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The 14 Winners of the AIA Housing Awards

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The 14 Winners of the AIA Housing Awards

The recipients demonstrate innovative, sustainable design. And several show that, with housing, small can be mighty.


By
Novid Parsi, Utopia Contributing Editor
May 2, 2022
AIA Housing Awards winner: The Ohringer has re-emerged as an Arts Incubator and affordable Artist Housing
The Ohringer, Braddock’s iconic eight-story furniture store and AIA Housing Winner, has re-emerged as an Arts Incubator and affordable Artist Housing. Photo courtesy Ed Massery

The American Institute of Architects (AIA) recently announced the 14 winners of the 2022 Housing Awards. Now in its 22nd year, AIA’s Housing Awards recognizes exceptional residential design for new construction, renovations, and restorations.

The four-person jury evaluated entries in relation to the AIA Framework for Design Excellence as well as the following criteria: sustainable, affordable, durable, innovative, socially impactful, meeting client needs, and addressing the natural and built contexts.

Here are this year’s AIA Housing Awards recipients:

WINNERS OF AIA'S 2022 HOUSING AWARDS

One- and Two-Family Production Homes

aMews House, Atlanta
Alex Wu Architect

The 14-foot-wide aMews House sits on a once restrictively small lot of 20 feet by 75 feet. Projects like aMews House leverage such lots to provide infill housing that can support diversity, affordability, and sustainability. In 2018, this was the third smallest lot with a detached single-family residence in all of Atlanta.

The house has access to a high intersection density street network, and to community resources like restaurants, libraries, churches, schools, parks, and recreation facilities— all within ½ mile
aMews House. The house has access to a high intersection density street network, and to community resources like restaurants, libraries, churches, schools, parks, and recreation facilities—all within ½ mile. Photo courtesy Garey Gomez

One- and Two-Family Custom Residences

Costa Rica Treehouse, Santa Teresa, Costa Rica
Olson Kundig

This carbon-positive house is inspired by the jungle that surrounds it on Costa Rica’s Pacific coast. Envisioned as an open-air surfer’s hut, the three-level home is made entirely of locally harvested teak. A rooftop solar array supplies all of the home’s power needs during daylight hours. During the rainy season, an underground rain catchment system meets all the water needs.

Costa Rica Treehouse View of exterior elevation
Costa Rica Treehouse. View of exterior elevation. Photo courtesy Nic Lehoux

Divine House, Eugene, Oregon
Landry Smith Architect

Overlooking a river in Oregon, the Divine House is a compact, 1,500-square-foot house with living and outdoor space all on one level, allowing the owner to age in place. The Divine House is a low-maintenance, low-tech home with elevated design and craft, built to last at least 200 years.

Divine House. North facade in the early morning
Divine House. North facade in the early morning. Photo courtesy Jeremy Bittermann and Landry Smith Architect

Goatbarn Lane, Boulder, Colorado
Renée del Gaudio Architecture

The 1,860-square-feet Goatbarn Lane sits beside a rock formation in the Colorado mountains. A viewing platform cantilevers over the first floor, while steel legs anchor the home to the rock. Built to defend against wildfires, the home’s steel cladding, concrete base, and ironwood eaves create an ignition-resistant shell. Goatbarn Lane operates at net-zero electricity.

Goatbarn Lane - living room with viewing platform overhead, view of snow capped Rocky Mountain peaks
Goatbarn Lane. Living room with viewing platform overhead, view of snow capped Rocky Mountain peaks. Photo courtesy David Lauer Photography

Highland Park Residence, Highland Park, Texas
Alterstudio Architecture

As a counter to the mansions that dominate Dallas’ Highland Park, this project eschews exterior grandeur to focus on the interior experience, with a large expanse of curved glass panels. A stone bar cantilevers 35 feet at the entrance, and the home’s living room is carved into the stone bar above, giving the space unexpected height.

Exterior Pool & Patio -  Casey Dun Alterstudio Architecture
Highland Park Residence. Exterior Pool & Patio. Photo courtesy Casey Dunn

Pemberton Residence, Austin, Texas
Alterstudio Architecture

In central Austin, the single-story Pemberton Residence contrasts with the larger, more expensive houses around it. The modestly scaled house provides an alternative to suburban sprawl. Sited for solar and wind orientation, the residence invites occupants to live in its shaded and private outdoor landscape.

Pemberton Residence. Back Exterior + Pool
Pemberton Residence. Back Exterior + Pool. Photo courtesy Casey Dunn

Rain Harvest Home (La Casa que Cosecha Lluvia), Temascaltepec, Mexico
Robert Hutchison Architecture and JSa Architects

In the mountains west of Mexico City, this residence comprises three green-roofed buildings. All three collect rainwater, channeling it into a reservoir for onsite treatment and storage and supplying all the water that the home needs year-round. At 250 square feet, the circular bathhouse contains a hot bath and a cold plunge pool open to the sky.

