Between 2013 and 2016, a team at GSAPP’s Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture attempted to answer a series of questions: What is the relationship between architecture, real estate, and the imagination? How are designers implicated in the profit-driven development that significantly shapes both where we live and how we belong? How did this happen? To date, the results of this research have appeared as site-specific interventions in Venice, Chicago, Berlin, and Los Angeles; were compiled in a website; were analyzed in a report; and are traveling in the form of the exhibition, House Housing: An Untimely History of Architecture and Real Estate, in Pieces—showing from November 7th–27th at the Galleri AHO as a part of the Oslo Architecture Triennale.
On November 7 the exhibition opens at 13.00.