Plugin Tower / People’s Architecture Office


View 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

View 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office


View 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office


Interior 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office


Birdview 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office


Interior 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office


Birdview 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

Birdview 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

The Plugin Tower curtails the investment necessary for building a home since it excludes the risk of losing one’s property: residents can pack up their homes and bring it with them if they are ever forced to relocate. Classified as a temporary structure, the Plugin Tower does not require an underground foundation, thereby circumventing the strict planning approval for permanent structures and easing the requirements for building a private house. 


Future scene 1

Future scene 1

Diagram 1

Diagram 1

Diagram 2

Diagram 2

Diagram 3

Diagram 3

View 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

View 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

A multi-story prefab system that is infinitely expandable, the Metabolist-inspired Plugin Tower is comprised of a steel space frame, a kit of parts that can be assembled in endless variations. Empty bays within the frame are plugged with living units, altered and unplugged when necessary. Units are made with PAO’s proprietary Plugin Panel system, modules that incorporate insulation, wiring, plumbing, interior and exterior finishes into one molded part. Panels are attached with integrated locks, easily installed by a couple of unskilled people with just a hex wrench. Unlike with shipping containers, Plugin Panels allow living spaces to be added without heavy machinery, and does not restrict their layouts to the shape of a box. 


Interior 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

Interior 2. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

3rd floor plan

3rd floor plan

Birdview 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

Birdview 1. Image © Hannah Wu / People's Architecture Office

2nd floor plan

2nd floor plan

Suggesting the instability of the state of housing in China, the ‘future of housing’ proposed by People’s Architecture Office is a flexible design that adapts to changing needs and fluctuating conditions.

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