Technological progress has homogenized architecture, detaching it from local climates and identities. This project envisions a post-crisis world where AI-driven cities collapse, squatters reclaim high-tech ruins, creating low-tech shelters and redefining an urban vernacular beyond technology.

To emphasis on the current trend of a techno-centric world, this scenario envisions its collapse due to economic failure and resource depletion. Abandoned Skyscrapers stand as remnants of a failed utopia. Amidst this decay, the project reclaims a high-tech tower, transforming it into a low-tech experimentation. Through subtraction, reuse, and adaptation, squatters aim to redefine urban repair, questioning the fundamental role of architecture.

As the project explores a fictional future of decay and reclamation, one question remains:
What defines an urban vernacular in this transformed world?

Squatters reclaim the abandoned Deutsche Bank Tower in Sydney. The fall of global systems has left architecture and techno-temples in ruins, prompting a return to the core principles of shelter, materiality, and climate adaptation.

Navigating the blurred boundary between utopia and dystopia, the project imagines a future of decay and reclamation. Squatters repurpose the structure, transforming rigid corporate spaces into self-sustaining, communal habitats through strategic subtractions, passive ventilation, and adaptable enclosures. Mechanical systems inspired by Renaissance-era machinery—operating without electricity—offer an alternative to high-tech dependence, reframing construction as a tactile, human-driven craft.

At its core, this project proposes re-learning architecture by emphasizing shelter as its most fundamental role. Drawing from informal settlements, vernacular design, and adaptive reuse, it introduces urban camping, movable thermal barriers, and layered climatic filters to regulate comfort. Spaces evolve organically, shaped by necessity rather than dictated by preordained design.

This exploration questions architecture’s reliance on technology and its impact on local identity. It examines how resourceful, climate-responsive design can naturally foster a regional aesthetic and sense of place, rather than conforming to globalized trends.

Reimagining Urban Vernacular

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