UMD Team Makes “Final Four” in HUD Affordable Housing Competition

May 24, 2019 / Updated Mar 17, 2020

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Winners in HUD Affordable Housing Competition

An interdisciplinary team of graduate students from UMD’s School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation has landed one of four finalist slots in the third annual HUD Innovation in Affordable Housing Student Design and Planning (IAH) Competition 2016, beating out over 80 teams from some of the finest and most prestigious graduate-level programs in the United States. UMD will go head-to-head against Harvard University, UT Austin and the University of Kansas on April 19, 2016, at HUD’s Washington, D.C. office to vie for the winning title. Team Maryland is: Oluwatobi (Tobi) Thomas (MRED), Nicole Akpedeye (MCP/ARCH), Meghan Leahy (ARCH/MRED), Robert Grooms (ARCH/MRED) and David Brotman (MRED). Adjunct Professor Rob McClennan, AIA, is the team’s advisor.

The philosophy behind the IAH competition is that ideas and innovations from the next generation of professionals are essential to fulfilling the need for affordable, sustainable housing. The IAH challenges interdisciplinary, graduate-level teams to address the social, economic and environmental issues that surround a real-world housing problem in the United States, by creating innovative and original solutions through development, design and finance. This year’s competition asks teams to retrofit or replace an existing site in Santa Barbara, Ca, for family housing. The first round required schematics and a preliminary pro forma. While UMD’s design is under wraps until the final competition, the team says it aims to challenge the perception of affordable housing, by offering a highly sustainable project that educates, enriches and that creates a sense of community.

“A desire for our project is to change the stereotype of what affordable housing looks like and how it functions,” said Robert, “so that when you look at it, you see a place that truly embodies the people who live there.”

The team will refine their project and produce more detail in the weeks leading up to the competition. The winning team will be awarded $20,000. To learn more about HUD’s IAH competition, visit their website.