Of
the
thesis
entitled: The Small-er
House
Design
Scheme
Abstract:
There
is
a
conflict
taking place
between
regional
and
community
interests. This
tension
is
nothing
new. Often
times
this
conflict
is
borne
out
of
urban
renewal
schemes
and
major infrastructure
interventions
in
core
neighbourhoods. As the
‘back
to
the
city’
trend
increases however,
these
conflicts
are
more
and
more
likely
to
push
into
first-ring
and postwar
suburbs.
With
intensification policy,
like
with
urban
renewal
schemes
of
old,
it
is
the
small
things
that
get lost in
the
shuffle. In
Ottawa,
Canada, this
conflict
is
being
fought
over
character;
sun,
trees,
parking,
landscaping, setbacks,
and
affordability. These
are not
the
most
glamorous
aspects
of
architectural
design
and
many
would
argue change is
inevitable.
But
if
these characteristics
were
in
fact
founding
tenets
of
a
residential
community,
then policy
makers
ought
make
every
effort
to
protect
them
as
they
set
and
pursue intensification
targets.
Unfortunately
these
low-density
residential
streets
have
fallen
into
a policy
blind-spot
and
city
planners
are
currently
scrambling
to
refine
new bylaws
aimed
at
curbing
invasive,
or
excessive,
developments. So
how
do
we
add
more people
to
these neighbourhoods
without
the
wholesale
replacement
of
the
existing
housing stock?
For
the
suburb
of
Overbrook
the answer
may
be
to
take
a
page
out
of
the
50’s
and
go
small,
extra
small.
The
introduction
of
coach houses
would unlock
a
much
needed
source
of
infill
for
this
neighbourhood,
and
many
like
it across
the
country. This
thesis
proposes their
regulation
and
deployment
aided
by
a
federal
initiative
inspired
by
the postwar
Small
House Design
scheme
of
the
Central
Mortgage
and
Housing Corporation.
The examining committee is as follows:
Supervisor:
Committee Members:
Donald McKay, University of Waterloo
Rick Haldenby, University of Waterloo
Val Rynnimeri, University of Waterloo
External Reader:
Michael Hannay, W Architect Inc.
The
committee
has
been
approved
as
authorized
by
the
Graduate
Studies
Committee.
The
Defence
Examination
will
take
place:
Tuesday
January
17,
2017
6:00
PM
ARC
2026
A
copy
of
the
thesis
is
available
for
perusal
in
ARC
2106A.