A BETTER WAY HOME looks at six solutions to America's multifaceted housing challenges at the National Building Museum
A new exhibition at the National Building Museum (NBM) in Washington, D.C. will explore innovations in the design and delivery of affordable housing across the country.Opening on October 21st, A BETTER WAY HOME is an extension of the museum’s Equity in the Built Environment series and showcases six winning projects from the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge, which awarded $20 million over a three-year span to exemplary solutions to the problem in the areas of housing construction, housing finance, and resident services and support. The 1,500-square-foot ground-floor exhibition space was designed by MASS Design Group, themselves widely considered an innovator in the application of social justice principles in the built environment, and tells the story of each project, their organization, and the community impacted through architectural models, multimedia materials, project photos, illustrations, and videography.Read the full post on Bustler
A new exhibition at the National Building Museum (NBM) in Washington, D.C. will explore innovations in the design and delivery of affordable housing across the country.
Opening on October 21st, A BETTER WAY HOME is an extension of the museum’s Equity in the Built Environment series and showcases six winning projects from the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge, which awarded $20 million over a three-year span to exemplary solutions to the problem in the areas of housing construction, housing finance, and resident services and support.
The 1,500-square-foot ground-floor exhibition space was designed by MASS Design Group, themselves widely considered an innovator in the application of social justice principles in the built environment, and tells the story of each project, their organization, and the community impacted through architectural models, multimedia materials, project photos, illustrations, and videography.
Read the full post on Bustler