On January 8 thirteen judges assembled at the Texas Capitol to review 83 designs submitted by teams of architects from across Texas. The judges included people whose homes were destroyed by hurricane Rita, the mayor of Port Arthur, some of the most prominent Texas architects and national experts in affordable housing design. The judges picked four winning designs.
We began work on this project back in the Summer of 2007 with the idea of doing a design competition and building some prototype houses to be used as models for alternatives to FEMA trailers. The “Katrina Cottage” concept was out there and we were big fans of the idea. But as advocates for low-income Texas families and their housing needs we had become concerned with the direction of the FEMA sponsored Katrina Cottage demonstration program designed to prove up the concept. One of our biggest concerns was the failure to tailor the program to meet the needs of the poor and the lack of consultation with low incomes survivors over the program design.
Besides, we were narrowly focused of poor families who really needed a long term housing solution and who were never really going to have the assets to build onto a small Katrina cottage to make it a permanent home. So we develop some criteria and sponsored a design competition to come up with a “post-Katrina Cottage” model. Our design considerations are outlined on the page you can get to by clicking the “about” tab above.
A prominent Austin architect, Tom Hatch, who has long been a champion of affordable housing in Texas took the proposal for a design competition before the Texas Society of Architects Board of Directors to ask them to cosponsor the design competition. The Pohlad Foundation in Minnesota had already sought us out and provided a small amount of funding to cover expenses. The community banker, Linda McMahon, of Chase Bank pledged the funds to provide awards for the winning architects. Michael Gerber, executive director of the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs took a proposal to his board of directors to provide mortgage funding to finance the prototype houses from the Texas housing trust fund. The Houston Endowment generously provided a modest grant to cover my time in working on the project through the first year. Gretchen Schartle and Standish Mecham became key promoters of the project. Most importantly, the remarkable Stephen Fairfield, executive director of the faith-based group, Covenant Community Capital of Houston committed to oversee the construction of the winning designs.
Working with a dedicated staff at Lutheran Social Services Disaster Relief in Port Arthur we are now busy identifying families to match to each of the four winning designs.