The experiment explores the spaces in which A, who cannot remain fixed or exist in a particular place or manner, and whose self is inherently multiple, organizes her life-not as a finished building fixed in a singular moment in time, but as a series of housing particles that contain the possibilities and potentialities of situations unfolding or yet to occur.
...A was always somewhere with us. She would wander the corridors, following the shadow of the structure above her.
...A was constantly thinking about her past experiences. She would watch all the chaos of the crowd outside and chase her own memories inside.
... A loved to share. Her food, her book, her knowledge, her troubles, her pain, her love... that's why she always looked for a companion.
When care becomes essential for living together as harmoniously as possible, it dissolves into life itself—into the act of living and into the moment. Ensuring that everyday life, the ordinary, can persist—that things can sustain themselves, that what has happened and what will happen unfold as they must—becomes the new purpose, function, and essence of care Care is not a secondary reflex appended to life; it is a sequence of events, situations, or emotions intertwined with the everyday. It hybridizes or intervenes, reconciles conflicts or provokes them, eliminates disruptions or supports the disrupted. It transforms the ordinary info the extraordinary and the extraordinary into the ordinary, seamlessly woven into the ‘most mundane flows of life, adapting to different situations, scales, and environments.
The multitude of systems-everyday things-formed within this information attempt to create order within disorganization, yet they can only produce momentary sequences. These ‘sequences, shaped by multiplying and increasingly complex situations, are examined not as parts of a cohesive whole but as independent explorations of possibility, guided by the interactions and nuances of the everyday

care experiment 1

When care becomes embedded in everyday life, the complexity of the ordinary—shaped by varying situations and modes—redefines the output of architecture. It is no longer a building designed and constructed at a fixed moment but emerges as particles of housing that embody the possibilities and probabilities of what has been and what will be. The seemingly small, insignificant objects, actions, emotions, and interactions that constitute and sustain daily life serve as the foundational information for the construction of space.
...A's bed was not only the place where she slept, got up, ate, drank, but also accompanied the moments when she stayed with her, dreamed, watched, listened, felt, worried. From this bed, which is now an extension of her body, she would see everything, be included in what is outside, and what is outside would be included in it.
The multitude of systems-everyday things-formed within this information attempt to create order within disorganization, yet they can only produce momentary sequences. These ‘sequences, shaped by multiplying and increasingly complex situations, are examined not as parts of a cohesive whole but as independent explorations of possibility, guided by the interactions and nuances of the everyday
...A would like to be left alone. when she wakes up when she sleeps, when she eats when she drinks. but the solitude she wanted was not a state of complete isolation.
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