Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities

The First Nations communities of Northern Manitoba, Canada, have been facing an extreme housing crisis. Overcrowding paired with insufficient funding, low-quality materials and mould contamination has created an uninhabitable environment where hepatitis, acute rheumatic fever, asthma, and tuberculos...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Catrina, Sallese
Other Authors: Mallory-Hill, Shauna (Interior Design), Coar, Lancelot (Architecture) Wilson, Alex (Educational Foundations, University of Saskatchewan)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35939
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spelling ftunivmanitoba:oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/35939 2023-06-18T03:40:38+02:00 Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities Exploring Sustainable and Culturally Appropriate Solutions Through the Mino Bimaadiziwin Partnership Catrina, Sallese Mallory-Hill, Shauna (Interior Design) Coar, Lancelot (Architecture) Wilson, Alex (Educational Foundations, University of Saskatchewan) 2021-08-26T12:54:28Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35939 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35939 open access Interior Design Cross-Cultural Indigenous Modular Housing master thesis 2021 ftunivmanitoba 2023-06-04T17:37:03Z The First Nations communities of Northern Manitoba, Canada, have been facing an extreme housing crisis. Overcrowding paired with insufficient funding, low-quality materials and mould contamination has created an uninhabitable environment where hepatitis, acute rheumatic fever, asthma, and tuberculosis are nine times more prevalent on remote northern reserves. Given that adequate shelter is considered one of the fundamental requirements of life, the circumstances seen on reserves are unacceptable. This Master of Interior Design Practicum project explores how to address the housing crisis through a series of literature reviews, precedent analysis and firsthand experience building in remote First Nations communities. Research begins with recognizing one's problematic inherited Western Bias, a critical starting point when organizing a culturally oriented design framework. Literature is further explored to define Indigenous design and architecture, creating the foundation for a culturally appropriate housing solution to build on. The honourable harvest and resilient design concepts uncover ways to build homes that sustain the people living within them and sustain the land from which the raw materials are harvested. The complexity that is homeownership on-reserve is addressed as building strategies and energy independence contributes to self-determination. Additionally, the lessons learned from historical and modern Indigenous home design ground findings from literature in real-life housing solutions. Looking into a wide range of Indigenous housing solutions helps bridge the gap between traditional ways of knowing and modern schools of thought. Lastly, designing and building in remote First Nations communities with the Mino Bimaaiziwin Partnership has been an all-encompassing learning experience that has shaped all aspects of the design process and outcomes. This unique and life-changing opportunity completely reformed how I now approach design, my relationship with the earth and the ongoing effort to reconciliation. ... Master Thesis First Nations MSpace at the University of Manitoba Canada
institution Open Polar
collection MSpace at the University of Manitoba
op_collection_id ftunivmanitoba
language English
topic Interior Design
Cross-Cultural
Indigenous
Modular Housing
spellingShingle Interior Design
Cross-Cultural
Indigenous
Modular Housing
Catrina, Sallese
Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
topic_facet Interior Design
Cross-Cultural
Indigenous
Modular Housing
description The First Nations communities of Northern Manitoba, Canada, have been facing an extreme housing crisis. Overcrowding paired with insufficient funding, low-quality materials and mould contamination has created an uninhabitable environment where hepatitis, acute rheumatic fever, asthma, and tuberculosis are nine times more prevalent on remote northern reserves. Given that adequate shelter is considered one of the fundamental requirements of life, the circumstances seen on reserves are unacceptable. This Master of Interior Design Practicum project explores how to address the housing crisis through a series of literature reviews, precedent analysis and firsthand experience building in remote First Nations communities. Research begins with recognizing one's problematic inherited Western Bias, a critical starting point when organizing a culturally oriented design framework. Literature is further explored to define Indigenous design and architecture, creating the foundation for a culturally appropriate housing solution to build on. The honourable harvest and resilient design concepts uncover ways to build homes that sustain the people living within them and sustain the land from which the raw materials are harvested. The complexity that is homeownership on-reserve is addressed as building strategies and energy independence contributes to self-determination. Additionally, the lessons learned from historical and modern Indigenous home design ground findings from literature in real-life housing solutions. Looking into a wide range of Indigenous housing solutions helps bridge the gap between traditional ways of knowing and modern schools of thought. Lastly, designing and building in remote First Nations communities with the Mino Bimaaiziwin Partnership has been an all-encompassing learning experience that has shaped all aspects of the design process and outcomes. This unique and life-changing opportunity completely reformed how I now approach design, my relationship with the earth and the ongoing effort to reconciliation. ...
author2 Mallory-Hill, Shauna (Interior Design)
Coar, Lancelot (Architecture) Wilson, Alex (Educational Foundations, University of Saskatchewan)
format Master Thesis
author Catrina, Sallese
author_facet Catrina, Sallese
author_sort Catrina, Sallese
title Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
title_short Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
title_full Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
title_fullStr Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
title_full_unstemmed Home Interiors & Furnishings in Remote Northern First Nation Communities
title_sort home interiors & furnishings in remote northern first nation communities
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35939
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35939
op_rights open access
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