Hybrid habitats: rethinking urban form for flexible work and inclusive living
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Date
2026
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Abstract
The rise of remote and hybrid work in the post-COVID era has fundamentally disrupted conventional urban patterns, exposing the inadequacy of traditional zoning models that rigidly separate residential, commercial, and public functions. As approximately 23% of the U.S. workforce currently engages in remote work—a figure projected to reach 35% by 2035—cities face urgent pressure to reimagine the built environment in response to evolving lifestyles and spatial needs. This thesis, Hybrid Habitat, proposes a new
neighborhood model that integrates affordable living, flexible workspaces, and shared social infrastructure within a cohesive, sustainable urban framework. Focusing on Indianapolis, Indiana - a city emblematic of Midwest hybrid work adoption - the research identifies the former GM Stamping Plant site as a catalytic brownfield opportunity for adaptive urban regeneration. Through multi-scalar design strategies spanning individual live/work units, co-living typologies, and a community-scale social corridor, the project challenges the separation of home and work while fostering social connection, inclusivity, and ecological resilience. An energy-positive environmental strategy integrating passive design with solar, wind, and geothermal systems addresses the increased energy demands of hybrid living. Ultimately, Hybrid Habitat offers a replicable prototype for 21st-century neighborhoods—adaptive, community-centered, and responsive to the irreversible transformation of how and where people work.
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Hybrid work, Remote work, Urban Adaptation, Neighborhood amenities, Affordability