House in Corrubedo (drawing in class) - Bianca Woisetschläger


House in Corrubedo - Anna Maly


Team 3 - Interview 2

This is an interview with the mother of Jarno. Since he is only 7 years old and isn't aware of his illness, it was better to speak with his mom. 

Basic questions 

What are the names and the ages of the family members?
Tim, 38 years
Dagmar, 39 years
Jarno, 7 years

Which family member has autism?
Jarno

What kind of autism does he/she have?  (Asperger's syndrome, pervasive developmental disorder, autistic disorder etc.)
PDD-NOS, diagnosed at age 2,5

Is he/she aware of his/hers neurological disease?
Not really

What kind of school does he/she goes to?
Special education (SBO Het Tangram, Purmerend)

Does he/she play sports or any other hobbies?
No sports, huge fan of Lego and iPad (games and videos)

Is he/she at himself or does he/she like to play or work with others?
Both. It depends on the situation and state of mind

Questions about the house

Main question: How can we as architects make it easier to live as someone with a neurological disorder?
Every person with autism has his/her own issues. Talk tot them. There is no general rule to make life easier.

What is his/her favourite colour?
No specific favourite, it changes over time.

What kind of materials will be best for the house? (No busy prints on the wall or crazy tiles for example)
Our living room has one wall with a busy print, a not very organized bookshelf and 3 tables with lego. This doesn’t seem to make any difference in comparison to a clean and organized  room. In his bedroom we tried to apply light colors and soft materials. And we try to keep it as neat as possible. This is the place where he has to rest (prefent overstimulation)

Can the furniture be possible to move or is it better to have it at one place all the time?
In my opinion it is better to keep furniture in the same place. As minor changes in the surrounding as possible. Every change can be disturbing without proper preparation.

What kind of surrounding is best? (city, nature etc.)
It depends on the person

Any other tips?

See answer of the main question.

Sandra Kesselmeier, drawing 1, work in class


Maria Helene Saether - technique from NMBU, and drawing of Casa de Blas

Technique from Norwegian University of Life Sciences - City and urban planning.

I am studying city and urban planning, and since we don't really have one specific technique we use, I will show a project we did from last year. Normally we start a project with hand drawn diagrams to analyse the city or area we are working on. The next thing we do is to locate different uses of each building, and we see what works in the urban space and what does not. In this project we were working on how to give the place a more human scale, focusing on pedestrians. At the end we made a new plan for the whole area focusing on how the pedestrians can get a better walking experience in the area. In the planning process we mostly use hand drawn sketches, and then finishing it in programs like Photoshop, Autocad, Sketchup, Illustrator and Indesign.




For this next task I have looked at diffrent uses of the rooms in the house like we do for type of uses in an urban plan.





Manpreet Kaur, first drawing, work in class




In our school we start by evolution of concet of design project by making some sketches of the idea in our mind and some bubble diagrams to work out the connectivity. so i have drawn a perspective view of my house (house of spiritual retreat) and a bubble diagram showing its connectivity.

Work in class, first drawing. Mónica Hidalgo


This is a sunny day in the pool seen through the eyes of Paula.




Casa en la Moraleja, Madrid. Miguel Fisac