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Karamia Müller's latest contributions
Going for growth
People
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Karamia Müller considers the current coalition government’s strategy for addressing the housing supply crisis and questions why we can’t treat housing as a basic human right.
Upzoning to what?
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Karamia Müller considers the politics of space globally and questions how locally, saving some character streets at the cost of further city sprawl is the future.
On reading and lucky jobs
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Karamia Müller reflects on framing productivity and concepts of work in the wake of technology’s promise and a post-COVID workforce grappling with rising living costs.
Habits of mind
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Karamia Müller looks at the relational nature of Te Tiriti and the importance of collectivism over individualism.
Freedom for the hollow lands
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Karamia Müller considers the ‘architecture’ of land occupation and the ideological differences that reveal the politics of sovereignty.
Is the system working?
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Karamia Müller looks beyond the “electoral moment” to the built realm and asks whether or not the system is working.
What water?
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Karamia Müller considers the politics of the built realm and uses a clever analogy asking “How’s the water?” to address the impact of social conditioning on how we view the housing crisis.
Fifteen cigarettes a day
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Karamia Müller ponders New Zealand’s housing crisis and its connection with a decreased lifespan, and after discussion with former tutor Graeme Burgess, arrives at a possible solution.
The line between good and bad
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Karamia Müller believes that if beauty in architecture is attainable then so, too, should be equity.
The bots are here
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Karamia Müller considers artificial intelligence, its relationship to creativity, and the ethics surrounding its application in the course of architectural study and/or practice.
Karamia Müller's latest photo contributions
Fifteen cigarettes a day
People
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Karamia Müller ponders New Zealand’s housing crisis and its connection with a decreased lifespan, and after discussion with former tutor Graeme Burgess, arrives at a possible solution.
Before there was dank, there was Frank
People
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Karamia Müller calls for more irony, cynicism and criticality over beauty, earnestness and elitism upon revisiting the architectural satire account: @dank.lloyd.wright.