Blog + News

Blog + News

So Happy Together

Grace Kim is an architect and co-founder of Schemata Workshop, a Seattle-based design firm focused on empowering communities through architecture, a vision very much share by Perch Projects. She spoke at TED about co-housing as an antidote to isolation – now recognized as public health epidemic –  and she walks her talk: she founded and lives in Capitol Hill Urban Cohousing (CHUC) with her family. Learn more about the project, which pairs individual family units with common courtyards, a rooftop garden and a street-level community kitchen and dining hall, in the video and images below. (all images courtesy Schemata Workshop)

Design for Dignity 2017 | L.A. Architects Address Homelessness

On the heels of the passage of  Measures H and HHH by L.A. county and city voters, respectively, Perch Projects attended the 2nd Annual AIA Los Angeles Design for Dignity conference on July 14th. The event drew a wide range of designers and activists focused on using the funds allocated in the aforementioned measures to find solutions to ending homelessness, create affordable housing and develop healthy neighborhoods. Above, Isela Gracian (center), President, East LA Community Corporation, provides perspective on developing inclusive communities. She is joined on the panel by Cynthia Strathmann (left), Ph.D., Executive Director, Strategic Actions for a Just Economy and Dalila Sotelo, President, Affordable Housing Commission, HCIDLA.

City of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti Addresses AIALA 2017 Design for Dignity Conference

In his keynote address, City of Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti outlined his administration’s comprehensive strategy for helping the 57,000 humans currently experiencing homelessness to secure and keep permanent housing. The strategy rests on 3 pillars: 1) housing people who were currently homeless by scaling up the Coordinated Entry System (quickly and efficiently matching people to available housing and services by stitching existing programs together); 2) creating more rapid rehousing subsidies; and 3) developing more permanent supportive housing. Photo | Paul Redmond Photography

Design for Dignity conference attendees at McCarty Memorial Christian Church. Photo | <a href="http://www.paul-redmond.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">AIA Los Angeles</a>

Design for Dignity 2017 attendees filled the pews at McCarty Memorial Christian Church, coming together in awareness that Los Angeles is facing not just a housing crisis but also a crisis of human connectivity and compassion. Photo | AIA Los Angeles

Will Wright, AIA Los Angeles Director of Government and Public Affairs, moderates Design for Dignity 2017 discussion of Measures H and HHH
Will Wright, AIA Los Angeles’ Director of Government and Public Affairs (far left), moderated a discussion aimed at empowering the architecture profession to invest measure H annd HHH dollars using integrated design thinking.

Panelists (from left to right): Wright; Dhakshike Wickrema, Assistant Senior Deputy for Homelessness and Mental Health, Office of Mark Ridley-Thomas, LA County; Alisa Orduna, Homelessness Policy Director, Office of LA Mayor Eric Garcetti; Jacqueline Waggoner, Commissioner, Los Angeles Housing Services Authority; and David Howden, Associate Director, Corporation for Supportive Housing. Photo | Paul Redmond Photography

Roland Wiley, AIA, Principal of RAW International, leads a conversation on best practices for fostering complete communities. Photo: Paul Redmond Photography
Roland Wiley, AIA, Principal of RAW International, led a conversation on best practices for ensuring inclusive communities and healthy neighborhoods for families, children and seniors. Photo: Paul Redmond Photography

left to right: Sofia Borges, John S Egan AIA, David C Martin FAIA, and R Scott Mitchell at 2017 Design for Dignity Conference

Shining a light on innovative housing solutions, John S. Egan AIA (center left) of Egan Simon Architecture was joined by members of the USC Homeless Studio and Woodbury University Social Innovation Studio projects. From left to right, Sofia Borges, Acting Director, MADWORKSHOP; Egan; David C Martin FAIA, Co-founder, MADWORKSHOP; R Scott Mitchell, Principal, Gigante AG, and Assistant Professor of Practice, USC School of Architecture. Not shown: Deborah Richmond AIA, Professor in Practice, Woodbury University.

Healthcare and Hope for Downtown L.A.’s Homeless

We are so excited to have officially broken ground last week on Wesley Health Centers’ Corner of Hope medical clinic and community center. Located in the heart of downtown Los Angeles’ Skid Row, the facility will provide both palliative and preventive healthcare to those most in need in a location that is immediately accessible to the largest numbers of homeless residents.

The center will also serve as a gathering place for music, art, and community activities, providing residents with a sense of belonging and a respite from the harshness of the downtown streets.

The non-profit Urban Voices choir provided the soundtrack for the ribbon cutting (they’ll eventually have a permanent space inside the center).

Architecture | Houston-Tyner
Landscape Architecture | Swamp Pink Landscape Architecture
Photography | Kurt Jordan Photography