Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Creole-inspired'' Katrina Cottage

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

The Katrina Cottage

 

Cute beats cutting-edge when it comes to temporary shelters.

By Witold Rybczynski

March 31, 2006

 

 

Say what you want about the new urbanists—whose ventures into suburban

community-planning the architectural avant-garde regularly castigates as

" nostalgic " and " Disneyfied " —like the Energizer Bunny, they just keep

going. Their latest project is the unlikely sounding " Katrina Cottage, "

a substitute for the trailers that FEMA regularly deploys as temporary

shelters.

 

At least, the trailers are supposed to be temporary.

 

More than 13 years after Hurricane Andrew, people are still occupying

FEMA trailers in South Florida.

 

In Mississippi, Development Authority Director Leland Speed is quoted as

saying, " We're still in FEMA trailers (seven months later). Can you

imagine, 37,000 travel trailers with over 100,000 people in them (and

hurricane season coming)? "

So, why not provide something that is designed for permanent living,

rather than camping? This question was raised during the Mississippi

Renewal Forum, a planning workshop convened by new urbanists and state

politicians in Biloxi last October. An architect from New York named

Marianne Cusato drew up a design for a 400-square-foot cottage that

could be erected on devastated lots and eventually be enlarged and added

onto to become a permanent home.

 

The strategy is not new. After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the

relief committee built 6,000 two-room wooden shelters (which they

likewise called " cottages " ) in a dozen locations. The aim was to provide

refugees with something better than the Army tents they had been using.

The cottages were occupied for a year while the devastated city was

cleaned up. But when people started to rebuild, they transported the

huts to their lots and incorporated them into the new homes. Some of

these original cottages still exist today.

 

Katrina cottage prototype

 

Last week, a larger version of Cusato's design, called Katrina Cottage

II, was unveiled in a Wal-Mart supercenter parking lot in St. Bernard

Parish, La.

The 14-by-32-foot structure includes two small bedrooms, a kitchenette,

a full bathroom, and a living room. In addition, there is extra space in

a sleeping loft over the bedrooms. Part of the debate about new urbanism

is its penchant for traditional styles. The little cottage, true to

form, is described as " Creole-inspired. " It has traditional windows and

a steeply pitched tin roof supported by delicate brackets. It's anything

but avant-garde. I've never lost my house in a flood, but I would

imagine that " cute " would beat " cutting edge " every time.

 

The Katrina Cottages are homier than trailers, with full-size

refrigerators and regular bathrooms. They're also sturdier and more

wind-resistant (there will be more hurricanes). Like most production

houses today, the cottages are built out of factory-made panels that are

assembled on-site. These particular panels are made out of Styrofoam

with exterior and interior skins of cement planks. This is energy

efficient, but expensive. Wood framing, fiberglass insulation, and

conventional vinyl siding would have been cheaper. So would asphalt

shingles instead of the trendy tin roof.

 

 

The designers have aimed at a construction cost of $60,000—a full

$10,000 less than the current $70,000 that it costs FEMA to buy a

trailer. This is an admirable goal, but they should have aimed lower.

The cottages are approximately 650 square feet, and the cost works out

to just less than $100 per square foot. That's pricey. A good production

builder can bring in a conventional house, with all the bells and

whistles that current homebuyers expect, for under $40 per square foot.

It's true that the Katrina Cottage is designed to withstand flooding, on

the assumption that some may be built in the flood plain, but a little

" value engineering " would not be out of place. The Katrina Cottages are

definitely a good idea, but they should be further simplified to reduce

cost.

 

Both Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour and Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu

have come out in support of the Katrina Cottage and have lobbied FEMA on

behalf of the project. The lobbying is necessary because current law

limits the federal government to offering only temporary housing

assistance. Presumably this was a recognition that the emergency

management agency should not be in the housing business. But it clearly

is. The legislators, too, need to go back to the drawing board.

 

The Katrina Cottage was designed by a collective of architects and

others including Andrés Duany, Steve Oubre, Susan Henderson, Eric Moser,

Steve Mouzon, Matt Lambert, and Diane Dorney.

 

©2006 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...