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Winner announced as Make Architects fund research to tackle loneliness

Make Architects challenged Sydney University students to produce design proposals to help combat loneliness and improve social connections in cities

by Nav Pal 23 April 2020 Future Projects

The Future Spaces Foundation (FSF), founded by the international studio more than seven years ago, is a think tank that undertakes extensive research to unlock the socioeconomic, demographic and technological drivers that need to be considered in order to design places and spaces that best serve our communities. 

FSF findings equip Make’s architects with vital intelligence to help them design more dynamic, sustainable and inclusive places and spaces. In recent years, the FSF has done a deep dive into transport networks, housing shortages and retail environments. Most recently, they turned the spotlight on urban loneliness. 

In an FSF-authored report, entitled Kinship in the City, a group of collaborators including architects, designers, academics, community organisers and policy advisers came together to explore the relationship between loneliness and the built environment.

Together, they determined a series of recommendations including prioritising community-focused approaches to design and planning, investing in loneliness-related policymaking and exploring new models for funding community spaces and services. 

Research shows that one in four Australian adults are lonely and nearly 55% of the population feel they lack companionship at least sometimes. Perhaps unsurprisingly, lonely Australians have significantly worse mental and physical health than connected Australians. 

Last year, a national survey revealed that more than a quarter of people aged 18 to 24 feel lonely ‘frequently’ or ‘always’. Additionally, people living in inner-metropolitan areas are much more likely to say they ‘occasionally’, ‘frequently’ or ‘always’ feel lonely, when compared with those residing in rural areas.

Make recently challenged Sydney University students to produce design proposals to help combat loneliness and improve social connections in cities.

Eight teams from the architecture schools of the University of New South Wales, the University of Sydney and the University of Technology Sydney all took part in the competition, judged by a panel of experts. NSW Government Architect Abbie Galvin, writer Elizabeth Farrelly, Lendlease’s Natalie Slessor and Make’s Sydney Studio Lead Simon Lincoln assessed each proposal. 

The winning team from the University of Sydney (USYD) impressed judges with their entry, ‘InTransit’. It proposes moving away from Sydney’s car-centric transport model and towards a fusion of transport and architecture that provides unexpected communal spaces in public transport hubs. 

Refurbished tram carriages supporting different programs like cafes, gardens, co-working spaces seek to facilitate social interaction and encourage the commuter to engage in the built environment rather than their screens. While not in use, these carriages assemble, opening their doors in a "hub" that blends with the city to create a new urban space open to all.

Simone Carmody, winning team member, University of Sydney (USYD)

The winning team, including students Abdullah Cheema, Guribadat Boparai, Sreejit Sarbadhikari and Simone Carmody, were awarded a $2,000 prize and their proposal will be in an official Foundation compendium. 

The winning proposal was set apart by the simplicity and clarity of the central idea. The team had the foresight to take something mundane and make it delightful. Cities need to create a sense of ownership and belonging for their citizens. Progression and sophistication as a society has led us to an increasing focus on the individual. As our cities densify, this approach needs to shift toward one that is more community centric.

Abbie Galvin, NSW Government Architect

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, Make’s Sydney Studio Lead Simon Lincoln is calling on all architects and designers to think more deeply about the design of our buildings and public places, and their power to unify communities. 

Whilst the need for social distancing during the COVID-19 crisis is abundantly clear, it also brings into sharp focus how much we crave connection as individuals and collectively. There are lessons to be learned from this crisis, including the understanding that with the right technology and design tools, social isolation does not have to result in loneliness. When designing our future cities, as architects we have a responsibility to prioritise designs that bring citizens and communities closer together. Eradicating loneliness is a lofty ambition but, for the long-term wellbeing of society, it is an essential aspiration.

Simon Lincoln, Studio Lead, Make Sydney

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