Lesson 2 of 3

Whare Iti: Geometry of Design

Big living in small spaces

Ako | Learning Intentions

  • Know: The formulas for area and perimeter of composite shapes.
  • Do: Create a scale floor plan for a tiny home that maximizes utility within a fixed area.
  • Understand: How geometry is used to solve design problems like housing affordability.

He Kōrero Timatanga - Introduction

Housing is expensive. One solution gaining popularity in Aotearoa is the "Tiny Home" movement. But designing a small space requires clever mathematics. Every square centimeter counts.

Discussion Starter

"What is the minimum space a person needs to live comfortably? Why?"

Consider: Sleeping, cooking, washing, relaxing.

Part 1: The Design Challenge

Your Client: A young couple looking for their first home.

Constraints:

  • Maximum Floor Area: 30m² (excluding loft).
  • Must include: Kitchen, Bathroom, Living Area, Sleeping Area (can be loft).
  • Max Trailer Width: 2.5m (Legal road limit).

Part 2: Geometry in Action

Students draw a floor plan on grid paper (Scale 1:50).

📐 Calculation Station

Calculate the Area of each "zone" in your house.

Kitchen Area = 2.5m x 1.8m = 4.5m²
Bathroom Area = 1.2m x 2.0m = 2.4m²
Total Footprint = Length x Width
Must be ≤ 30m²

Part 3: Cost Estimation (Surface Area)

To estimate the cost of cladding, we need the Surface Area of the exterior walls.

Task: Calculate the total wall area (minus windows/doors) to determine how many timber-boards are needed.

Kaiako Notes

Encourage students to research real Tiny House plans online for inspiration. This connects abstract geometry to tangible, desirable outcomes.