ABSTRACT
Home in a hybrid world seems to develop into an increasingly problematic item; the paradox of having a shelter without having protection other than physical, a place that is not “chosen” by people but, to a large extent, for them by a system that renounces them from being a participative inhabitant does not do justice to their (occasional/temporal) need for a private sphere. First, there is the condition to dwell, second, the translation into a sphere that facilitates, and, third, the physical framework in which this occurs. In an environment that increasingly develops into or becomes an interface, it is primarily, as put by John Rajchman, “a question of constructing free spaces of unregulation, undetermined by any prior plan, which so loosen an arrangement as to follow for sensations of something new, other affects, other precepts”.
