• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: hud

Yale students win HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Design Competition

By Alexander Walter|

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Yale University's winning proposal in the 2020 HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Design Competition. Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

The 2020 edition of the Innovation in Affordable Housing Student Design and Planning Competition, hosted by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, recently selected the proposal by Yale University students as the winning entry. 

The brief asked to design a new mixed-use development for mixed-income residents on a site in Santa Fe, New Mexico, identified by the Santa Fe County Housing Authority.

Yale's team included students Helen Farley (M.Arch ‘20), Kelley Johnson (M.Arch '20), Eva Leung (MBA '21), and Jackson Lindsay (M.Arch '20).

Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.
Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

"The proposal seeks to connect to the surrounding area and Santa Fe at large and promote resilient communities through paying homage to the vernacular Pueblos," explains Yale's proposal description, "bringing together residents through communal spaces at a variety of scales, passive environmental systems, and a lease to limited equity co-operative model."

Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.
Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

The jury selected the entry from the University of Maryland, College Park as the Runner-Up. The two other finalists were University of California, Berkeley and University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

To learn more about the individual entries, watch the online presentation of all four student finalist teams below.

HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Competition final presentations

Related

hud ● affordable housing ● student competition ● competition ● yale ● yale university ● housing
Yale University
Yale University

Share

  • Follow

    1 Comment

  • jeanwatland
    jeanwatland

    jeanwatland ·  Sep 22, 20 8:09 PM

    I’m curious.  Where does the water come from to support this sustainable development in New Mexico? Presumably this type of development will attract more population to New Mexico, and this will put more strain on your aquifers.  Follow on question - where is the population coming from?

    I live in Minnesota and there was apparently an attempt to source our strained aquifer to literally ship via rail to, I believe it was, New Mexico.  Meanwhile we’ve been forced by our government into using mining waste water (yep, that’s true).  Needless to say, I’m questioning sustainability if you do not have the natural resources to support this type of development.


  • Comment as :

Yale students win HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Design Competition

Affordable housing and community projects win in the 2019 AIA/HUD Secretary's Awards

Two housing projects win in the 2015 AIA/HUD Secretary Awards

Recipients of the 2014 AIA/HUD Secretary Awards

Winners of the 2013 AIA/HUD Secretary Awards

AIA/HUD Secretary Awards Recognize Four Outstanding Housing Projects

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

Yale students win HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Design Competition

By Alexander Walter|

Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Share

Yale University's winning proposal in the 2020 HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Design Competition. Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

Related

hud ● affordable housing ● student competition ● competition ● yale ● yale university ● housing
Yale University
Yale University

The 2020 edition of the Innovation in Affordable Housing Student Design and Planning Competition, hosted by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development, recently selected the proposal by Yale University students as the winning entry. 

The brief asked to design a new mixed-use development for mixed-income residents on a site in Santa Fe, New Mexico, identified by the Santa Fe County Housing Authority.

Yale's team included students Helen Farley (M.Arch ‘20), Kelley Johnson (M.Arch '20), Eva Leung (MBA '21), and Jackson Lindsay (M.Arch '20).

Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.
Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

"The proposal seeks to connect to the surrounding area and Santa Fe at large and promote resilient communities through paying homage to the vernacular Pueblos," explains Yale's proposal description, "bringing together residents through communal spaces at a variety of scales, passive environmental systems, and a lease to limited equity co-operative model."

Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.
Image courtesy of Yale School of Architecture.

The jury selected the entry from the University of Maryland, College Park as the Runner-Up. The two other finalists were University of California, Berkeley and University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

To learn more about the individual entries, watch the online presentation of all four student finalist teams below.

HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Competition final presentations

Share

  • Follow

    1 Comment

  • jeanwatland

    jeanwatland ·  Sep 22, 20 8:09 PM

    I’m curious.  Where does the water come from to support this sustainable development in New Mexico? Presumably this type of development will attract more population to New Mexico, and this will put more strain on your aquifers.  Follow on question - where is the population coming from?

    I live in Minnesota and there was apparently an attempt to source our strained aquifer to literally ship via rail to, I believe it was, New Mexico.  Meanwhile we’ve been forced by our government into using mining waste water (yep, that’s true).  Needless to say, I’m questioning sustainability if you do not have the natural resources to support this type of development.


  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Intermediate Designer

Rafael Viñoly Architects

Intermediate Designer

New York, NY, US

Project Captain

Practice (formerly GGA+)

Project Captain

Pasadena, CA, US

Design Technologist / BIM Lead

The American Housing Corporation

Design Technologist / BIM Lead

Austin, TX, US

Project Manager

Payette

Project Manager

Boston, MA, US

Assistant Professor Architecture

California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Assistant Professor Architecture

Pomona, CA, US

Junior Architect in nyc

Lara Apelian Studio

Junior Architect in nyc

New York, NY, US

Project Manager/Designer

BOTO Design Architects

Project Manager/Designer

Santa Monica, CA, US

Architectural Designer Level 2

Arthur Chabon Architect

Architectural Designer Level 2

New York, NY, US

Lead Design Architect

The American Housing Corporation

Lead Design Architect

Austin, TX, US

Interior Design Project Manager

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Interior Design Project Manager

Bellevue, WA, US

Next page » Loading