Designed by Minoru Yamasaki, Pruitt
and Igoe consisted of the thirty-three buildings pictured. Dramatic images of
its demolition made newspapers across the country.
I cordially believe that Affordable Housing is a pure architectural challenge, not engineering nor financial.. It is the dilemma that architectural designers often offer the world; either by ill-envisioned perspectives, or surfing high ones, unrelated to realities on the ground..
Civic and municipal bureaucracies are often short of intelligent and accredited capacities to guide or to procure the appropriate housing concepts that would last among our sights for 50-200 years.. Affecting our perception of beauty, coherence and rationales for generations..
In several countries, I had seen affordable housing schemes, which are dump, bad and dangerous.. Also, had enjoyed the scene of excellent examples that were an added urban value to their inhabitants..
I like to call the Affordable Housing as Democratic Housing.. It symbolize the notional of human rights for shelter and privacy.. It enable the stress free mindset to contribute to prosperity generation and protection.. it maintains the social coherence and glued patterns among the various economic layers of the society, without, mobs and hooliganism rule..
Ladies and Gentlemen; we need to reinstate our architectural business, and municipal structures..
The Architecture & Design Of Affordable Housing
http://nhpr.org/post/architecture-design-affordable-housing
“We shape our dwellings, and afterwards our dwellings shape us.”
Winston Churchill said that in an address to Parliament in 1944, and it
remains true today.
As part of our station-wide series, “The First Decade,” we’re looking at
how the environmental and familial circumstances a child’s first ten years can
influence – even determine -- their later lives. Today, housing, neighborhoods
and the built environment.
Poor Quality Housing = Poor Health
“We know that poor health stems from your
environment in many ways and unfortunately a lot of poor quality housing
throughout the United States has been impacting health. And what we see is that
it’s primarily impacting young children and older seniors who are more
susceptible to poor air indoor quality.”
That’s Jamie Blosser,
founder of the Sustainable Native Communities Collaborative and associate at
Atkin Olshin Schade, echoing findings from a spate of recent studies that have
quantified how childhood poverty, specifically living in a poor
neighborhood, influences cognitive abilities, adult employment, earnings,
and behavioral and health problems -- including depression, asthma, diabetes,
and heart disease -- at higher-than-average rates. We reached Jamie Blosser
and Kathy Dorgan, two
prominent practitioners of community and public interest design last week, just
after they’d put together a panel on community-based design at the American
Institute of Architects conference in Atlanta.
Practitioners now use the term
affordable housing to distinguish their work from the low-income housing units
of the past. Those projects have mostly been torn down to establish more human
scale housing. Still, being raised in poor housing in a low income area can
directly affect a person’s opportunities.
Income Opportunity
Here’s Kathy Dorgan, an architect and urban planner
who employs participatory design practices, which she says can achieve
communities of choice and justice.
“There’s so many example of that, there’s a recent
study out of Harvard that really looked at where children live and what kind of
opportunities come their way as a basis of where they live. And so for example
if someone lived in New Hampshire in an average community, average opportunity
and they moved to Baltimore--which has recently been in the news--which is not
an area of high opportunity, their long term prospects for the household
income, for a boy, would decrease by 1.39% for every year that they lived in
Baltimore. And so the lifetime effect of that would be if someone lived there
their whole childhood they might make a third of what they would make if they’d
stayed in a community of average opportunity.”
Rural Poverty
But that does not happen only in inner cities, like Baltimore.
“When we look at poverty 85% of counties in the
United States that are high poverty counties are non-metropolitan, so we know
that rural poverty is a huge issue, and unfortunately, with more information
and more data about location and how important location is in affordable
housing in providing access to transit and employment and services, we know
that rural regions are even more vulnerable because they are more remote and do
not have that access. So we see higher costs of living, but we also see higher
vulnerabilities, I think, without that access.”
A study from the Urban
Institute looking at low income residents in Chicago and Portland found kids,
even pre-teen kids, at risk of experiencing school failure. They engage in
risky sexual activity, and suffer from poor mental health. But while these stats
may be bleak, not all low-income communities are dead ends, there are places
known as “opportunity rich”, “high opportunity communities” that encourage more
stability and supervision for children through better school systems and access
to transportation. Kathy Dorgan:
“High opportunities are often
high income communities, but not always, so we have a great variance between
communities with similar income profiles and the amount of opportunity that
they afford to the residents. There’s a lot of things that lead to that, a lot
of it’s trust. There have been a lot of studies of communities that work
together better that trust each other, provide more opportunity for all of
their residents, high or low income, communities with less segregation. But
it’s also a matter of public policy and we’ve seen great examples in
Massachusetts where they’ve moved to much higher performing schools in many low
income communities and that’s of course immediately made those higher
opportunity communities. I live in Connecticut where we have much more
disparate and the highest of the nation difference in income in achievement
between communities. So that difference in achievement and communities in
Connecticut makes it a much worse place for a poor person, or anyone to live than
our neighboring state of Massachusetts that’s addressed that by policy.”
Bridging the Gap
As practitioners of community and public interest design, Jamie Blosser
and Kathy Dorgan aim to bridge that gap.Again, Kathy Dorgan:
“So, the important thing I think here is to provide
every resident with opportunities and access to those opportunities. And
there’s a lot of ways to achieve that, and that may be by mixing incomes within
a specific development, it may be by mixing incomes and opportunities and resources
within a larger neighborhood. And so I think it’s every community has important
structures and resources for providing opportunity, and it’s therefore
important to do real design within communities to understand the existing
conditions and to understand the opportunities there. Having said that, I think
it’s really important not to have large areas of segregated incomes and
segregated opportunities.”
Not segregating communities based on incomes or race: a lesson learned,
perhaps, by the public housing fails of the postwar era. Think of those massive
urban high rises, isolated on the outskirts of cities – places like the
infamous Pruitt-Igoe housing project in St. Louis, built with great promise in
1956, only to be demolished in the mid-70s. Or the Robert Taylor homes in
Chicago, widely considered to be a low point for American urban renewal. While
it’s easy enough to look back on those failures in hindsight, will today’s
designers make similar mistakes? Nadia
Anderson, is an Associate Professor of Architecture and Urban
Design at Iowa State University. We started our conversation with the public
housing fails of the post war era, and asked her, what did those planners &
architects get wrong?
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