|
Originally published on January 24, 2001, in the Harvard
Gazette. Reprinted with permission.
Back
Ambitious KSG Group Opens up its Affordable
Housing Competition to All Area College Students
By Doug Gavel
Gazette Staff
|
It requires only a cursory glance at the classified
ads to determine just how exorbitant the cost of living
has become in and around Boston.
A "modern" one-bedroom apartment in Cambridge
rents for $1,400 a month. A two-bedroom flat in Brighton
("pets OK") goes for $1,550. A "spacious"
two-bedroom in Somerville is on the market for $1,600.
The rents may be manageable for the dotcom yuppies
moving in from the suburbs, but for a single woman on
minimum wage supporting two children the escalating
prices are a painful indication of just how unaffordable
much of the Boston area's housing stock has become in
recent years.
In an ambitious effort to address this growing regional
dilemma, a group of Harvard graduate students is recruiting
participants for the inaugural Affordable Housing Development
Competition. Open to all area college students, the
competition challenges design teams to produce real-life
affordable housing plans from the ground up, with the
winners splitting $16,000 in cash prizes.
|

Andrew Han, Brendan Miller and Sarah Karlinsky Kennedy
School of Government students
and co-coordinators of the Affordable Housing Development
Competition,
Andrew Han '01 (left), Brendan Miller '03, and Sarah
Karlinsky '01. (Staff photo by Rose Lincoln)
|
The competition is co-sponsored by the Federal Home Loan
Bank of Boston and the Citizen's Housing and Planning Association
(CHAPA) with additional financial support and cooperation
provided by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard,
the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (M.I.T.), the Center for Urban and
Regional Policy at Northeastern University, the College of
Citizenship and Public Policy at Tufts University, and the
College of Public and Community Service at the University
of Massachusetts, Boston.
"I believe this is a huge educational opportunity, but
that is only part of the motivation for me," says Brendan
Miller KSG '02, a member of the competition's organizing committee.
"I feel some responsibility, too, as a student. Because
we have such a huge student population in the city, we are
in competition for many of the housing units in the area."
With its dual purpose - of providing students with a valuable
learning experience while providing the community with specific
detailed proposals for alleviating the housing crunch - the
Affordable Housing Development Competition is expected to
attract interest from a wide range of students from the fields
of architecture, design, finance, marketing, public policy,
and urban planning at Harvard and other surrounding institutions.
"Because the Boston community is so rich in resources,
but because these resources are somewhat compartmentalized
... it's nice to foster this connection between institutions
and between people," says Sarah Karlinsky KSG '01, also
a member of the organizing committee. "The affordable
housing crunch isn't just a Kennedy School crunch, a Harvard
crunch, an M.I.T. crunch, but rather it's a Boston regional
crunch, and getting institutions to work together allows us
to broaden the perspective."
Teams consisting of between three and five students from
various institutions will begin forming next month following
an informational meeting on Feb. 6. Each team will be partnered
with either a community development organization or a for-profit
developer of affordable housing. The teams will prepare proposals
for actual affordable housing projects in local neighborhoods,
including everything from the physical design plans to marketing
strategies to financing options.
Proposals will be judged in April by a panel of affordable
housing practitioners, academics, and other professionals
with the winning team receiving a $10,000 first prize ($7,000
for the developer and $3,000 for the students). The second-place
team will receive $6,000 (with $4,000 for the developer and
$2,000 for the students).
The bulk of the prize money is courtesy of the Federal Home
Loan Bank of Boston, which has provided more than $100 million
in housing subsidies in the region during the past 10 years.
Bank Senior Vice President for Housing and Community Investment
David P. Parish believes the competition will do more than
advance the mission of stimulating more affordable housing.
"I think the additional advantage is making the development
community more aware of the resource that exists in local-area
universities," he says, "particularly in terms of
the talent of the students, while also making students more
aware of the housing development community and what they can
add to that."
CHAPA Executive Director Aaron Gornstein is convinced that
bringing students to the table now will pay dividends later.
"It's going to be important to bring young people into
the housing field in the future," he says. "The
best way to interest students and excite them about affordable
housing is to have them working directly with community organizations
in the area to put together real proposals.
"So we are hoping [this competition] will really stimulate
interest in the affordable housing field among graduate students
and the undergraduate students who will participate, while
also providing a resource for the nonprofit organizations
that could use the help."
For Karlinsky, the opportunity to link energetic students
with grass-roots neighborhood groups who need the support
makes this an extremely worthwhile pursuit.
"I thought that a competition would be a particularly
good way of raising consciousness among students about what
actually goes into doing affordable housing," she says.
"It's not just the bricks and mortar of it. It's the
community of it. It's the financing of it. There are all these
different components ... and by doing it in such a way as
you actually develop ties to the larger Boston community seemed
to me to be a really phenomenal opportunity for students in
the Boston area."
Students will compete not only for prize money, according
to Karlinsky, but also for the opportunity to see their proposals
come to fruition.
"The optimal scenario will be that students learn a
lot but also that the developers are actually able to use
some of what the students come up with in order to push through
a viable project so that what we do is not just an academic
exercise but rather of use to someone at some point,"
she says.
Academic exercise or not, Gornstein insists the competition
is a step in the right direction. "This isn't going to
solve the housing crisis," he says. "But it is part
of an effort that needs to go on. Central to any affordable
housing initiative needs to be the bringing together of the
public sector meaning government agencies with
the private sector, including universities. [That] partnership
[will enable us] to expand affordable housing in Greater Boston."
In addition to its participation in the competition, Harvard's
commitment to affordable housing in the region is underscored
by its 20/20/2000 initiative which makes available $20 million
in low interest loans to help community organizations secure
and renovate new affordable housing units in Boston and Cambridge.
The University also recently established the Housing Innovation
Program, providing $1 million in one-time grants.
|