flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

A modular solution to help reduce homelessness

Modular Building

A modular solution to help reduce homelessness

DOME is a Perkins and Will-designed prototype whose goal is to provide bridge housing to the unsheltered.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 18, 2019
DOME provides a secure environment for homeless individuals while they try to find permanent housing. Images: Perkins and Will

DOME provides a secure environment for homeless individuals while they try to find permanent housing. Images: Perkins and Will

On any given night, more than 500,000 Americans are homeless. Of that total, more than one-third of those homeless—35%—is unsheltered. And 47% of all unsheltered homeless live in California, which is four times higher than the state’s 12% share of the U.S. population.

Those estimates come from “The State of Homelessness in America,” which the White House’s Council of Economic Advisors released in September. That report notes that in the last two years, homelessness in Los Angeles alone had risen by 12% to more than 59,000 people. An estimated 44,000 of L.A.’s homeless eschew its shelter system, often preferring instead to live in outdoor tents that offer them more privacy and security.

Los Angeles isn’t oblivious to this situation. Proposition HHH, approved by voters in 2016, allocates $1.2 billion to build thousands of “supportive housing” units over the next decade.  Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti has also initiated a plan called A Bridge Home, which would help the homeless get into temporary housing in their preferred neighborhoods until they can be connected with a permanent home. The Mayor’s budget includes in excess of $460 million for supportive housing, bridge housing, and services. The state kicked in another $219 million this year.

Los Angeles is committed to creating 1,600 new units for the homeless by July 2020, and is considering a number of options, including DOME, a modular, unitized system that Perkins and Will designed specifically for interim and emergency housing.

The unit, which ranges from 47 to 52 sf, includes a bed with room for storage underneath, a lockable wardrobe, partitions, access to an electrical outlet, and an optional fabric canopy that can be pulled down for additional privacy. A person can stand inside DOME. And the design allows for an optional medium-sized kennel that can accommodate a pet up to 30 lbs.

DOME units' installation maximizes space.

 

Yan Krymsky, design director of Perkins and Will's Los Angeles studio, calls DOME “a sleeping cabinet.” DOME’s microsite provides details about the unit and its installation, which slots together onsite and is collapsible; 32 units could fit onto a 53-ft-long trailer. P&W estimates DOME’s cost at $4,749 per unit.

A prototype of DOME, built by Shield Casework in Kansas City, Mo., has been installed in the Los Angeles Architecture & Design Art Museum, where interested parties can evaluate its design, construction and utility, and offer comments.

Krymsky says that P&W has also been talking with shelter operators such as the Salvation Army and People Assisting the Homeless (PATH) to gauge interest in DOME and to see if they are willing to test it out.  DOME’s design is flexible enough to bend to different operators philosophies about partitions (some like them, others don’t, for security reasons). The prototype could also be made bigger (some operators prefer longer beds, for example.)

P&W got interested in this project when it was retained by the city to do research on interim housing. As such, it learned that this kind of housing typically provides extended-stay shelter, anywhere from six months to two years. P&W also learned that there wasn’t much out there that could provide bridge housing. “For us, that’s unusual in other typologies,” says Krymsky.

Shield Casework, a five-year-old company, specializes in making products using acrylic solid surface. Its two primary markets are healthcare and sports, for which it prefabricates everything from headwalls to custom lockers.

32 DOME units can be shipped on a single 53-ft trailer. 

 

Stephen Hopkins, Shield’s president, says that he and Krymsky had worked on previous projects, including a dorm-pod concept for the University of Utah that didn’t get built for code reasons but set the stage for the two companies’ alliance on DOME.

“For us, the challenge was how do we hone the design to its basic components” so that it could be produced simply and efficiently, says Hopkins, who is an architect.

Neither he nor Krymsky see DOME as a silver bullet for solving homelessness, given the magnitude of the problem. “It’s a Band-Aid, but one we’re happy to provide,” says Hopkins. If demand for DOME were to take off, Shield has the capacity to produce 1,000 or so units over a six-month period without disrupting its other orders.

Krymsky anticipates high interest in DOME, not only in L.A. but possibly from other cities desperately seeking housing options. Perkins + Will is also considering other housing designs, such as tiny houses (which California codes currently don’t allow). “Our frustration [with tiny houses] is that their pricing is total confusion,” with the lowest-priced model with electricity he’s seen costing around $20,000.

 

Related Stories

Modular Building | Jul 22, 2016

PNC Bank’s 'Tiny Branch' opens on West Virginia University campus

The new branch doesn’t need much space for its ATM and new accounts and personal loans services.

Transit Facilities | Jun 12, 2016

Philippines’ oldest city getting its first public bus system

New York-based CAZA designed the modular bus stops with the city’s extreme weather conditions in mind.

Modular Building | May 17, 2016

Oklahoma’s first modular hotel will begin construction next month

Guerdon Modular Buildings will produce 81 modules for this project. 

Modular Building | Feb 26, 2016

CHPS releases new program, first model for prefab modular classrooms

Provides standards for indoor air quality, energy efficiency, materials, and waste management.

Game Changers | Feb 5, 2016

Asia’s modular miracle

A prefab construction company in China built a 57-story tower in 19 days. Here’s how they did it.  

Game Changers | Feb 4, 2016

GAME CHANGERS: 6 projects that rewrite the rules of commercial design and construction

BD+C’s inaugural Game Changers report highlights today’s pacesetting projects, from a prefab high-rise in China to a breakthrough research lab in the Midwest.

Modular Building | Feb 1, 2016

Hotel developers turn to modular construction to meet demand

A $90 million rebuilding project in Yellowstone National Park exemplifies this trend.

| Jan 14, 2016

How to succeed with EIFS: exterior insulation and finish systems

This AIA CES Discovery course discusses the six elements of an EIFS wall assembly; common EIFS failures and how to prevent them; and EIFS and sustainability.

Modular Building | Dec 13, 2015

Undaunted, Forest City pushes ahead on modular construction

The president of its FC Modular division says new projects are under consideration, even as competitors falter or fall by the wayside. 

Greenbuild Report | Dec 1, 2015

Data centers turn to alternative power sources, new heat controls and UPS systems

Data centers account for 2% of the nation’s electricity consumption and about 30% of the power used annually by the economy’s information and communications technology sector, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




Modular Building

Building with shipping containers not as eco-friendly as it seems

With millions of shipping containers lying empty at ports around the world, it may seem like repurposing them to construct buildings would be a clear environmental winner. The reality of building with shipping containers is complicated, though, and in many cases isn’t a net-positive for the environment, critics charge, according to a report by NPR's Chloe Veltman.

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