot and the economic and political center of the region. There are multicultural coastal communities in the city with a vibrant cultural scene.
The effect of climate change on the shoreline communities will be seen shortly. The global sea level will threaten the temporary settlements along the coastline of Lisbon.

SITE

Fig: 4 — Site image

The site is beside a water reserve with a low sandy coast and surrounded by roads and rail lines. The neighborhood of Bairro da Petrogal consists of a local community that is residing on the sides of roads in temporary shelters. The site has parks, residential colonies, and hospitals in its vicinity which makes the location ideal for this typology.

  • Site area = 15,292 sq.m
  • Height restriction = 6 metres
  • Ground coverage = 50%
  • Maximum FAR: 1
  • Setbacks as per CAD plan
  • Coordinates = 38°48'11.5"N 9°05'34.9"W

PROGRAMMATIC OUTLINE

The neighborhood is to be built with 100 dwelling units. Strategies can be proposed on the individual dwelling unit level and the neighborhood level.

The following programmatic outline is the point to begin your design at. You can add more functions and activities in relevance or modify the below design program.

  • Housing: Build variants of 100 dwelling units with bathroom, sleeping, and kitchen areas (2 types: 30 sqm and 60 sqm each)
  • Economical: community gardens, local markets, retail shops
  • Social: Squares, courtyards, gardens, play area for kids

Water-resistance should be to the point where a slight sea-level rise may flood the neighborhood gradually. So, strategies must be in response to this scenario where the community itself can become an efficient drainage mechanism before letting the flooding enter the city. Flood prevention must come at a minimal cost to the water neighborhood itself.

Find all the competition brief, terms, and other registration guidelines on this

page: Ohana | Residential Building Competition on UNI | About

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Originally published at https://uni.xyz.

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