 Rain Harvest Home is a water-autonomous home in Temascaltepec, Mexico that disperses living functions into three porous, green-roofed buildings that each collect rainwater.
Rain Harvest Home is a water-autonomous home in Temascaltepec, Mexico that disperses living functions into three porous, green-roofed buildings that each collect rainwater. Photo courtesy Jaime Navarro

Renovation 1662, Washington, D.C.
Robert M. Gurney 

A historic rowhome in Washington, D.C.’s Georgetown has transformed into a modern, light-filled, and open dwelling that’s visually unchanged at the street. Marrying history with contemporary, urban living, the renovation sits atop the original, century-old shell. The home features high ceilings and large expanses of glass.

Renovation 1662
Renovation 1662. Photo courtesy Anice Hoachlander, Hoachlander Davis Photography

Rio House, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Olson Kundig

A jungle hideaway near Tijuca National Park, this small modernist home is a steel-and-glass box that rises into the rainforest canopy atop two concrete piers, one of which functions as an indoor/outdoor fireplace. The 1,500-square-foot home’s raised volume is high enough to immerse occupants in the trees while remaining low enough to offer sweeping views of Rio.

Evening view of exterior elevation Rio House
Rio House. Evening view of exterior elevation. Photo courtesy Maíra Acayaba

West Campus Residence, Austin, Texas
Alterstudio Architecture and Mell Lawrence Architects

This residence in Austin’s West Campus neighborhood departs from the trend of oversized homes. At 1,922 square feet, the compact home’s first floor offers a respite from the oppressive Texas sun with darker colors and finishes, while the larger, brighter second floor has a series of porches facing the street in the front and offering privacy in the back.

West Campus Residence Living room, Austin Texas
West Campus Residence. Living room. Photo courtesy Casey Dunn

Specialized Housing

Chandler Tiny Homes Village for the Homeless, Los Angeles
Lehrer Architects LA

Designed, permitted, and built in about three months, Chandler Tiny Homes Village for the Homeless helps Los Angeles place people in “bridge” shelters as they await permanent housing. Using prefabricated pallet shelters, the village transformed an infill lot into 39 one- or two-person units for unhoused Angelinos. At 8 feet by 8 feet, the conditioned, vibrantly colored shelters are easy to assemble quickly.

The project contains a variety of spatial scales to change up the social inter - actions between residents – the axial views provide openness, while the homes provide privacy.
Chandler Tiny Homes Village. The project contains a variety of spatial scales to change up the social interactions between residents—the axial views provide openness, while the homes provide privacy. Photo courtesy Lehrer Architects LA

Flor 401 Lofts, Los Angeles
Koning Eizenberg Architecture

Flor 401 Lofts’ studio apartments provide permanent supportive housing to the recently unhoused and those living with mental illness in Los Angeles. With its tree-canopied courtyard, Flor 401 provides a rare garden setting near the city’s Skid Row. Directly off the courtyard sit onsite social services and a stairway leading to activity spaces. Bridges encourage both informal exercise and social interaction.

Flor 401 Lofts 7th Street Facing Elevation
Flor 401 Lofts. 7th Street Facing Elevation. Photo courtesy : Eric Staudenmaier

Affordable Housing

Ohringer Arts, Pittsburgh
Rothschild Doyno Collaborative

Ohringer Arts has reimagined a former furniture department store as an arts incubator and housing for artists in one of the remaining structures from the area’s industrial heyday. The project converted furniture showrooms into affordable-housing apartment units. It also provides space for artists to showcase their work.

Ohringer Arts. The apartment layouts prioritize natural light and views with a refined material palette that allows the artists’ personalities to take center stage. Photo courtesy Ed Massery
Ohringer Arts. The apartment layouts prioritize natural light and views with a refined material palette that allows the artists’ personalities to take center stage. Photo courtesy Ed Massery

The Aya, Washington, D.C.
Studio Twenty Seven Architecture and Leo A Daly

This affordable-housing project in Washington, D.C. provides short-term housing for up to 50 families, mostly young mothers with small children. Each of The Aya’s floors is considered its own neighborhood, and access is restricted to the families assigned to that floor. This allows residents to become familiar with others on their floor, sharing information and childcare.

The Aya. An affortdable housing project in the District of Columbia. All images are courtesy of Anice Hoachlander
The Aya. An affordable housing project in the District of Columbia. Photo courtesy of Anice Hoachlander

 

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