Stephanie  Ng
  • Alternative Futures


01_Where Art Meets Architecture

02_What do Pigs, Fish and Humans have in            Common? Millet

03_The Diffused House

04_De-alienating the Home

05_Fertile Futures

06_Nurtured Beginnings 

07_Life in Common: Re-Enchanting the City           through Urban Commoning

08_Reversible Destiny Loft
09_Building a Garden with Birds


Coming Soon...

  • Research and Writings

10_Water

11_The Spatial Language of Urban                           Commoning


  • Art

  • 12_Containment (2019)





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02_What do Pigs, Fish and Humans Have in Common? Millet.

Columbia GSAPP First Year CORE I
Project Duration: 4 Weeks
Instructor: Andrea Chiney (A+A+A)


Location:  Christopher St Pier, NYC
Project Type:  Agroecology / Food Futures


How can we re-imagine the uses of NYC's piers as spaces of food production? As agriculture remains heavily reliant on climate, the challenges posed by climate change and rising sea levels leave global food systems increasingly vulnerable. 

By harnessing the interdependent relationships between millet, pigs, fish, and humans, it creates a cyclical, self-sustaining system, paving the way for future food security. This proposal envisions a floating farm that reintroduces farming to urban waterfronts, centred on millet—a climate-resilient crop. 



01_Diagram of Building Systems for Resource Capture and Distribution (Left) and Axonometric of Design on Site (Right)





02_Mutually Beneficial relationship Diagram between Pigs, Fish, Humans and Millet 







As I developed my research I came across a symbiotic relationship which my ancestors found between millet and pigs that have been practiced for more than 5000 years which fed societies in Northern China and contributed to their development.


So my proposal is an architectural translation of this network of relationships between human and non-humans in this ecosystem: including pigs, fish, plankton, birds and most importantly millet. This network is self-sustaining and renewable, with the feeding of millet crop residue to pigs and the fertilisation of millet fields with pig waste. Millet residue can be used to fertilise the fish ponds, which when it decomposes creates nutrients for plankton which serve as food for fish. The millet is food for humans and birds.

03_Section Through Proposal





04_Render of Pig’s Feeding Columns



05_Render of Second Floor: Pig’s Garden




06_Render of Millet Farm







07_Floor Plans







08_Initial Design Concept Sketches


tn2556@columbia.edu
© Stephanie Ng 黄紫鑫