The case for queering housing design standards - How can looking at things through a queer perspective help improve the way we design and deliver housing in the UK? asks Tarek Merlin

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What began as a well-intentioned and much-needed initiative to establish minimum quality, the housing standards have, through a series of unintended negative consequences, led to a rigid and prescriptive approach to volume housing design. These dictate specific outcomes, leaving little or no room for flexibility or adaptation, tying the hands of the designer and the developer alike.

No large volume housing developer wants to pursue an alternative to the standards for fear of causing friction through the planning process, and architects often lack the agency to challenge this due to limited time, scope, and fees, especially when there’s no requirement nor incentive to innovate.

Following the housing standards ultimately means you have to design to one 2b4p (70m²) apartment layout, which prescribes one way of living and leaves little or no room for improvement or alternative.

This way of living is based on heteronormative ideology – a monogamous couple who sleep together in one double bed, with one or two children, or two adult couples sharing. This is an outdated model and does not represent the way modern society works, nor how contemporary relationships evolve, and certainly does not reflect the way in which queer communities might wish to live together.

Queer communities are inherently diverse and within the community itself there are many differences and intersections. And, just like wider society, one size does not fit all.

Queer relationships often break away from conventional heteronormative ideals of monogamy, navigating more diverse and fluid structures. Consensual non-monogamy (CNM) can mean different things to different people and includes open relationships, throuples, polyamory, and polycules (a network of interconnected polyamorous relationships). A recent study in the US found that about 77 per cent of bisexual and gay men and 56 per cent of bisexual and lesbian women have been in a CNM relationship.

Transgender individuals and relationships influenced by gender diversity further expand the understanding of what relationships can look like. These evolving relationship models require more flexible and inclusive architectural solutions to support the distinct ways in which people live and connect with each other.

These relationships are, of course, not exclusive to queer people; long-term monogamous heterosexual relationships often deviate from the ideal of single-partner exclusivity. Indeed, a recent article in The Guardian reported that a third of heterosexual men and 11 per cent of women in the UK were open to having more than one spouse or long-term partner. That equates to about 11.4 million people.

And this is not only about emotional or romantic openness; sometimes simple practicality demands flexibility. What about a couple needing space apart after an argument, or if someone has a cold? What about the changes during pregnancy that affect sleeping arrangements? We all require adaptability in our living arrangements at different points in our lives.

The notion of lifelong, exclusive monogamy, where two people sleep together, side-by-side, in the same double bed, night after night, forever, is simply unrealistic and ignores the reality of the diverse and evolving nature of all relationships. If our homes are to reflect who we are and the way we live, housing design must move away the rigid and fixed idea of what an apartment is, and how people live within it, embracing greater flexibility and adaptability.

A flexible design could accommodate varying cultural identities around cooking, eating, sleeping and washing, allowing for variations in relationship models, creating more inclusive and dynamic living environments.

So what could this look like in practical terms? It might simply mean incorporating more open-plan layouts, movable partitions, or adaptable wall systems that allow residents to easily reconfigure their living spaces as their needs and lifestyles evolve.

And a new flexible 2b4b layout in the housing standards would not be a replacement for the existing standard, but an additional option that would allow the developer, the design team and the planning authority to provide greater flexibility in the offer, ultimately allowing people to decide what might be right for them when they look at where they want to live.

In 2024, my practice, Feix&Merlin, and IF_DO co-led a think-tank design module at the London School of Architecture looking at housing through the lens of queer identities. Seven talented students took the subject through a detailed process of research, from analysing the housing standards to inheritance laws, creating a manifesto for change which led us onto a mini design proposal for a multi-generational, queer affirming, housing design proposal in Waltham Forest.

The culmination of this work has led to thinking about how we can pursue a positive change in the way in which volume housing is delivered in this country. Why do many of the large housing developments end up looking very similar? And why do most new-build apartments follow the same conventional layout?

To truly embrace the diverse and evolving ways in which people live today, the UK housing industry must break free from the one-size-fits-all constraints of outdated standards. By queering housing design – challenging heteronormative assumptions and rigid layouts – we can create spaces that celebrate flexibility, inclusivity and the rich diversity of human relationships and lifestyles.
 
