Hinging for Space in the Navajo Nation
Site: Navajo Nation; Crownpoint, New Mexico
Collaboration: John Lewallen
Studio Critic: Laurie Olin + Tony Atkin
PennDesign Spring 2015
The hinge offers a new strategy for responding to the dire need for housing, water, and sense of place on the Navajo reservation. By turning family residences into essentially duplexes, shared courtyards provide residents with a comfortable new space to escape the sun and strengthen familial and community bonds. The larger shared roof area means a much greater ability to capture precious fresh water during the infrequent rainstorms. A series of check dams, hinged between residents, create habitable shaded gardens due to their ability to retain water while reducing the impact of flash flooding. These gardens, as well as placing the homes along natural outcroppings on a topographically diverse site, reconnect residents to their unique landscape, offering a variety of public and private spaces and unobstructed view corridors, while still achieving a required population density.
This new neighborhood of family and student housing is hinged around a central community center, offering a variety of shared programs and spaces for a people with a deeply rooted culture of making, evidenced by the recent success of the local technical university’s fabrication lab and culinary institute. This flexible node offers a space to learn, make, and strengthen community, familial, and cultural bonds.
Hinging family and student housing around shared resources, and the entire community around a common center, the Navajo cultural traditions of making and close familial connections are nurtured in shared, shaded space.