Houses as throwaway objects like beer bottles, now that's a provocation! For decades, progressive designers have explored waste as a building material. Some went as far to imagine houses made entirely of garbage that you could disassemble, rebuild, and adapt at will. Sounds radical but it did actually move to mass production. In the '70s, Heineken designed the WOBO, a beer bottle shaped like a brick that could be stacked to build walls. Drink your beer, build your house. The whole concept challenged sacred homeownership by making construction materials free and widely available. Fifty years later, we're drowning in waste and facing housing crises simultaneously. Garbage housing proposes solving both at once. Riso-printed and hand-bound in San Francisco