That entire article can be summarized as "people sometimes like to have their own space when living together, so houses should be designed with that in mind".

Not a new concept, and certainly not a "queer" one.
 
Here’s a queer idea: make the front entryway into the bathroom. Kitchen? Also a bathroom. Study? Two bathrooms. Bathroom? Baby room.
 
What began as a well-intentioned and much-needed initiative to establish minimum quality, the housing standards have,
WE HAD THE FUCKING STANDARDS. They were called the Parker-Morris standards and they set out very sensibly what the minimum was. Which is why we have some really great housing stock from the late sixties up to about 1980 and then it all went to shit. The standards set out minimum sizes for normal furniture and the minimum spaces needed to live around them. After that was abolished you get the shoeboxes we have today where there’s a queen size bed and eight inches around it and no wardrobes.

Before that we still had much better housing stock. A 1930s semi seems incredibly spacious these days - high ceilings, storage cupboards and sensible layout.
What about a couple needing space apart after an argument, or if someone has a cold?
It used to be called a spare room, but god forbid anyone have one of those these days.
What about the changes during pregnancy that affect sleeping arrangements?
The what? I’m baffled on this one. Not that I’d expect a faggot to understand pregnancy but does he think pregnant women expand to the size of a bus or explode if you share a bed with them?
 
It seems like this is a way for developers to cut costs by getting rid of interior wall construction in houses and to sell it as being "inclusive".
I would guess that they want to converge residential construction with business office construction. There is nothing inclusive about these ideas. Its just about being cheap.
 
Why does EVERYTHING have to be faggot centered these days?
These are the same retards who complain that they cant afford to pay rent, yet they somehow expect to be able to afford a custom built home made just for fags/poly fags.
i know they didnt mention the whole poly debacle, but im sure someone will eventually.
 
How do these people manage to be so insufferable with everything they write?

There have been different housing styles for centuries, millennia even, which would "solve" some of these "problems."

Mormons 175 years ago built houses for non-monogamous relationships. Muslims 1000 years ago built houses for non-monogamous relationships. Africans and Eskimos have houses made out of cow shit and snow that fit plural wives.

Then there are Jews with two kitchens, and plantations where the main kitchen is a separate building. There are New Yorkers with no kitchen.

There are cultures and time periods where everyone in the family sleeps in one room. A lot of larger families have one bedroom for the boys and one bedroom for the girls. American culture pushes the idea that everyone needs their own space. In some places and times, a three-bedroom tenement could have four whole families in it.

Some older European societies had livestock on the ground floor of the house while people slept in a loft. Roman houses were built around courtyards.

A lot of older couples move into separate bedrooms when the kids move out. My hippie cousin sleeps in a bed with her husband and their baby.

I don't know what the fuck the inside of the one-bedroom apartment next to me in 2008 looked like, but I think there were about 20 Mexicans living in there.

If you can't fuck in a two-bedroom apartment, move to an old Victorian, a converted barn, a renovated industrial space, a shack in the woods... figure this shit out.

Faggots.
 
It might simply mean incorporating more open-plan layouts, movable partitions, or adaptable wall systems that allow residents to easily reconfigure their living spaces as their needs and lifestyles evolve.
I think I found the perfect living space for these people:
 
I want you to be joking but I’m not optimistic enough about Japanese oddities to dismiss that being true.
I'm not, Tokyo Lens has a series exploring micro and odd apartments. The one I mention was an architect messing with weird layouts.
 
Activists are they their own worst enemy honestly. "we are just like you" turned into "why isn't this house designed around my gay lifestyle"
 
Not that I’d expect a faggot to understand pregnancy but does he think pregnant women expand to the size of a bus or explode if you share a bed with them?
"It happens every time. They all become blueberries."

 
All housing in the UK, and indeed the world, should consist of two-story-minimum units, so queers can rope themselves off the banister at top of the stairs? That kind of perspective?
 
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