Can parking spaces get a second life? A student project in Atlanta helps demonstrate the possibilities in every stall.
Students at the Savannah College of Art and Design created three "SCADpads:" 135-square-foot micro-apartments designed to fit in the space defined by a single parking spot. Three prototypes for these modular homes, which cost $40-$60,000 to construct, were installed in an Atlanta garage this spring, to help model what might be a more sustainable paradigm for the city.
Each micro-apartment was designed by the students to reflect the culture of a different continent: Asia, North America, and Europe. Each was outfitted with a small kitchen, a sleeper-sofa, a bathroom, and some high-tech features like iPad-controlled "smart glass" windows that can be obscured for privacy. In addition, each apartment included a "porch" area, the size of an additional parking space, and a shared community garden that harvests "grey water" from the sink and shower.
Since April, the SCAD installation has been hosting people who stay overnight, mainly students and alumni of the college.
Rebecca Burns, a writer with the Guardian whose husband is on the SCAD faculty, recently spent the night in a SCADpad. She says it was a bit cramped, but not too shabby overall:
I’ve lived in studio apartments before, but nothing quite so tiny. However, while small in square footage, the SCADpad felt more spacious, thanks in large part to the airy design and those big smart-glass windows. That said, the kitchen is minute: it’s impossible for two people to work side-by-side. The sofa/beds are spacious: two of us comfortably lounged to watch Italy play England on the iPad (the SCADpads are equipped with speedy Wi-Fi). But when friends stopped by to visit, we quickly learned that it’s difficult to fit four people in one of the units.
There was no room for us to comfortably entertain guests in our tiny apartments, but the common-area lounge was relaxing, and offered great skyline views. The community garden offered a soothing contrast to all the concrete – and yielded salad for dinner.
Apartments 300 square feet or smaller have become an affordable option for younger people in cities like Seattle, Washington, and even Cleveland and Providence, Rhode Island.
Hopefully, the SCADpads installation will help enlighten Atlantans to a new range of possibilities for some of the city's underutilized urban spaces.