Skip to main content

Housing and Community Design Award Winners

HUD.GOV HUDUser.gov
eList


From: HUD USER News
 
A jury of knowledgeable design, community planning, and
housing professionals representing The American Institute
of Architects (AIA) and the U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) has selected four outstanding
projects as national models of affordable housing.
Recipients of the AIA/HUD Secretary's Housing and
Community Design Award for excellence in residential
housing design are:
 
The Bridge (Homeless Assistance Center of Dallas, Texas)
 
The Bridge won the 2009 Community-Informed Design Award,
which recognizes design that supports physical
communities in rebuilding social structures and
relationships weakened by outmigration, disinvestment,
and the isolation of inner city areas. Widely accepted by
the homeless, a facility designed for 400 now handles up
to 1,000 people a day, and more than 500 individuals have
received training, counseling, secured employment or
permanent housing. Results are tangible and the
surrounding neighborhood is revitalizing; crime has
declined by 18 percent.
 
Project Place - Gatehouse of Boston, Massachusetts
 
Project Place won the 2009 Creating Community Connection
Award, which recognizes projects that incorporate housing
within other community amenities for the purpose of
either revitalization or planned growth. Project Place is
a new six-story, mixed-use building developed by a
nonprofit agency that offers job training, work
experience, education, housing, and support services to
men and women experiencing homelessness.
 
Bridgeton Neighborhood Revitalization of Bridgeton, New Jersey
Irvington Terrace of Fremont, California
 
Bridgeton Neighborhood Revitalization (BNR) and Irvington
Terrace both won Excellence in Affordable Housing Design
awards. This award recognizes architecture with overall
design excellence that responds to the needs and
constraints of affordable housing. BNR used HOPE VI funds
to revitalize an historic urban neighborhood by erecting
period-design housing on carefully chosen scattered sites
that had become physical barriers to pedestrian/social
connectivity and often acted as havens for illegal
activity. Irvington Terrace, a 100-unit low-income rental
housing development, uses progressive modernist forms in
the context of a traditional village square-like
development. Apartments feature stoops and porches to
encourage resident interactions and are oriented to the
square, which offers amenities such as a swimming pool;
fountain; and sunny, shaded, planted areas.
 
More information on these winners and the Secretary's
Award program is located
at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/about/housingCommDesign_2009_1.html.
 
--------------------------------------
Please contact us at:
HUD USER
P.O. Box 23268
Washington, DC 20026-3268
1-800-245-2691
1-800-927-7589 (TDD)
202-708-9981 (fax)
--------------------------------------
The HUD USER News eList keeps busy professionals in the
fields of housing and community development informed of
new research and resources available from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development's Office of
Policy Development and Research (PD&R). Periodically,
publication announcements and other useful information
will be sent via the eList. The HUD USER and Regulatory
Barriers Clearinghouses value your privacy; we do not
share our mailing lists with other groups, and you can
unsubscribe at any time.
 
You can search the eList archives
at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/elist/archive.html.
 
Why not share HUD USER's resources and information with
a colleague? Forward this email to associates who may be
interested in the housing research and data sets we have
to offer. Thanks!
 
To keep up with the latest HUD research and related
resources, you can also sign up for a free subscription
to our ResearchWorks newsletter (in either electronic or
print-based formats) by visiting https://www.huduser.gov/emaillists/subscr.html.
 
--------------------------------------
 
You were sent this HUD USER News update because
you expressed interest in receiving a weekly email to
stay informed of new HUD research and resources. If you
no longer wish to receive this email, please send an
email to hudusernews@huduser.gov with "unsubscribe"
as the SUBJECT.