Simple systems applied to derelict sites allow new intervention to come out of raw matter. With the understanding and study of systems that once put these abandoned sites into the situation they are now in, we can utilize an intelligent rebellion against the previous actions of these weathering patters by harnessing them into raw systems of intervention that allow these spaces to repair themselves over time and through a sequence of procedures. By working from the ground up to tap into all local and relevant resources the capacity of a project can be amplified by the context that had at one point turned its back on the project. These material and system technologies should be explored through a catalog of situations and scenarios that all fall under the criteria of a terrain vague location that can reemerge next to its neighboring sites as a place even more vital than when it was first conceived because of the deep rooted reliance and resilience to the surrounding landscape.
As part of the House as Thesis project the model may have only enhanced the artifact more than exhibiting the idea. While it did give scale and examine the operation of the project, it also did not dig deeper into the details of how far the project reaches into the context and systemic links of the project.
Taken from an excerpt from "Living Systems" which was referenced during the review, this project looks at frameworks and expectations. As a set of scaffolding it allows for the anticipated to make its way through in an manner while a bit chaotic also as an underlining organization to it.
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