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Solar Design = Tiny Home on the Water

Solar   Design = Tiny Home on the Water
Johanna Link

Solar + Design = Tiny Home on the Water

With the world seemingly turned upside down due to pandemic travel restrictions, the effects of global warming, conflicts, an energy crisis, and more, the time has never seemed more urgent for a refuge with a high level of self-sufficient energy and the ability to remain mobile despite mounting challenges.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link
photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

Crossboundaries has re-designed a fully solar-powered motorboat with high-end, tiny-home characteristics that enable it to function as a slow-motion traveling nest.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

The exterior’s resemblance to a bus on the water sparked the interest of the new owner, and with enough space to invite family and friends aboard for a getaway, she named the personal reenergizing retreat “Fàng Sōng 放松”, which translates from Chinese into “Relax”.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

A transient space

Itinerant forms of architecture were first performed out of necessity and, more recently, out of willingness - the current architectural agenda debates our notions of public-private and temporary-permanent. A home that was once linked to real estate ownership now shifts to a network of commodities that can be moved to different places.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

As Archigram already put it in 1964 with The Walking City: “One of the great attractions of urban living is the notion of being able to easily access all the services and goods you need. But what if those services came to you?”

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

A House that floats: Compact and transformable

This compact space is a perfect match for Crossboundaries because it allows for testing flexibility in micro-dwellings where each room assumes multiple programmatic roles. The appeal of water in this project is to explore the possibility of adapting, while challenging assumed and conventional norms.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

With an overall length of about 15m, and a maximum width of a bit over 4m, the boat includes a set of interlinked and multi-purpose areas.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

The boat's color palette celebrates creativity, and it is highly customizable and extremely practical. Functionality improvements include a fully hidden bed with a function to close the “helmstand”, which hides the more technical equipment of the boat, achieving a calmer sense of home. Additionally, it includes a pop-up table for the kitchen area, and a hidden foldable desk included in a cabinet, providing a “work-from-home” environment.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

A living machine: Technical and sustainable integration

Research in material quality and durability led the concept to a craftsmanship level. With a results-driven approach and virtual project management, some actors, including the local master carpenter, were key in the execution phase. The boat is "smart and self-powered" due to a set of innovative solutions in terms of solar energy, heating source, water, and waste management.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

On sunny days, the houseboat is fully self-reliant on its solar panels, with an average range of 50km per day. A pellet stove, remotely controlled by an app, was installed to satisfy heating demands with a source of renewable energy. In the future, the owner plans to add a water purification system and a biological sewage treatment unit to upgrade the boat for long journeys.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

This 'Tiny Home on the Water' can be conceived as a unit of the city, containing a comprehensive set of urban resources.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

Ideally, in the future, people can free themselves from too many possessions and embrace denser, high quality spaces that enable more flexible ways of life.

photo_credit Johanna Link
Johanna Link

Team:

Architect: Crossboundaries, Beijing
Partners in charge: Binke Lenhardt, Hao Dong
Design team: Marijana Simic, Silvia Campi, YU Hongyu, YU Zhaoxiong
Collaborators and co-creators: Brettmen, Berlin - Anselm Breig and chief carpenter Malte Spiess
Consultant, technical installations: Benedikt Riepe, Berlin
Consultant, bathroom installations, paintwork: Mirko Kriebel, Berlin
Consulting and installation pellet stove: Woitha, Berlin - Oliver Schwarzer
Upholstery: Krebes, Berlin
Glass film printing and installation: Werberitter, Berlin
Photographer & Video clips: Johanna Link, Munich
Video creation: Elena Gamez Miguelez

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Project credits

Architects

Project data

Project Year
2022
Category
Boathouses
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