The High Cotton Project: A Community-Based Method for Serving the Urban Homeless

Authors

Keywords:

urban planning, architecture, homeless shelters, campus-community partnerships, case study

Abstract

This article details the ways a series of architecture graduate classes partnered with a nonprofit youth sports organization and other community groups to design a shelter to accommodate those experiencing homelessness in Lubbock, Texas. The researchers use a case study approach to discuss how graduate students repeatedly engaged with the public for feedback on their designs and eventually created a design for a community-specific homeless shelter and treatment center. This article shares the project’s engagement methods, which included precedent studies, design charrettes, regular presentations to the public, meetings with stakeholders, and professional collaborations.  

Author Biographies

Timothy J. Elliott, DePaul University, Writing, Rhetoric, and Discourse Department

Timothy J. Elliott is an Assistant Professor in DePaul University’s Writing, Rhetoric, and Discourse department where he researches and teaches professional and technical communication.

 

*Timothy Elliott is the corresponding author for this article. Please contact him at t.elliott@depaul.edu or by mail at DePaul WRD Department, 2320 N. Kenmore Ave., Chicago, IL, 60614-3210.

David A. Driskill, Texas Tech College of Architecture

David A. Driskill is an Associate Professor of Architecture at Texas Tech University and director of UrbanTech, a community-engaged design studio.

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Published

08/31/2021

Issue

Section

Research and Theory