Architectural Photographer Captures Temporary Communities

Leaving city for country, people create their own alternate dwellings and communities.

1 MIN READ

When people leave the high-rises of the cities and the builder houses of the suburbs, what kind of shelter do they live in? Architectural photographer Maxwell MacKenzie recently set out to capture the answer to that question, often from his powered-parachute ultra-light aircraft. In Nevada, he found the 55,000 inhabitants of the Burning Man festival arranging tents, domes, and RVs into an organized city; In Minnesota, houseboat communities; in Florida, Airstream rallies. Helter-Shelter: An Exploration into the Organization of Temporary Communities at the AIA Headquarters Gallery in Washington, D.C., exhibits MacKenzie’s mural-sized panoramic photographs of assembled communities. Through Jan. 31. • aiadc.com

About the Author

Lindsey M. Roberts

Lindsey M. Roberts is a freelance writer outside of Seattle, specializing in interiors and design, and a former assistant managing editor at ARCHITECT. Her work has appeared in National Geographic, Gray, Preservation, and The Washington Post, for which she writes a monthly column about products for the home.

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