flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Essential housing: What’s in a name?

Affordable Housing

Essential housing: What’s in a name?

Encouraging innovation and speed in essential housing permitting and jurisdictional processes, while still maintaining public health and safety, is imperative. 


By Jon Hall, Principal, GGLO | August 21, 2023
Exterior of essential housing affordable housing development Cocoon House in Washington
Cocoon House in Snohomish County, Wash., provides residents with supportive services. Photo courtesy GGLO

Recently, while commuting past a tent community on my way to work, I was reminded that a medium- to large-sized city in the U.S. today without a homelessness problem is a rarity. In my home city of Seattle, for example, we need tens of thousands of new affordable units per year to keep up with population growth, which city officials expect to hit one million people by 2044.

As an architect who has focused on designing affordable housing developments in Seattle, Los Angeles, and Boise for more than 25 years, I know firsthand achieving these projects is complicated and requires the combined resources of developers, contractors, architects, engineers, and judicial plan reviewers, as well as a range of public and private funding sources. It also takes a huge amount of collective will.

In the face of this challenge, there is one simple but extremely powerful way to address the “problem” of affordable housing. We can change the language we use to describe housing and actively shift it to be more inclusive. The descriptor “essential housing” allows for that framework. While “affordable housing” often conjures associations with government handouts and helping those who cannot, for whatever reason, help themselves, the reality is there are huge swaths of our population for whom housing costs are prohibitive. They are our teachers, baristas, firefighters, nurses, and many other essential workers. For many in our communities, rising rents and increased demand for housing means they are only one paycheck away from being unhoused.

It’s time to stop thinking of affordable housing as a handout which is someone else’s problem to solve and start calling it what it is: Essential Housing, a crucial component of a thriving local community. 

Essential housing development
Providence Joseph House, Seattle, Wash. Photo courtesy GGLO


Essential housing is a collective endeavor 

When we reframe housing as something essential to communities, many more possible solutions come to light. There are numerous connections between stable housing and other elements of community life such as wellness, faith, and public safety, and looking at housing through these lenses reveals new opportunities to tackle the issue.

Framing Essential Housing through the lens of healthcare reveals the link between stable housing and healthy community members. Anyone living unhoused, or in substandard living conditions, is at a greater risk for negative health impacts, and many mental health issues can only be solved after obtaining permanent housing. Understanding housing as essential to a healthy community means there are opportunities to direct medical investments toward the endemic housing shortage. At GGLO, our design for Providence Joseph House in south Seattle is a successful example of how healthcare companies—in this case, Washington-based Providence Health & Services—can direct resources towards bolstering the housing supply.

Looking at Essential Housing through a faith-based framework, we see the connection between stable housing and the necessary support services often offered by religious or mission-based entities. There are many examples of churches, synagogues, and temples using their available space to build much needed housing developments, including GGLO’s recently completed Cocoon House. This development provides 40 units of housing alongside support services for at-risk youth in Snohomish County, Wash., on the site of a former church. 

People in classroom setting raising hands
Cocoon House, Snohomish County, Wash. Photo courtesy GGLO

Understanding housing as an essential aspect of ensuring public safety asks us to treat the issue with more urgency. We hear proclamations of local, regional, and statewide housing emergencies year after year, yet we see the challenge continue to grow with little resistance. If we can act with a similar haste to public health emergencies like the COVID-19 pandemic, or to a flood, fire, or earthquake, we can make a meaningful impact.

Design solutions 

Although the housing challenge is massive and impacts all aspects of community life, there is not a one-size-fits-all approach to solving it. The strategies must be as varied as the stories of those facing a lack of housing. It is truly not possible to create enough housing through traditional means; reframing the issue as essential can help drive a new sense of urgency and an all-hands approach to developing new solutions.

We are seeing great strides in modular and manufactured housing to speed up the production of this essential resource. Whether a full living unit, or a kit of parts that can be componentized and rapidly assembled, these strategies can rapidly create new shelter. Individual Tiny Homes provides rapid shelter, and multi-story buildings built from factory components can provide permanent stable homes on an expedited timeline.

