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Kristin Buckalew
displays her design for the women's shelter
Architecture
students design
Hempstead Women's Shelter
On Sept.
27, Texas A&M architecture students unveiled their design concepts,
programs, drawings and models for a sustainable women’s shelter
in Hempstead, Texas.
The class
projects, under the direction of George J. Mann, the Ronald L. Skaggs
Endowed Professor of Health Facilities Design, and Joseph J. McGraw,
professor emeritus, were undertaken at the request of "Focusing
Families," a non-profit organization in Hempstead, established
to promote the preservation of families and provide education about,
prevention for and intervention in domestic violence and other family
crisis issues.
The 14 Aggie
architectural design students began the project on Sept. 1 at a kick-off
presentation in Hempstead led by Heather Stautmeister, executive director
of Focusing Families, and her staff.
“We
are privileged that Texas A&M University’s College of Architecture
has chosen the women’s shelter as one of there fall projects,” Stautmeister
said. “The students became emotionally involved and you can see
it in their designs. We are very pleased with the talent and ingenuity
they utilized in developing their designs and meeting the needs of the
victims of abuse.”
Some of Focusing Families clients shared their experiences with the class.
“The students were quite moved by a victim of abuse from Hempstead who
described her ordeals and the attitudes of those around her, as she finally had
to turn for help to the sensitive staff of the Women's shelter,” said Mann.
Each student developed his or her own interpretation of the organization’s
vision. Students researched designs of other women's shelters, visited the
proposed shelter site, developed a space program, made a site analysis, developed
plans, and built a design model.
“This has been a great opportunity to aid a community on a subject that
is serious, but usually kept quiet in society,” said Kristen Buckalew,
one of the students working on the project. “It is unfortunate that a place
like this is ever needed; however, it is rewarding that through architecture
we have the privilege of making a positive impact on the lives of victims in
crisis.”
Students were asked to employ a theme of designing for sustainability. This
theme included principles of designing for energy conservation, climate realities,
site access and orientation, using recycled materials, security and functionality.
Several Focusing Families officers and board members and City of Hempstead
officials visited the students in the studio several times to critique the
projects.
The designs are intended to assist Focusing Families with its purpose of eliminating
domestic violence and establishing support for families by providing services
to victims, abusers and families. The group helps clients learn new ways to
communicate and alternatives to violence, seeking to strengthen the community
by strengthening families. Its children’s program was created to educate
children and teenagers about healthy relationships, about avoiding unhealthy
ones and about positive ways to deal with bullying, harassment and abuse in
schools and communities.
"Our health facilities design students, working through and collaborating
with the director and staff of Focusing Families, have contributed in considerable
measure to the awareness, understanding, and civil discourse of this most important
social issue of domestic violence,” McGraw noted. “Their resulting
analysis and solutions have in a most positive way made a meaningful contribution
toward ending the persistent conspiracy of silence that usually surrounds this
global issue.”
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