'microparcelization' by carmen c. cham, james black and tyler goss

'microparcelization' by carmen c. cham, james black and tyler goss


the 'microparcelization' project by carmen c. cham, james black and tyler goss


a dingbat is a type of formulaic apartment building that flourished in the united states
in the 1950s and 1960s, a vernacular variation of shoebox style 'stucco box'. popular in
areas such as L.A - southern california, arizona, florida and hawaii.

american carmen c.cham, james black and tyler goss won first prize in the dingbat 2.0
international competition for their project 'microparcelization'.

the competition asked designers to re-envision the dingbat, and in so doing, offer a revised
vision for L.A. itself. in order to redefine the dingbat, it is essential to understand what has made
it so successful (or at least ubiquitous) and determine what form of dingbat-ness will best define
a new identity for an emerging 21st century los angeles.



smaller houses replace the original dingbats


the 'microparcelization' project advocates replacing dingbats with small single-family homes
on small lots, to be made possible by new mechanism for subdividing parcels, and to be
promoted by an updated version of the case study house program. dingbats were perfect for
the zoning, economies, and construction practices of their time, but today they approach
the end of their useful lifespan. aging dingbats are structurally and environmentally deficient.
the dingbat is the city’s least desirable multifamily housing typology; their nostalgic appeal tugs
most strongly at architects themselves. thousands can be replaced before we should get soft
and start to miss them.

the goal of dingbat 2.0 is the increased quality of housing stock in the dingbat neighborhood,
not by covering it with new stucco beasts, but rather with diverse and desirable new architecture;
and the way to catalyze this change, as the dingbat taught us 50 years ago, is by amending
the zoning code. the obsolescent dingbat will become the fallow ground from which a new
housing form may emerge. dingbat, make way – the city needs room for small homes on small lots.

los angeles’ enormous 7500-square-foot lots made sense for single-family homes a century
ago, but by the 1950s, the marketplace dictated that they were ripe for redevelopment with
six to eight units. the greater value and scarcity of urban real estate today should be acknowledged,
and the barriers preventing smaller houses on less land should be demolished.



the plots of land which can be divided


dividing the land promotes economic equality and neighborhood stability. the old american
dream of homeownership persists. increasing the number of homeowners augments the numbers
of neighborhood stakeholders and their sense of community. people are learning to do more
with less space, encouraged by both economic necessity and a backlash against the phony
sustainability of gigantic custom 'green' homes that are actually energy and resource hogs.





smaller parcels invite urbanistic diversity. parcel subdivision creates smaller, cheaper parcels,
and further lowers the price of land by relieving excess demand. cheaper land and smaller,
cheaper houses beget a larger client base for custom or semi-custom homes (and more
projects for our hungry architects). smaller homes on smaller parcels provide a means of
injecting new vitality into the moribund design culture of residential los angeles. the goal is
to achieve a more informal architecture of novelty and delight. in support of the goal of
a revitalized culture of architectural experimentation, we propose a new series of 'case study
microhomes' as a successor to the famed case study house program, promoting a participatory,
populist design culture.




dingbat replaced by smaller homes


the implementation of tokyo-style small homes on small lots has been unfeasible primarily due
to limitations on lot subdivisions. we propose modifying the los angeles planning and zoning
code to create a new tool for the urban designer’s toolbox: microparcelization. with more
freedom than under the small lot subdivision ordinance, landowners within designated districts
would be permitted by right to subdivide their parcels into separate legal parcels as small as
the marketplace will support.



ridhika db
06.26.10  
1
Demolish and replace them? That sounds to me like a high-modernist solution: a lot of material headed for the landfill, not to mention the materials that need to be forested, mined, smelted and shipped to build brand new houses. Rather than treat the lot itself as a divisible tabula rasa, would it not be as interesting, and more sustainable and economically feasable to treat the existing dingbat structures themselves as objects to be modified toward a more "diverse and desirable new architecture"?
bg   06.26.10

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