Honeycomb housing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Honeycomb housing is an urban planning model pertaining to residential subdivision design.

The defining hexagonal tessellation, or "honeycomb" pattern, consists of multiple housing clusters containing 5–16 houses and centered around a courtyard in a cul-de-sac arrangement at its smallest unit of organization. Multiple clusters are connected to each other to form larger cul-de-sac communities with up to 42 houses in total. These courtyard communities are in turn also connected to one another, making up a distinct neighborhood of up to 300 houses.[1]

The honeycomb concept was first introduced in Malaysia as an alternative to terrace houses and the predominantly rectilinear form of residential layouts.[citation needed]

 plan of a small courtyard neighbourhood.
A small courtyard neighbourhood.
 a cul-de-sac neighbourhood composed from three connected courtyards
A cul-de-sac community composed from three connected courtyards.
a honeycomb neighbourhood
A honeycomb neighbourhood.

It can also be described as a new form of cul-de-sac layout.

 from cul-de-sac to honeycomb.
The residential blocks are divided into 2, 3, 4 or 6, creating duplex, triplex, quadruplex or sextuplex units.
Layout of hillside Honeycomb housing project in Nong Chik, Johor Bahru.
Honeycomb Layout Plan.
 Bird's eye view of Honeycomb cul-de-sac
Bird's eye view of a Honeycomb cul-de-sac.
 Perspective of quadruplex honeycomb house
Perspective of quadruplex honeycomb house.
 Perspective of sextuplex honeycomb house
Perspective of sextuplex honeycomb house.

Cul-de-sacs are popular: they are perceived as being safer, more exclusive and neighbourly. According to one study, between the 'grid', 'loops' and cul-de-sacs, the latter were the most popular.[2] These houses are used in Malaysia.[3][unreliable source?]

Since houses are built around a small park with plentiful shady trees, this communal garden is easily accessible to all in the cul-de-sac, allowing it to act as a social focus that can encourage social interaction and neighborly spirit.[4][5]

The courtyard area is a "defensible space" as well, as it acts naturally to reduce crime in the sense that strangers are quickly spotted. The short winding roads put a stop to speeding traffic, and certain to dissuade snatch thieves on motorcycles – therefore becoming safe for children, pedestrians and cyclists.[6]

Apart from the social advantages, it is also claimed that compared to the terrace house layout, the honeycomb layout uses land efficiently and offers savings in the cost of infrastructure.[7]

The honeycomb Layout may be said to be inspired from the geometrical design of Islamic tiles and the structure of beehives. Introduced by Kuala Lumpur-based architect Mazlin Ghazali, it has received a patent, that is expired as of 2024.[8]

Honeycomb Housing projects under construction

The honeycomb concept has been applied to a hillside development on 14 acres of land at Kampung Nong Chik the edge of Johor Bahru business district in a development which advertises a modern version of the traditional village or "kampong" lifestyle.[9]

Criticism

References

Further reading

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