A Place To Grow From

Name
Maja Berglund Kruse Andersen
Education degree
Kandidat
Fagfelt
Architecture
Institute
Architecture and Technology
Program
Architecture and Extreme Environments
Year
2023

Feedback systems in an urban (agri)culture

The project investigates the potential of improving food security in Jakarta through a large-scale strategy, suggesting implementation of a sustainable urban ecology by facilitating the establishment of an urban rice farmers cooperative.  The mega city is challenged by continues and deadly floods, primarily due to land subsidence, caused by illegal ground water extraction from the aquifers. The dense urban fabric of contemporary building mass and infrastructure that is today covering most of the land surfaces used to host mangrove forests and wetlands that would capture the heavy rainfalls and relieve swollen rivers during monsoon season.  

How can a sustainable urban agriculture be re-introduced to the urban fabric of Jakarta to improve local and domestic food security?
1
/3
The Roof as a Live Exhibition
West Elevation
A Flood Resilient Urban Landscape

Re-establishment of A Lost Wetland

The project suggests a symbiotic urban agriculture that does not rely on further extraction of groundwater for irrigation of the rice fields. Instead, the city’s thirteen heavily polluted rivers, the heavy rainfalls and massive building surfaces are perceived as a potentially reliable resource.  It includes a reproductive low-tech wastewater treatment facility, integrated in a landscape that is designed to have a recreational value for a local community. A cultural venue is investigated as a potential income generator for a pilot project to inhabit. The open and informal design of a concert hall offers a symbiotic facility for an urban rice farmers learning center, where both visitors and farmers can experiment and share information and knowledge through a living exhibition. Flexibility and informality in the spatial layout generate a space for a community with particular gaps in socio-economic and cultural backgrounds to meet under one roof and strengthen their mutual identity. 

Site Plan

A Symbiotic Urban Wetland

1
/3
The Productive Cycle
Community Calender
Program Functions and Relations

In the Shade of a Forest

The building is designed to reflect the history of the Kemang neighborhood, which used to function as an official water catchment area until it recently underwent rapid densification. The large roof is experienced as an abstraction of the characteristic banana palm leaves, allowing sunlight to penetrate, weaving the layers of the building together. To create an inviting building, that can generate meetings and interactions between a mixed user group, the visual connections between the public interior spaces has been equally important as to establish a visual interaction between these and one of the neighborhood’s main streets to the west. 

Flexible Community Spaces

1
/2
Foyer
Auditorium
Section

An Object of The Wetlands

1
/2
Roof Concept Model
Typical Roof Module
Exploded Isometric Drawing
1
/3
ground floor plan
1st floor plan
2nd floor plan

The Royal Danish Academy supports the Sustainable Development Goals

Since 2017 the Royal Danish Academy has worked with the Sustainable Development Goals. This is reflected in our research, our teaching and in our students’ projects. This project relates to the following UN goal(-s)