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Airbnb Will Start Designing Houses In 2019 (fastcompany.com)

Airbnb is reportedly planning to distribute prototype buildings next year. Yesterday, Samara, a futures division of Airbnb meant to develop new products and services for the company, announced a new initiative called Backyard. The initiative is described in a press release as "an endeavor to design and prototype new ways of building and sharing homes," with the first wave of test units going public in 2019. Fast Company reports: The name "Backyard" might imply that Airbnb just wants to build Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs), those small cottages that sit behind large suburban houses and are often rented on Airbnb. [Airbnb chief product officer and cofounder Joe Gebbia] clarifies that is not the case. "The project was born in a studio near Airbnb headquarters," he says in an interview over email. "We always felt as if we were in Airbnb's backyard -- physically and conceptually -- and started referring to the project as such."

Backyard is poised to be much larger than ADUs, in Gebbia's telling. Yes, small prefabricated dwellings could be in the roadmap, but so are green building materials, standalone houses, and multi-unit complexes. Think of Backyard as both a producer and a marketplace for selling major aspects of the home, in any shape it might come in.
"Backyard investigates how buildings could utilize sophisticated manufacturing techniques, smart-home technologies, and gains vast insight from the Airbnb community to thoughtfully respond to changing owner or occupant needs over time," Gebbia says. "Backyard isn't a house, it's an initiative to rethink the home. Homes are complex, and we're taking a broad approach -- not just designing one thing, but a system that can do many things."

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  1. Re:Hate Air BnB by LostMyAccount · · Score: 2

    What's weird is that subletting rooms in your house was pretty normal, say up through maybe the 1950s? I mean people did have full-on rooming houses in some larger homes.

    I think it was largely the post-war economic prosperity that got many families into single family houses and a lot of lower income single people either out of their parents' homes or into their own apartments vs. something like a rooming house or the really old-school residential hotel where rooms were let by the week.

    I often can't help but see a lot of this as just the arc of middle class prosperity slowly winding down and people reverting to the economic systems -- like rooming houses -- of the pre-prosperity model.