All Together Now: Inside French 2D’s Innovative Multifamily Complex

Boston-based architecture studio French 2D has designed Bay State Cohousing, a typology-challenging, 45,000-square-foot collective housing complex for thirty households. Situated in Greater Boston’s city of Malden, the innovative community is the first of its type under Malden’s newly created Cohousing Zoning Ordinance, legislation that French 2D helped catalyze. The project was envisioned in collaboration with its residents – a multigenerational group of families and individuals seeking to develop alternative shared housing, support, friendship, and collective values. The participatory design process emphasized mutual support and the central values of consolidating and sharing resources from land and energy to cars and material goods.

The North American cohousing model is a form of intentional community often bringing people together around a common purpose, and is typically arranged as a collection of single-family homes surrounding a common house for community activities. In contrast with this model, French 2D’s innovative design for Bay State Cohousing could be read as a single collective house, while simultaneously functioning as a collection of 30 dwellings. Each of the units provides the amenities of a private home, embedded within a larger framework of shared spaces and resources, including communal terraces, gardens, a dining room for 100, community pantry, workspaces, and spaces for yoga, media, music, and more.

“In a field saturated by profit-driven multifamily speculation, this project finds resonance between client-led development and architect-led experimentation. We hope this project can serve as a replicable model for alternative American housing,” say principals Jenny and Anda French, speaking about the potential for urban co-housing to be a subversive counterpoint with the housing market. “In both its conceptual core and its built reality, we have maintained that architecture is capable of pairing considered, complex form with the customs and comforts of a collective community. An open courtyard lined by stealthily coordinated single-loaded corridors, reshuffles the boundaries between private lives and common territories.”

The constraints on the size of the site, coupled with the desired program, encouraged French 2D to create an ethos of abundance within limited resources. While traditionally cohousing in North America has taken advantage of horizontal spatial arrangements, in this case, the 3⁄4-acre urban site demands a rethinking of the model. Found after years of searching, the site is steps away from both a Boston subway stop and a thriving and diverse downtown. French 2D built upwards, taking advantage of stacking and interlocking units, keeping private units small — in plans ranging from micro-studio through three-bedroom —and consolidating square footage for use by interior and exterior common spaces. The pooling of space and certain resources, while maintaining individual household ownership and separation of finances, encourages mutual aid and support between households, as well as the creation of broader extended families built upon friendship and choice.

Photography by Naho Kubota.

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