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ARCHIVE Institute’s Health and Housing For Haiti Winners are Clean, Green, Off-Grid Homes

06/09/2011
by
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  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners
    Last week the winners, finalists, and other entries for <a href="http://www.archiveinstitute.org/" target="_blank">ARCHIVE Institute</a>'s Kay e Santé Nan Ayiti (<a href="http://inhabitat.com/solar-powered-teaching-hospital-currently-under-construction-in-haiti/" target="_blank">Health and Housing in Haiti</a>) competition were officially unveiled in New York City's West Village, and all proceeds from the exhibit will help pay for the construction of 5 designs. The houses, part of an open design competition last year, emphasize healthy transitional living for HIV and Tuberculosis outpatients from Fondation Esther Boucicault-Stanislas (FEBS), a non-profit that provides health care, counseling, and job training for HIV-positive persons in St. Marc, Haiti. The international competition brought together architects, engineers, students, health professionals, and sustainability consultants to create inexpensive solutions to the housing shortage affecting this population. Given the rural setting and low budget, green off-the-grid designs emerged as the most appropriate to fulfill ARCHIVE's mission of<a href="http://inhabitat.com/uc-davis-modern-student-health-center-targets-leed-gold/" target="_blank"> health-oriented architecture</a>. All five winning designs will be constructed in phase I of the project, with the first home breaking ground today, June 17th - read on for a rundown of the winning designs!
    1
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners
    The winning design is Breathe House, pictured in the previous image. Second place in the competition was awarded to Maison Canopy, by architects Lilian and Brook Sherrard. An open plan creates a protected yet open place to engage new neighbors and build new friendships. Maison Canopy is a low-tech, user-friendly design that utilizes familiar building technologies.
    2
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners
    Shutter Dwelling blends Haitian culture and building practices with high performance elements (like steel reinforcement that <a href="http://inhabitat.com/unique-bamboo-living-pod-concept-is-a-study-in-disaster-proof-design/" target="_blank">withstand hurricane winds</a>) into a familiar, durable and healthy home.
    3
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners
    Through the extensive use of sustainable building systems, the colorful Bois L'Etat house hopes to bring a dignified, off-the-grid living solution to FEBS patients.
    4
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners
    The most interesting feature of Cycle House, are two<a href="http://inhabitat.com/wireless-shadow-ebike-allows-cyclists-to-charge-their-phones/" target="_blank"> bicycle powered generators</a> located within an "exercise room," where residents can improve their health while powering their home.
    5
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Finalist Kay Play proposes that a good psychological setting will improve the well-being of all inhabitants. Cultural familiarity is critical, but also suggested is the use of bright traditional colors and the critical element of play to aid in the recovery process.
    6
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Finalist Axis House is designed on the premise that the road to healing is based on the premise of 3 axes: medical (medical, sanitation and security), communal (family/private, connection, education) and social (town, infrastructure).
    7
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Deyo House, another Finalist, is designed around the bamboo-reinforced concrete structure as well as ensuring a high ventilation rate inside the proposed house through a purposefully designed overall geometry.
    8
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Based on Haiti’s tradition, the kitchen is the place where the family meets the most and where everyone unites. The additional rooms in competition Finalist Exo-House radiate around the hearth of this home.
    9
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    The foundation of this Finalist design is the Flux Core which utilizes the natural ventilation and a cistern-based water collection and distribution system, maximizing renewable natural resources.
    10
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    The Lakou Dwelling, another finalist, functions around a central bamboo-enclose courtyard and exterior kitchen, which encourages social interaction through the linking of bedrooms to the main communal area.
    11
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Finalist Nou Ti Kwen Paradi is made of a structural bamboo system, which is used because it is a moisture-resistant material and minimizes the use of concrete. This project proposes a bamboo floor slab system capped with recycled plastic bottles.
    12
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    Competition finalist Settled Box is noteworthy for its simplicity: easy to apply, quickly assembled, dried solutions (dry work), no heavy lifting (machines), easily dismantled (if necessary) and cost effective.
    13
  • Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Finalists
    The Stack House, a two-story competition finalist, includes two innovative building systems: the stack-driven ventilation in the proposed solar chimney and the compressed stabilized earth blocks as carbon-absorbing concrete.
    14
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Archive Institute's Health and Housing in Haiti Contest Winners

Last week the winners, finalists, and other entries for ARCHIVE Institute's Kay e Santé Nan Ayiti (Health and Housing in Haiti) competition were officially unveiled in New York City's West Village, and all proceeds from the exhibit will help pay for the construction of 5 designs. The houses, part of an open design competition last year, emphasize healthy transitional living for HIV and Tuberculosis outpatients from Fondation Esther Boucicault-Stanislas (FEBS), a non-profit that provides health care, counseling, and job training for HIV-positive persons in St. Marc, Haiti. The international competition brought together architects, engineers, students, health professionals, and sustainability consultants to create inexpensive solutions to the housing shortage affecting this population. Given the rural setting and low budget, green off-the-grid designs emerged as the most appropriate to fulfill ARCHIVE's mission of health-oriented architecture. All five winning designs will be constructed in phase I of the project, with the first home breaking ground today, June 17th - read on for a rundown of the winning designs!

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Categories:  Architecture, Business, Design, News
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