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Emergent Heartland is a masterplan that focuses on facilitating bottom-up, self-directed urbanism. Made from a kit of parts that are constructed in the central workshop space, the building will grow and adapt over time.
It is situated in a brownfield site directly south of the Bata industrial estate in East Tilbury, in the London Greenbelt. Serving as the town's former industrial heartland, the factories have since fallen into decay following the Bata shoe factories withdrawal from the area. The scheme draws parallels with this industrial legacy by upskilling and empowering the residents of the building.
Modification, addition and subtraction are central to the building’s approach. Each floor represents a complex negotiated urbanism, where the hierarchy of the built environment process is reversed, and the residents are free to build their own futures. The framework structure includes the overall structural system and floorplates that house the MEP elements. This provides maximum flexibility for the self-builders making construction and deconstruction simpler for those less experienced in the built environment.
Ultimately the flexibility provided by the scheme draws parallels with architects such as Walter Siegel and Frie Otto. They saw the architect as a nurturer to empower people to build according to their own needs.
Through the complex experience of building ones own home, the inhabitants are always learning new skills from one another. Specialist knowledge is widely available through on-site expertise that lives in the scheme.
Over time separate clusters form. These grow to have their unique specialisations, approaches and contributions to the overall master plan.
East Tilbury's industrial legacy is central to the town's identity. Emergent Heartland reimagines this legacy through a new community that prioritises making, sharing knowledge, and innovation.
The building never has a single, pristine, complete state. It is always in a state of change, growth and contraction - a negotiated urbanism whose outcome is unknown.
The single shared floor and centre of activity in the courtyard stimulates interaction between neighbours, an informal, organic transfer of knowledge and skills, and community bonding.