Winning Team: Nova Heights
Team members: Mikayla Zeitlin, Mia Westphal, Benjamin Satloff, Victoria Bloom & Joseph Josleyn | University of Colorado Boulder
Advisor: Alice Reznickova, Assistant Teaching Professor
The winning project develops a pioneer social housing model for the currently abandoned and contaminated Lincoln Heights Jail. The design includes solar green roofs, electric load-shifting metres, and ground-source heat pumps as the primary cooling source for the building. The project proposes repurposing two of the buildings; the firdt into a Community Resilience Centre, retrofitted with climate-resilient and disaster-preparedness resources and the second into a Market Hall with an adjacent outdoor patio with flexible use for farmers’ markets and food trucks.
From 1979 to 2014 the jail housed the Bilingual Foundation of the Arts. In 2016 the City commissioned an adaptive reuse study and awarded an RFP to adaptively reuse the site in 2017. In 2022 the developers returned the site to the City due to a high amount of environmental hazards and infeasibility. Currently, there are City facilities located in separate buildings on the property.
The City is experiencing a housing crisis amidst a global climate crisis. LA County contains the nation's largest number of homeless individuals who reside outdoors on our streets. The City is also mostly comprised of renters, half of which pay more than 30% of their income on housing and are thus housing cost-burdened. Low-cost housing is located far from the City’s job centres and boundaries contributing to sprawl in Southern California where some commuters spend up to 3-4 hours daily commuting into the City for work, leading to an increase in GHG emissions and Vehicle Miles Travelled. It is imperative that we construct more infill housing close to DTLA.
The site is 210,800 SF/ 2 hectares
Key Information
The surrounding area is densely populated, with a high percentage of Latino and Asian residents. The median household income is among the lowest in the region and ranks in the 100th percentile for CES 4.0 pollution score.
Priority areas & main expectations:
The size and location of the site present a unique opportunity to become a pilot to model “Social Housing” for the local and regional community. It can become a catalyst for economic development and increasing access to natural resources. Solutions can either focus on the adaptive reuse of the jail (considering the inflexible concrete infrastructure) or can assume the land has been remediated and the building demolished. For either approach, teams should bear in mind the cost and feasibility of their proposed interventions.
The jury panel who evaluated all submitted projects consisted of the following members:
- Helen Campbell, AICP, Planning Director | Office of Councilmember Eunisses Hernandez
- Christina Navarro, Executive Director | Healing Urban Barrios
- Geoffrey Moen, Director of Development | Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles (HACLA)
- Robert Vega, Community Member
- Gloriela Iguina-Colón, Manager of Heat, Health and Equity | C40 Cities