Architecture

Two million people helped design this Swedish home

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While it remains a concept at present, the house is due to be built soon
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
Architects are always trying to create the ideal home, but Stockholm-based Tham and Videgård (of wooden high-rise fame) took an unusual approach to designing a house that is all things to all people
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
The firm analyzed data from 2 million Swedes – or an estimated 20 percent of the country's population – to help create what is billed as a new type of democratic architecture
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
While it remains a concept at present, the house is due to be built soon
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
In all, the firm drew upon roughly 2 million visitors, 200 million clicks, and 86,000 properties between January and October 2014
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
It then added a little artistic license based on some classic Swedish design principles
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
The resulting home is surprisingly appealing, if a little bland from the outside
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
Taking the form of a simple cube, it comprises a total floorspace of 103 sq m (1,115 sq ft), and includes a bathroom, guest WC, three bedrooms, and a large kitchen with high ceiling
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
Generous windows and skylights promote natural light, and the home also boasts a terrace that's protected from the wind and can be converted into an additional room if required
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
While it remains a concept at present, the House of Clicks is due to be built soon
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter
View gallery - 9 images

Stockholm-based Tham & Videgård (of wooden high-rise fame) took an unusual approach while aiming to design a house that could be all things to all people. The firm analyzed data created by roughly 2 million Swedes – or 20 percent of the country's population – to design what's billed as a new type of democratic architecture.

The home's design process involved Tham & Videgård analyzing what users of a popular Swedish property website looked for in a dwelling. This included size, cost, the number of rooms, and even the color of the surfaces. In all, the firm drew upon roughly 2 million visitors, 200 million clicks, and 86,000 properties between January and October 2014. It then added a little artistic license based on classic Swedish design principles.

"The house is in short based on two parts: first a direct interpretation of Big Data statistics from all the Hemnet users, an average value that determined the measurable properties of the home, including size, price, number of rooms, bathrooms and floors," says Tham & Videgård.

"To this Tham & Videgård have added a reading of the Swedish house condensed into two iconic types: the red wooden cottage that represents history, local resources, crafts and national building traditions; and the white functionalist box, which stands for modernity, optimism, industrial development, the welfare state and international ideals."

While it remains a concept at present, the House of Clicks is due to be built soon
Tham and Videgård Arkitekter

Referred to as both the House of Clicks and Hemnet Home (the latter named after the website from which the data was gleaned), the resulting residence is surprisingly appealing, if a little bland from the outside. Taking the form of a simple cube, it comprises a total floorspace of 103 sq m (1,115 sq ft), and includes a bathroom, guest WC, three bedrooms, and a large kitchen with high ceiling.

Generous windows and skylights promote natural light, and the home also boasts a terrace that's protected from the wind and can be converted into an additional room if required. The facade is made from red wooden boarding and the house is surrounded by a modest garden plot.

While it remains a concept at present, the House of Clicks is due to be built soon and will then be put up for sale.

Sources: Tham & Videgård, Hemnet

View gallery - 9 images
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4 comments
Koolski
They couldn't do any better than a giant cargo container look?
martinkopplow
I'm certain they could, but they didn't want to. They did not take the approach of creating something oviously outstanding, so it's actually not bad at all, considered it was explicitly meant to be average.
I'd move in without bothering too much. That's probably what was intended here.
Prelogic
LEGO
no parking
nice, but not bathroom accessible, or 2nd level. nicer if 1 level with bathroom access for wheelchair users