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Plan drawing by Laura Quan.
Exploded axonometric drawing by Audrey Yifei Li.
Plan drawing by Timon Covelli.
Exterior perspective by Spencer Fried.
Final model by John Holden.
Aerial view of model by James Coleman.
Study model by Dylan Weiser.
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Site model by Xiaomeng Li.
Plan drawings by Tara Marchelewicz.
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Elevation drawing by Danielle Schwartz.
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Oblique plan by Samantha Monge Kaser.
Rendering by Jennifer Lai.
Physical model by Ethan Zisson.
Model by Melissa Weigel.
Model by Kerry Garikes.
Site model by Pik-Tone Fung.
Rendered aerial view by Melissa Russell.
Plan and section drawing by Haylie Chan.
Perspective by Ryan Hughes.
Model view by Iven Peh.
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Student Work

How to own your own home: A handbook for prospective home-owners (1924)
How to own your own home: A handbook for prospective home-owners (1924)
School cottages for training in home-making (1925). Girls were trained in home-making by home economics teachers as a way of making them more effective in their unwaged domestic duties.
School cottages for training in home-making (1925). Girls were trained in home-making by home economics teachers as a way of making them more effective in their unwaged domestic duties.
Boy-Built Houses (1927). Whereas girls were trained to participate in the informal sphere of unwaged domestic production, boys were trained to approach the home as a “house”. The house would need to be built, maintained, appraised and purchased, and these were the ways that the boy trained to relate.
Boy-Built Houses (1927). Whereas girls were trained to participate in the informal sphere of unwaged domestic production, boys were trained to approach the home as a “house”. The house would need to be built, maintained, appraised and purchased, and these were the ways that the boy trained to relate.
The idealized American house as a news worth spreading on the cover of Better Housing, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1934).
The idealized American house as a news worth spreading on the cover of Better Housing, Vol. 1, No. 1 (1934).
1∕4

Title

The New Deal and ‘The Economy

Authors
Eric Rogers

Course
Independent M.E.D. Research

Project Description

The present study re-evaluates the Progressive era in the United States from the standpoint of capitalist reproduction, yet does so in a way that ultimately transcends Marxist economic determinism. It considers the ways in which ‘progressive’ discourses problematized urban issues in such a way that these shaped knowledges and subjectivities which were instrumental in the shaping of the American metropolis during the period between 1894 and 1950. The city, and its physical features, operated as an interface between actors and the abstract aggregation of their actions in what would eventually be conceptualized as “the economy”. This study considers how the built environment, which served as such an interface, also was problematized as a site for economic, social and political intervention. This urban discourse in which these problematizations occurred is the protagonist of the thesis, since it is within that discourse that knowledge and subjectivity seem to have formed.

Tags
MED Program Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen Urbanism Peggy Deamer Housing Keller Easterling MED Thesis