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Architecture for a social cause

Janhavi Purohit

Issue date: 4/4/08 Section: News
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Architect Cameron Sinclair, co-founder of the charitable organization Architecture for Humanity and author of "Design Like You Give a Damn: Architectural Reponses to Humanitarian Crises," spoke April 3 to an audience of architecture students from the Westphal College of Design, as well as a mix of professors and other individuals.
Sinclair gave a lecture on his organization and the current projects underway. Architecture for Humanity is currently working on rebuilding impoverished communities in areas such as East Biloxi, Miss., which was struck by Hurricane Katrina, and Sri Lanka, which was damaged by the 2005 tsunami.
Sinclair spoke to students regarding the situation in areas that require immediate relief and assistance, and commented on the inefficiency of the majority of efforts that were proposed.
"We are losing focus of what it means to be sustainable," Sinclair said. "That's why I come to schools like this that are about building an environment."
According to Sinclair, the organization centers on working in locations that are not profiled by the media, or "hyped up."
"We don't go where Anderson Cooper tells us to," Sinclair said.
Funding for the program comes from a variety of "interesting places," according to Sinclair, from the conventional organizations, such as Oprah's Angel Network, to the "sublime."
"Most of our funding, initially, came from hot chocolate being sold by high school kids," Sinclair said.
For the first time at Drexel, 100 students from the architecture program will be sent on a weekend trip with Sinclair, starting April 4, to design solutions for buildings in crisis-stricken areas. The awards ceremony for the winning designs will be held April 7.
Sinclair said that his motivation for beginning this organization came from his impoverished background.
"I grew up in a poor, low socioeconomic London neighborhood, where people in the rich part of town, with the big houses, always looked so much happier than the people living in houses near me," Sinclair said. "I was inspired by bad architecture-I felt that we should, we had to do better."
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