Vast urbanisations in developed, developing and under-developed  economies have one common denominator: an immediate need for quality  housing. Never before were those involved in architecture and building  construction confronted with such a challenge – the housing of millions.  
Based on the analysis of one of  the housing experiments of the past, the Soviet Microrayon, Volume  proposes a new prototype – a housing block, which is custom-made but  mass-produced and conceived via open source standards.
 
        Vast urbanisations in developed, developing and under-developed  economies have one common denominator: an immediate need for quality  housing. Never before were those involved in architecture and building  construction confronted with such a challenge – the housing of millions.  A one-fits-all solution seems unthinkable since most mass-housing  schemes in the past failed, in part because they originated from  dictatorship or total absence of power. Based on the analysis of one of  the housing experiments of the past, the Soviet Microrayon, Volume  proposes a new prototype – a housing block, which is custom-made but  mass-produced and conceived via open source standards.