355WinnerT.I.M.E. HEALSHabitat when tarnished disrupts lifestyle causing emotional, mental and financial losses which creates scars forever. So, it is necessary to heal from the beginning by converting the exhausting period of struggle into a motivating environment with interactive neighbourhood. Our system unites the community by various incremental measure at different levels.
72Runner-upANTI - FRAGILESome things benefit from shocks; they thrive and grow when exposed to volatility and uncertainty. Imagine a tomorrow that builds on the resilience from unpredictability using elements of Nature & power of regeneration towards a new horizon. ANTI-FRAGILE is a 3 insert approach to celebrate community, instate resilience in structures & thrive a new habitat.
14Honorable MentionHeal For AluvaConcept of the project starts with the designing unit that 5 people families could live together, is constructed by using vernacular and recycled material, can be reconstructed by users easily when its damaged and can be developed and increment in time.
26Honorable MentionCourtyards and chinampas for urban water management in AluvaA design strategy to create a productive urban landscape with a high water retention capacity, to reduce the impact of floods and build local coping capacity.
14Honorable MentionA flexible and economic bandage for AluvaInspired by the traditional boats of Kerala and the principle of Vastu Shastra, the prototype was designed as a flexible, multi-functional, economic and 'easy to construct' floating structure which works according to the level of the flood. It's using local and sustainable materials and can be transposed everywhere during emergency cases.
67Honorable MentionRethinking ResilienceThe project embraces flood as a natural phenomena as the premise to imagine the possibility of secure human habitation. With this as the central idea, the project defines resilience to be two fold- 1.to be prepared before flood. 2. sustenance and recuperating post flood scenario. In its execution, the project encapsulates this idea at three distinct scales.
7Honorable MentionAmphibious CommonsAmphibious Commons is a strategy that works across public spaces in Kerala, from a single cluster, to a market, to a regional transit network. During flood conditions, it restores what the flood removes, a shared ground plane, and in post flooding conditions, this public ground becomes a formwork for bamboo reinforced concrete construction.
64People's Choice AwardA DoItYourself ToolBox for KeralaPeople know their enviroments better than any outsider, so why give them ready-made solutions when we can give them the tools to solve it as they think is best? We aim to provide a ToolBox to deal with flooding that fulfill certain basic requirements so the community build it on their own, as they like and asuring their identities.
373People's Choice Awardsurviving habitatthe surviving habitat is a floating habitat project designed as a result of a proposed urban plan in the city of kerala that is facing flooding problems. The idea is to propose a suitable and vernacular habitat
5HEAL +: Regenerative housing for KeralaThe concept evolved in this urban design project is based on climatic activities such as flood, heavy rainfall, and other practical issues. If a flood happens, then the water will rise to a maximum an extent of approximately 4m. In that case, an apartment is the best solution for this scenario. In such a case, a villa project is not practically feasible.
16THE FLOOD RESILIENT COMMUNITYA design for a 100 home community that is affected by the floods, but needs to get back on their own to a better future. A design that looks into flood resilient societies, community development as a drive to healthy societies, and individual dwelling upgrading.
34SAIRA: Shared And Individual Response for ActionA natural disaster disrupts people's pursuit of happiness and forces them to restart their lives from scratch. What we need today is a resilience strategy that is not just focused on generating housing stock but looks to empower people to take positive action during any disaster in the future.
2Building Smarter, Building Together"BSBT" addresses head on the realities of the previous devastating flood and proactive methods to mitigate future floods. Our approach builds upon enhanced digital technology in combination with shared spatial interventions and strengthens the community through shared building and socio-economic investment strategies.
198Safe (X)A planning outline for scalable 100 units regenerative community housing model is proposed and the strategies are refined from a Master plan level to dwelling unit level, along with an action plan for functionally surviving the flood. Safe (X) is a unique model which can be adapted in any location which ensures the safety of all communities considered.
2Plug and SpreadIn the 21st century alone, natural disasters have killed over 600,000 people, and have left even more homeless according to UNISDR. The Plug House is derived based on the logic of deconstructing and simplifying the core spaces of the house and a study of the vernacular housing of Kerala.
18Communal ResilienceCommunal Resilience symbolizes the combined ability of a community to use locally available materials to fight, withstand and recover from any threatening peril or calamity. It is a project to instill a feeling of alliance with an environment that is shared. So, when the calamity eventually hits, the decision of living together will be the preferred.
14LABAKFlooding in India was always a serious problem and it is more actual than ever. Therefore we want to offer not just a temporary solution but a long term plan which locals can work together and build their own life. The solution was given by bamboo conrete legs or LABAK that keep the residental building from the ground and thereby it rising above water.
6Heal: Regenarative housing for KeralaThe designs offers a series of inside out strategies which would help affected communities deal with a flood situation and also help in recovery in the aftermath.
54HEAL - INOVATION IN RENOVATION OF FLOOD AFFECTEDWith around 120?140 rainy days per year, Kerala has a wet and maritime tropical climate influenced by the seasonal heavy rains of the southwest summer monsoon and northeast winter monsoon. Around 65% of the rainfall occurs from June to August corresponding to the Southwest monsoon, and the rest from September to December corresponding to Northeast monsoon.
4BiomimeticsPrevent and anticipate is the phiposophy of this project. Cooperate, low cost and tech. Austerity and efficiency: viability. An existing infrastructure, local people & a local plant; it is the aquaduct -height, connectivity and resistance-, keralans -work capacity and sense of community-, and bamboo -floats, grows fast, easy-to-use, decentralized.