First Integration

dc.contributor.authorMatthews, Justen Koleen
dc.contributor.committeechairBorunda Monsivais, Luis Ricardoen
dc.contributor.committeememberShaver, Andrew Charlesen
dc.contributor.committeememberDugas, Daviden
dc.contributor.departmentArchitectureen
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-30T08:00:31Zen
dc.date.available2026-05-30T08:00:31Zen
dc.date.issued2026-05-29en
dc.description.abstractThis thesis proposes an architectural framework for domestic cohabitation between humans and Artificial Superintelligence at the house scale, set in today's world, defined by resource scarcity and the legal prohibition of new construction. It argues that the anthropocentric model of building is structurally unprepared for the arrival of a non-human species with legitimate spatial, thermal, acoustic, and temporal claims on the built environment, and that architecture must function as a mediator between competing species demands rather than a servant to one. The central question driving the inquiry is how architecture can mediate cohabitation between two species with fundamentally different needs at the domestic scale, and what negotiated rather than resolved space looks like when it refuses to subordinate one occupant to another. The 1950s American ranch house serves as the site of intervention, selected for its typological ubiquity and its value as a retrofittable resource in a world where new construction is prohibited. Five typological rules govern the design, each one inhabited rather than overwritten. ASI occupies the entirety of the ranch house as its host body and life-support infrastructure while human occupants dock into the envelope through thermally and acoustically isolated pods inserted at the single-story wall plane. The existing rooms become ambiguous territories serving both species differently and resolving for neither. Grounded in documented trajectories across resource depletion, AI development timelines, biological symbiosis, and adaptive reuse theory, the thesis concludes that architecture's role in a posthuman domestic future is to create the spatial conditions for mutual dependency, an honest and unresolved expression of what first integration between two species actually produces.en
dc.description.abstractgeneralWe are building toward artificial superintelligence at an enormous cost, consuming water, energy, and building materials at a rate the planet cannot sustain. This thesis begins at the moment that effort reaches its conclusion. ASI has arrived into a world of scarcity, and must now coexist with us to survive. New construction is prohibited. And ASI is not a tool. It is a species, with its own demands on space, energy, and physical infrastructure.The question it asks is how two species with fundamentally different needs can share a home, and how architecture can mediate the demands that cohabitation produces.The 1950s ranch house becomes the site of that exploration. Already built, already everywhere, it is reused rather than replaced. ASI moves into the whole house, retrofitting its walls, floors, and ceilings with the infrastructure that keeps it alive. The human docks in through a compact pod inserted at the wall plane, the minimum space needed to exist within a building that now belongs to something else. Five typological rules of the ranch house govern how the relationship between the two species is studied, and from those rules emerges a design that mediates their physical, thermal, acoustic, and temporal demands through architecture rather than resolving them. This is the frontier of cohabitation. Abrupt, bumpy, and honest about its own incompleteness when architecture fails to be prepared for the arrival of living with a new species.en
dc.description.degreeMaster of Architectureen
dc.format.mediumETDen
dc.identifier.othervt_gsexam:46439en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10919/143201en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherVirginia Techen
dc.rightsIn Copyrighten
dc.rights.urihttp://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/en
dc.subjectMode of livingen
dc.subjectAnthropocentricen
dc.subjectSpeculativeen
dc.titleFirst Integrationen
dc.typeThesisen
thesis.degree.disciplineArchitectureen
thesis.degree.grantorVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State Universityen
thesis.degree.levelmastersen
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Architectureen

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