Case Studies/Architecture for Humanity

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Architecture for Humanity is a non-profit organisation which promotes social design, seeking architectural solutions to humanitarian crises.

Architecture for Humanity and Design for Change are inspiring examples. Collaborative design over the internet is tremendously powerful, and likely the best way forward. Omar Yaqub, Vestergaard Frandsen Nigeria, Lagos, Nigeria

Overview

Describing the global housing crisis, Architecture for Humanity (AFH) provides the following context:

‘One billion people live in abject poverty.
Four billion live in fragile but growing economies.
One in seven live in slum settlements.
By 2030 it will be one in three.
What is needed is not one solution but millions of solutions.’

Architecture for Humanity operates under the motto ‘Design like you give a damn.’ Founded from a single laptop computer in 1999 by Cameron Sinclair and Kate Stohr, AFH is a charitable organisation which promotes social design, seeking architectural solutions to humanitarian crises. Based in California, and with chapters in Canada, the United Kingdom, Italy and Australia, AFH responds to global events: present and past projects encompass the establishment of transitional housing for returning refugees in Kosovo, mobile health clinics in Sub-Saharan Africa, an HIV/AIDS outreach centre in South Africa, and rebuilding after Hurricane Katrina in the Biloxi Model Home Program.

Co-founder Cameron Sinclair explained his philosophy for sustainable housing in his acceptance speech for the 2006 TED prize, stating his wish to ‘create a global open-source network that will let architects and communities share and build designs to house the world.’ A result of this ‘one wish to change the world’ was the establishment of the Open Architecture Network (OAN) in 2007, developed in conjunction with Creative Commons and Sun Microsystems. OAN aims to respond to the UN Millennium Development Goal of achieving ‘improvement in the lives of 100 million slum dwellers for the year 2015.’ The network involves not only professional architects; it incorporates community leaders, educators, healthcare workers, non-profit organisations and technologists, amongst others with relevant expertise. Reaching their audience through competitions, workshops, educational forums and exhibitions, OAN fosters public appreciation for the diverse ways that architecture and design can improve lives.

The contribution made by AFH has been further recognised in the granting of the 2005 Index Award to Improve Life (community) and in 2006, the Innovation of the Year from the Observer’s Ethical Awards and Wired Magazine’s Rave Award for Architecture.

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