The paper discusses the problem of interdisciplinary influence of the social sciences on the contemporary housing design. A short analysis introduces the topic of the impact of historic and cultural patterns of living on the shape of today's home. It also indicates that a new definition of psychological or social needs often results in new spatial solutions. Social awareness is a must in an architect who addresses the needs of numerous families, especially in state-owned housing schemes. Defining new cultural or ecological habits or enhancement of mutual contacts in a neighbourhood seems to be as important a factor in housing design as function or form. Individual housing design schemes approach the problem from different points, thus enabling identification of certain trends. Some of them are: flexibility (a current present in architecture for at least 70 years, now with a label of nomadic attitude), transcultural non-defining architecture (with family enclosure), attempts at the new neighbourhood enhancement through design.
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