Open House Festival

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Alternative Housing curated by Oliver Wainwright

Oliver Wainwright is the architecture and design critic of the Guardian. He trained as an architect at the University of Cambridge and the Royal College of Art, and worked at OMA, muf, and the Mayor of London’s Architecture and Urbanism Unit. He has served as curatorial advisor to the Architecture Foundation and is a regular visiting critic and lecturer at a number of architecture schools. His photography has been exhibited around the world and his first book, Inside North Korea, was published by Taschen in 2018.

What would London look like if housing was no longer a commodity, but simply a place to live? How would it feel if streets were used not to park cars, but for children to play, and to grow flowers and vegetables together? What could life be like if we pooled our resources, shared our amenities, and knew our neighbours? The projects I’ve selected present an alternative vision for how we might live together, ranging from co-housing and community land trusts, to sociable housing for older people, to neighbours who decided to get together and built their homes themselves.

Drop in / Guided tour

12 Church Grove

miscellaneous

The first residents have moved into the capital’s biggest community-led self-build project, coordinated by the Rural Urban Synthesis Society (RUSS): 36 flats in two linked buildings, a new public riverside garden and shared community spaces. As a Community Land Trust, RUSS aims to create sustainable and permanently affordable homes in a community woven into the wider communities of Lewisham.

Shepheard Epstein Hunter , 2021

Guided tour

A House for Artists

residence, community/cultural, event

A House for Artists is an ambitious project, designed to provide subsidised, sustainable long-term housing for artists; who in exchange offer free civic and cultural engagement for communities in Barking Town Centre. Co-commissioned by Create London and London Borough of Barking & Dagenham, this project has received supported from the Mayor of London.

Apparata, 2020

Guided tour

Appleby Blue

housing

Appleby Blue is a a contemporary social housing project reimagining the almshouse. Designed by Stirling Prize-winning architects Witherford Watson Mann for United St Saviour's Charity and located in Bermondsey, this innovative development offers 57 almshouses for residents aged 65+, fostering intergenerational connections and promoting community-centric urban living.

Witherford Watson Mann Architects, 2023

Guided tour

Glenkerry House

residence, housing, community/cultural

Glenkerry House is a 14-storey tower block designed by Hungarian architect Ernő Goldfinger. The block is managed by its residents, who collectively form the Glenkerry Co-operative Housing Association.

Erno Goldfinger, 1975

Drop in

Mount Pleasant

hostel

A former Victorian workhouse that has been transformed through LB Camden's Community Investment Programme into a state of the art facility for 50 homeless people laid out around a beautiful suntrap courtyard.

Peter Barber Architects, 2014

Walking tour

Somers Town: The Housing Story

museum

Somers Town: a Social Housing conservation area? An immersive theatrical guided walk around Somers Town exploring social housing and the St Pancras House Improvement Society, ending at St Mary's Church, Eversholt St (NW1 1BN) for a workshop and refreshments. The workshop will explore questions of heritage in Somers Town, including making Somers Town a conservation area.

Open House of 13 Nubia Way and oral history exhibition of Europe's largest black-led community self-build for rent iintiative including archive material and new video. https://sites.gold.ac.uk/inlivingmemory/tomorrow-is-built-today/

Architype, 1997

Walking tour

Walter Segal buildings tour

residence, walk/tour

Walter Segal System Talk, aimed at people interested in using this building method. Walters Way Tour (outside only), then to a local charity (AFRIL) community/volunteer build on allotments a few mins walk. Approx 1 hour.

A close of 13 self-built houses. Each is unique, built using method developed by Walter Segal, who led the project in the 1980s. Houses have been extended and renovated. Sustainable features including solar electric, water & space heating.

Walter Segal, 1987