Can modern architecture, with its cold machine aesthetics, make room for fanciful play?
To a great extent, this question gets at the evolution of buildings by Charlie Lazor, principal of the Minneapolis-based Lazor Office and co-founder of Blu Dot furniture company. Earlier on, Lazor transposed his knowledge of ready-to-assemble furniture to architecture, and invented his FlatPak system in 2004. In a house-of-cards fashion, FlatPak "unpacks" a house with prefabricated panels of wood, concrete, metal and glass in 8-foot-wide modules.
The idea of a ready-to-assemble architecture seems especially applicable to extreme living conditions. Ikea is working with the U.N. Refugee Agency to mass-produce 10,000 flat-pack temporary shelters for refugees and victims of natural disasters. Famed British architect Richard Rogers is collaborating with the YMCA to create the "Y:Cube," a flat-pack home for homeless people.
With FlatPak, however, Lazor envisioned a distinct application — streamlined production of highly customized, refined houses of modern aesthetics.
FlatPak finds aesthetic influence in Charles and Ray Eames' 1949 "Eames House" (inspired by the design of a Chinese kite). But unlike the do-it-yourself, ready-to-assemble Blu Dot furniture, a FlatPak house requires custom design, planning and site work, before it is "pieced together" by the architect and his crew on-site. Notwithstanding the behind-the-scenes labor, Lazor's system promulgates modern living as an interchangeable commodity.
FlatPak enjoyed exceptional success when it was launched. Then came the recession. Like many enterprises, FlatPak struggled.
Lazor resumed his private architectural practice, designing buildings on a one-to-one basis. Among his non-FlatPak work, three cabin designs bear special mention: Week'nder (on Wisconsin's Madeline Island), Peek-a-Boo (New Auburn, Wis.) and Kiss-Kiss (Bear Pass, Ontario).
Prefab components still figure prominently in these homes, but now Lazor shifts his focus from building technology to design narratives, and thinks in terms of "bars" (rectangular blocks), instead of "panels." This shift hints at a mischievous twist in the aftermath of FlatPak, against the modernists' more spartan geometry.