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What Will Our Houses Look Like?
As space grows more precious and technology more dazzling, home, sweet home will be changing
By WES JONES; BERNARD TSCHUMI


THE SUBURBS BY WES JONES

For better or worse, the suburbs are what America came up with when presented with the chance to manufacture its ideal geography. Come 2025, people will still live in houses within eyeball distance of their neighbors, but the cyberrevolution and the environmental movement promise to alter the landscape. While computers promote a dramatic trend toward decentralization, allowing people to spread out and live or work anywhere, the green consciousness will urge a contrasting densification, to conserve open space. The reconciliation of these opposing trends will define the suburb of the future. As the vastness of cyberspace increasingly satisfies the craving for more space, the house and yard will shrink to a more supportable size; when people can find their privacy in the virtual world, those wasteful "setbacks" between neighbors will become less important. Cyberspace will, at the same time, become the arena for conspicuous consumption, relieving the home and front lawn of that responsibility. Meanwhile, the physical neighborhood will be freed for parks and other community gestures.

The cyberrevolution will have an effect inside the home as well. It will challenge the cohesiveness of the family as children become self-sufficient citizens of the virtual world. The home will continuously readjust itself to the family's needs. As cyberspace becomes the kind of space that matters, the primitive territorial need for fixed rooms will fade, and the house will be divided among specific activities rather than simply among family members. So much for arguments among the kids over who gets the biggest bedroom.

Wes Jones is the head of Jones, Partners: Architecture, a technology-oriented design firm in Los Angeles

THE EXTERIOR

1. Powering Up
Homes will tap energy from efficient neighborhood generators, thermal-mass cooling ponds and solar collectors embedded in the streets

2. Energy Source
Machinery that runs the house will be powered in part by the homeowner's manual exercise. Pedal away, and watch the dishwasher and lawn mower go!

3. Safety Features
Wheelchairs of the future will be able to climb stairs, and guard rails will be replaced with airbags to prevent falls

4. Rooms with a View
While houses will have a Miesian simplicity, their windows will become display surfaces, able to show vistas of deserts, jungles or urban skylines

THE INTERIOR

1. Multipurpose Space
Instead of individual rooms dedicated to specific activities such as dining or recreation, one large room will be converted as needed, with the help of movable activity pods

2. The Family Room
As a counterpoint to the individual appliance zones, the open family room will be a nonvirtual agora for those who crave an old-fashioned encounter with a relative

3. Work, Work, Work
Most of our work will be done not in the office but in virtual workstations at home. With a computer screen and interface goggles, you'll be able to work anywhere in the house

4. Burgers to Go
Few people will cook. Instead their food will be delivered by the home-meal industry. The small kitchen will mainly be where food is opened, zapped and readied for the table

5. Waste Disposal
Household refuse will be processed by a fully enclosed waste-management system, with unregenerated bits composted and spread on the overhead lawn during mowing

6. Bedtime Stories
Bedrooms will be smaller, with a space-saving, foldout Murphy bed. Since cyberspace will be the arena for personal display, we will have fewer personal effects to store in the closet

7. Game Boys and More
Instead of a garage crammed with speedboats, surfboards and assorted play gear, the home will have various fold-out recreational simulators and gaming pods

8. Look! Up in the Sky!
Ceilings will be studded with videoconferencing devices; medical and security scanners; heating, ventilation and air-conditioning sensors; and environmental regulators.

The Family Car
The ELOV--electric low-occupancy vehicle--will be the pollution-free mode of transportation. Its size will allow more cars on the highway, and its light weight will reduce accidents, since cars will simply bounce off one another. When extra space is needed, another car can be attached to its side

The Neighborhood
The suburban house will combine with its neighbors in more space-efficient patterns, with private courtyards that leave vistas wide and open from above

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