Testing the Limits: A DC Ecoblock Creates Community for Everyone
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Abstract
Loneliness is an emotional feeling that represents disconnection. With one in
five people suffering from loneliness, it has become a public health crisis. Ranked
second in the nation for loneliness, Washington DC is three times the national
average. The transient nature of the greater DC population has created a negative
perception on the city, causing people to either move on or move out. Such a
progressive and influential city seems stuck in a stagnant pattern, not reacting to the
constantly changing density, mobility, and needs of the built and non-built
environment.
This thesis aims to explore the connections of ecology and psychology of
architecture through a superblock typology in an effort to battle loneliness in the
nation’s capital. A superblock is a large-scale entity both extroverted and permeable
composed of business, community, and other institutional programs, each different
but overlapping in a common elements and connections.
The superblock throughout time has been given a negative connotation
because of exploited failed attempts. When using the principles correctly, however,
the superblock typology provides endless possibilities and solutions to connect,
engage, and ignite community interaction through strategically placed nodes of space
and diverse program.
If one were to take create new principle site, culture, and health specific,
could a meaningful interaction and connection through a ecoblock in DC be created?