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AIA/HUD Secretary Awards
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A diagonally angled partition forms the organizing principle of the plan, visually elongating and
enlarging the space and dividing a public lower level from a slightly raised private upper level. Wood and stone flooring and low rugs were selected for ease of navigability. The diagonal wall is paneled with sanded HomasoteŽ recycled-paper wallboard, which provides acoustic dampening in the absence of heavier carpeting.
The kitchen, bathroom, and bedroom include cabinetry and counters that allow the owner to approach head-on. The kitchen also includes an eye-level oven, drawer-style dishwashers, cabinets with pull-down shelves, and an inexpensive aluminum rub-rail at the toe kick to protect the wood cabinets from wheelchair damage. Two levels of counters allow food preparation from both standing and seated positions, welcoming visitors to participate.
A niche built into the wall next to the toilet provides an alternative to the standard toilet grab bar. The shower curb was eliminated; the shower area slopes in a single plane to a trough drain.
Doorways were generally avoided and, where used, were adaptive: A wide, lightweight acrylic sliding panel serves as a door for the main bathroom, and a fabric curtain covers a clothes closet.
The project previously received a special housing award in the 2007 AIA Housing Awards.
Affordable Design
K Lofts, a nine-unit project in downtown San Diego, California, designed and developed by Jonathan Segal, FAIA, was recognized for excellence in affordable housing design.
Built on a 9,000-square-foot (840-square-meter) urban property in the Golden Hill area, the building integrates a former Circle K convenience store and gas station to minimize deconstruction. The project was built at a cost of $82 per square foot ($882 per square meter), without governmental subsidy.
K Lofts includes a mixture of very-low-income affordable and market-rate rental units. Each unit boasts large private outdoor spaces and oversized glazing.
Architect-developer Segal worked closely with the community for nine months in a participatory design process, seeking to enhance the building's human scale, promote social interaction, and create defensible space. The development also produces some renewable energy for its own use.
The project previously received a multifamily housing award in the 2006 AIA Housing Awards.
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