Rezoning and densifying land for housing is rapidly occurring in cities like Seattle, Boise, and beyond. Former malls and retail centers are being adapted to housing, including Seattle’s Northgate Mall and Lynnwood’s Alderwood Mall, which GGLO is working to convert to transit-oriented redevelopments by creating new housing to complement existing retail infrastructure. 

Converting existing vacant office buildings into residential is also seeing an increased opportunity, as evidenced by GGLO’s current Alloy at Midtown project in Phoenix, Ariz. This development takes advantage of the existing infrastructure to create housing at greater speed than new construction. We must match increasingly vacant office space to the huge housing needs across our communities.

Office to residential conversion in-progress, Pheonix, Arizona
Alloy at Midtown, Phoenix, Ariz. Photo courtesy GGLO

Always, we must remember the importance of an inclusive and community-centered process where integrated teams of designers, builders, operators, and users come together to plan buildings that address the unique needs of the communities where they are situated. Essential Housing requires new advocacy and creativity around the design and development process. Encouraging innovation and speed in permitting and jurisdictional processes, while still maintaining public health and safety, is imperative. 

While much of this can feel overwhelming, it is possible if we come together as communities to address these pressing housing challenges. Changing the narrative to reframe housing as essential is a first step. Through the power of language, we can tap into our collective willpower and, hopefully, pool our energy and resources to build a better future.

Related Stories

Adaptive Reuse | Aug 28, 2024

Cities in Washington State will offer tax breaks for office-to-residential conversions

A law passed earlier this year by the Washington State Legislature allows developers to defer sales and use taxes if they convert existing structures, including office buildings, into affordable housing.

Affordable Housing | Aug 27, 2024

Not gaining community support is key barrier to more affordable housing projects

In a recent survey, builders and planners cited difficulty in generating community support as a key challenge to getting more affordable housing projects built. The survey by coUrbanize found that 94% of respondents tried to gain community input and support through public meetings, but many were frustrated by low attendance. Few respondents thought the process was productive.

Adaptive Reuse | Aug 22, 2024

6 key fire and life safety considerations for office-to-residential conversions

Office-to-residential conversions may be fraught with fire and life safety challenges, from egress requirements to fire protection system gaps. Here are six important considerations to consider.

MFPRO+ New Projects | Aug 20, 2024

Seattle workforce housing project inspired by geology of eastern Washington

J.G. Whittier Apartments, a workforce housing project in Seattle uses the geology of eastern Washington as inspiration for the design. The architecture and interior design celebrate geometric anomalies found in nature. At the corners of the building, blackened wood siding “erodes” to expose vibrant murals underneath.

MFPRO+ News | Aug 14, 2024

Report outlines how Atlanta can collaborate with private sector to spur more housing construction

A report by an Urban Land Institute’s Advisory Services panel, commissioned by the city’s housing authority, Atlanta Housing (AH), offered ways the city could collaborate with developers to spur more housing construction.

Modular Building | Aug 13, 2024

Strategies for attainable housing design with modular construction

Urban, market-rate housing that lower-income workers can actually afford is one of our country’s biggest needs. For multifamily designers, this challenge presents several opportunities for creating housing that workers can afford on their salaries.

MFPRO+ Research | Aug 9, 2024

Apartment completions to surpass 500,000 for first time ever

While the U.S. continues to maintain a steady pace of delivering new apartments, this year will be one for the record books.

Affordable Housing | Aug 7, 2024

The future of affordable housing may be modular, AI-driven, and made of mushrooms

Demolished in 1989, The Phoenix Ironworks Steel Factory left a five-acre hole in West Oakland, Calif. After sitting vacant for nearly three decades, the site will soon become utilized again in the form of 316 affordable housing units.

MFPRO+ News | Aug 1, 2024

Canada tries massive incentive program to spur new multifamily housing construction

Canada has taken the unprecedented step of offering billions in infrastructure funds to communities in return for eliminating single-family housing zoning.

MFPRO+ New Projects | Jul 31, 2024

Shipping containers converted into attractive, affordable multifamily housing in L.A.

In the Watts neighborhood in Los Angeles, a new affordable multifamily housing project using shipping containers resulted in 24 micro-units for formerly unhoused residents. The containers were acquired from a nearby port and converted into housing units at a factory.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021