Architecture Beyond Waste: Redirecting Urban Consumption
Architecture Beyond Waste: Redirecting Urban Consumption
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2010
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Title of Thesis: Architecture Beyond Waste
Degree Candidate: Stanley Mathurin
Degree and Year: Master Of Architecture, 2010
Thesis directed by: Assistant Professor Hooman Koliji, Chair
Assistant Professor Micheal Ambrose
Professor Emeritus Ralph D. Bennett, AIA
The rate of our consumption is rapidly transforming our planet's biomass into human mass, which equals more trash. The U.S. is estimated to generate 225 million tons of trash a year. Each one of us generates about 4.3 pounds of waste per day. As a country we generate more garbage than any other country by far. About one-third of American garbage will be recycled or composted, leaving about 150 million tons of garbage to be managed by other methods.
This thesis aims to foster new developments in the design, construction and operation of municipal systems in urban areas. This architecture will respond to the cities rate of consumption and the disposal of waste by alternative methods that produce energy, such as turning waste into fertilizer, biogas, electricity, recyclable materials and distributing it back into the surrounding community.