Solar Steps affordable housing concept

03 Aug 2023

Enabling spatial agency and participatory space-making

Solar Steps short section Photo credit: Nicole Cao

Nicole Cao presents “Solar Steps”, a proposed affordable residence featuring a triple-storey ETFE greenhouse atrium that explores how threshold materiality and operability could create new forms of collective living that empower residents to make their own spaces. Sited in Brampton, Ontario, the project was completed for a third-year design studio led by professor Adrian Blackwell at the University of Waterloo entitled “Humans are more important than real estate”. The colourfully illustrated project recently won the Azure Magazine A+ Student Award for 2023.

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The design concept layers architectural thresholds to redefine the relationships between interior and exterior climates, and between domestic and public programs. By varying circulatory, visual, and auditory porosity, the operable partitions, connections, openings, and other architectural interventions grant spatial agency to residents.

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The triple-height greenhouse structure covers a shared terrace on the private side of the building, which becomes a semi-public, semi-exterior mediator in addition to being a climate strategy. While occupants remain protected from wind and precipitation, sunlight filtering in through the translucent high ceiling evokes the outdoors in a space that is comfortable and habitable year-round.

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Solar Steps affordable housing concept
View of South arcade
Photo credit: Nicole Cao

Deciduous interior plantings add to the seasonal dynamic, while traces of resident activity, including furniture, clotheslines, bikes, easels, and other personal belongings, populate the edge of the terrace and strengthen the community-made social atmosphere. These qualities of comfort and accessibility draw out and concentrate resident activity under the greenhouse terrace. The result is a new shared living condition that encourages conversations and interactions between neighbours.

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As a result of the layered scheme, residents regularly interact with or across threshold elements to adapt the spaces in between to changing programmatic needs. Operable bi-fold doors allow the greenhouse condition to bleed past the entrance boundaries of each unit’s south face to merge with each private living quarter when desired. Sliding doors, sliding-walls, and operable wall openings within the units likewise divide and merge spaces to accommodate large gatherings or quiet study zones as needed for diverse housing situations, including multi-generational families and co-housing groups.

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The street-facing arcade of Solar Steps joins the residence to the urban context through its sheltering structure and commercial program. Storefront space attached to first-floor units gives residents direct access to small-business opportunities. Oncoming pedestrians, drawn to both commercial activity and shelter from weather and traffic, animate the arcade into a lively marketplace whose accessibility and atmosphere become the foundations of a new gathering centre for the broader urban community.

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Through a layering of thresholds and inhabited intermediary spaces, the individual resident’s relationship to their neighbours and to the broader community become at the same time more connected and more flexible: Agency over where and how to draw the boundary between personal and community space is given to the residents themselves.

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Technical sheet

  • Project name: Solar Steps
  • Location (proposed): Brampton, Ontario
  • Course: ARCH 392
  • Supervising professor: Adrian Blackwell
  • Designer: Nicole Cao
  • Type: Affordable housing residence 
  • Building footprint area: 1500sm
  • Building footprint dimensions: 19m x 80m
  • Building height: 19.5m
  • Materials: Steel, ETFE 
  • Building net floor area: 5845sm
  • Number of residents: 100-150