Earlier this summer, Inhabitat got a chance to catch up with M Design’s eco-prefab architect Mark Baez in lovely Venice, CA when he gave us a personal tour of his M Cube home – the minimalist, modular, sustainable, and surprisingly affordable prefab residential development that he designed using his patented prefab modular building system. Designed based on traditional Japanese tatami and imperial units of measurement, M Cube may appear spartan at first glance but proves deceivingly comfortable once inside.
VIDEO: A tour of the Eco-Friendly Translucent M-Cube Home
by Haily Zaki, 12/10/08
filed under: Sustainable Building
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5 Responses to “VIDEO: A tour of the Eco-Friendly Translucent M-Cube Home”
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Get out of California.
You could live outside in Venice.
Show us sustainability where it gets really cold.
I dont think this guy has ever been to a fiberglass production facility. Wood is a renewable resource
I don’t know why the previous posters are so angry, people (like me) live in Venice too.
I just want to know how to move in…
This is obviously not a universally applicable design, but the concepts and they way they are applied are very interesting. Keep in mind that flexibility in use is a key to sustainability down the line as you won’t need to move or heavily remodel your home to fit changes in your life.
A big question for me is how the cost compares to a traditional stick built home.
[...] students with information while they relax in arm chairs facing the waterfront tides. Resembling a glass box posed between limestone bookends, the design was able to triumph over glare and ventilation issues. [...]