Tiny Houses and Tent Cities are in the news this week. Councilmember Sally Bagshaw has called for a
massive expansion of temporary encampments throughout
the city. Meanwhile, a consultant hired
by the Mayor has declared this strategy a distraction, one that dissipates our
energies and drains resources from the task of building permanent housing facilities
that can support a Housing First approach.
Last month our office entered a tiny house design competition in Chicago. The competition
brief called for a 10-12 tiny house village for homeless youth, built on a
large city owned lot, with a budget of $60,000 per unit. Our entry was a micro-housing
apartment, delivering 3x the amount of housing on less land at the same cost per unit. You don’t win many design competitions by disputing
the premise. We entered it to make the
point that cities have huge housing needs and very expensive land; that they need
housing solutions that can scale to the size of the problem and make the most effective
use of scare resources. Donated land,
non-profit services, volunteer hours…these are all finite assets. We do
ourselves no favor when we fail to use them efficiently.
A tiny house village can provide temporary
shelter as a hardened, secure alternative to a tent, but that is about as far
as it goes. Beyond that we need
permanent housing. One of the reasons
our firm has jumped in with both feet into microhousing is that we see it
can serve a huge range of housing needs at the affordable end of the housing
spectrum. Seattle used to have thousands
of units of SRO housing that served the affordable end of the housing
market. In the 1970’s we shut most of these down out of safety concerns, but we have replaced them with nothing. It’s
about time for us to get started.
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