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New Orleans Design Competition

Designing the Future of New Orleans
Architectural Record and
Tulane University host tow ideas competitions
By James S. Russell, AIA.
Can houses and apartments rise gracefully above
floodwaters while maintaining New Orleans’s famous
neighbourliness? Can higher ground successfully
accommodate more of the city’s citizens in an
environmentally sustainable way? Both students and
professionals offered a wealth of answers in the 544
entries for two competitions initiated by
Architectural Record in a partnership with Tulane
University’s School of Architecture. The High Density on
the High Ground Competition asked professionals to propose
a 160-unit housing project on an actual development site,
while student competitors in the New Orleans Prototype
House Competition designed a three-bedroom house that
could adapt to a variety of conditions. Tulane
architecture dean Reed Kroloff presided over the judging,
while Scott Bernhard and Carrie Bernhard wrote the
programs and co-coordinated the competitions, aided by
numerous student volunteers from Tulane. For two days, the
nine-member jury winnowed entries in galleries provided by
the New Orleans Museum of Art. Almost every scheme took
seriously the request to eschew visionary ideas in favour
of practical ways to address the city’s real housing
crisis. The winners, a group of citations, and additional
selection of projects proposed by the jury went on
exhibition in New Orleans in April and May at the Ogden
Museum of Southern Art. Some will travel to the AIA
National Convention in Los Angeles this month and will be
displayed in the fall in the U.S. Pavilion at the 10th
International Architectural Exhibition, in Venice, Italy.
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High Density on the
High Ground Competition
New Orleans may need to incorporate
high-density housing if certain parts of the city
prove unsafe to build back. A city-block-size site in
Bywater, a mid-19th-century neighbourhood downriver
from the French Quarter, offered a suitably
challenging site for this competition. It’s a bit
elevated and hard against the Mississippi levee;
north, across Chartres Street, a mix of shotgun houses
and Creole cottages has only begun to see
gentrification. The program included 160 units, which
could vary widely in size from 700 to 2,100 square
feet, as well as 15,000 square feet of retail and a
5,000-square-foot “city center” studio space for
Tulane. Open to everyone, the competition drew entries
from students and professional design firms. One team,
among those cited in the following pages, were simply
three friends who recently graduated from Harvard’s
Graduate School of Design and decided to collaborate.
Juror Mario Gooden said, “I was looking for moments
that spoke to how people live next to each other, how
they watch out for each other.”
Click here to see the
projects. |
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New Orleans
Prototype House Competition
As New Orleans faces a future in
which widespread abandonment is a real possibility,
this competition, open only to current architecture
students, sought designs for a three-bedroom house
that responds to the city’s new circumstances: one
that’s easy to install on an infill site, that rises
above flood waters, and that respects the local
climate and environment. Since historic house types in
New Orleans have proved to be highly adaptable over
time, juror Patty Gay observed, “It’s tough to compete
with shotguns or Creole cottages” in the design of a
new prototype. That said, the five Honour Award
projects on these pages, submitted by students from
Bozeman, Montana, to Cambridge, Massachusetts, did an
admirable job. The jury felt five additional projects
deserved a citation (below right). “Lots of entries
were interesting in the way they were built,”
commented Brian MacKay-Lyons. “This is surprising
because students don’t necessarily know much about
construction.” Click here to see the projects |
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