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Design for Renovation, The Bicentennial Home: Strategies For Long-term Relevance Through Timeless Design and Adaptive Renovation

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Palmer, Taimana

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Burgess, Andrew
Vallis, Stacy

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Thesis

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Auckland University of Technology

Abstract

The Bicentennial Home: A Vision for Sustainable, Adaptable Architecture As Aotearoa approaches two centuries of nationhood, the state of our housing and urban infrastructure raises a forward-looking question: what should the next two centuries of domestic development look like? Building homes to last two hundred years might seem ambitious, but global examples show buildings that have been renewed, repaired, and adapted across generations. Aiming for a bicentennial outlook encourages architects, planners, and builders to consider more than just material durability; it also pushes them to think about the ability of homes to be maintained, modified, and upgraded as technologies, climates, and social norms evolve. This perspective directly affects urban resilience and sustainability, particularly given Aotearoa’s trend-driven building culture. New Zealand’s dominant housing model, primarily post-war stick-frame suburbs renewed through cyclical demolition and rebuild, generates significant construction and demolition waste streams, entrenches inefficient land use, and hinders the densification necessary for creating compact, low-carbon cities. Introduced during a consumerist era, this commodity-focused mindset diverges from vernacular traditions where buildings were designed to be legible and repairable by their occupants and communities. Modern practice too often results in homes that are short-lived, rigid, and reliant on specialists. This thesis promotes “design for renovation” as a primary goal rather than a secondary concern. It distinguishes enduring human needs (comfort, privacy, flexibility) from fleeting trends that quickly date. It also frames repairability, effective use of modularity, and accessible service layers as tools that empower households while reducing environmental impact. The conceptual approach draws on right-to-repair principles, adaptive reuse, design for disassembly and access, and material continuity or substitution, aligning with values of kaitiakitanga and whakapapa. Methodologically, the project combines literature review and precedent analysis to develop The Bicentennial Home: a practical framework and brief manual that translates principles into actionable details. The goal is to support sustainable urban growth, cultural continuity, and durable, adaptable homes that remain meaningful across multiple generations in New Zealand.

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