ʵ

News

Kokoon house stacks up at the Flow Festival

The project by Department of Architecture’s Wood Program was built to offer affordable housing to migrant populations.
The visitors to the Flow Festival can explore the modular Kokoon house. Photo: Juho Haavisto.

Japanese Tomoyo Nakamura was one of the students in last year’s Wood Program, responsible for the Kokoon house project. “Kokoon was our final project and we constructed it by ourselves. There were 18 people with 13 different nationalities. I was responsible for the structure and its detail”, she says.

The Department of Architecture’s Wood Program is a one year intensive program focusing on wood and wooden architecture. The program explores the ecological, technical and architectural properties of wood. Every year the students design and build an experimental wooden building as a final project of the program.

Students assembling the Kokoon house. Photos: Léa Pfister.

“Our task was to design a transportable house. Kokoon can be moved around by truck and stacked in various configurations. Each unit has a big skylight which lets the sunlight in“, says Nakamura. Kokoon was designed to meet the needs for temporary accommodation, and it could offer a place for living for asylum seekers, students, residents displaced by building renovations, and others.

Nakamura was very pleased with the learning outcomes of the project: “Discussing, drawing and constructing with other group members who have different talents was very exciting and broadened my perspective.” She hopes that displaying the house at Flow could make people think about the housing problem or make them consider the possibility of living in a small space. “Or it could just make them comfortable”, Nakamura adds.

Inside the Kokoon. Photo: Anne Kinnunen.

takes place 11–13 August in Suvilahti, Helsinki. Aalto University is one of the partners of Flow 2017. The Kokoon house will be open to visitors throughout the festival.

More information:

Wood Program: /en/wood-program

Kokoon-talo:

Students in the Kokoon project were: Alexander Rantanen Barstad, Akın Cakıroglu, Kristin Ekkerhaugen, Satoshi Iiyama, Nicklas Ivarsson, Stephanie Jazmines, Yuko Konse, Sini Koskinen, IgnacioTraver Lafuente, Toni Lahti, Tomoyo Nakamura, Taeho Noh, Léa Pfister, María Inés Quirarte, Käbi Noodapera Ramel, Ivan Segato, Tanja Vallaster, Eduardo Wiegand.

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

A person in black touches a large stone sculpture outside a brick building under a blue sky.
Campus, Research & Art, University Published:

Glitch artwork challenges to see art in a different light

Laura Könönen's sculpture was unveiled on 14 October at the Otaniemi campus.
Book cover of 'Nanoparticles Integrated Functional Textiles' edited by Md. Reazuddin Repon, Daiva Mikučioniene, and Aminoddin Haji.
Research & Art Published:

Nanoparticles in Functional Textiles

Dr. Md. Reazuddin Repon, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Textile Chemistry Group, Department of Bioproducts and Biosystems, Aalto University, has contributed as an editor to a newly published academic volume titled “Nanoparticles Integrated Functional Textiles”.
A modern building with a colourful tiled facade with solar panels. The sky is clear and light blue.
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Carbon-based radicals at the frontier of solar cell technology

Could a single unpaired electron change the future of solar energy?
Sähköauton laturit Kemistintie 1
Campus, Cooperation Published:

More electric car chargers added on campus

Ten new charging devices have been installed on the Otaniemi campus.