Ochsner, Jeffrey KProksch, GundulaCrotty, Kelsey A2020-08-142020-08-142020Crotty_washington_0250O_21801.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1773/45682Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2020Cities are growing at unprecedented rates. Simultaneously, society is beginning to experience physicality through a combined digital and social frame. We currently live within an economic and real estate system whose rigidity makes generating equity, finding quality, affordable space, and fostering community simultaneously difficult. It is apparent that new forms of habitation, that draw on changing contemporary conditions, are becoming critical. Re:GEN is the speculative design of a new system that leverages changing economic and digital social structures as a means to employ a form of the sharing paradigm within the built environment. This thesis proposes that architecture, as both a profession and design, can leverage the resource-exchange platforms already available while advocating for a community-based culture, addressing many of the problems of high-density living in urban environments. Re:GEN, as the catalyst of a new collective development pattern, offers an alternative method to occupying space as an exploration into the future of high-density living.application/pdfen-USCC BY-NC-NDArchitectureDesignfuture livingsocial developmentSpatial relationshipUrban DesignArchitectureArchitectureRe:GEN An Alternative to Occupying Urban SpaceThesis