Tasked with creating a visionary supportive living facility for Auckland City Mission, long-established Auckland-based architects Stevens Lawson Architects took the opportunity to transition to Archicad, and in doing so was able to take advantage of Central Innovation’s training, support and CI Tools extensions to enhance the project’s design. Stevens Lawson Architects associate Joshua Warne tells how it came about.
“The Auckland City Mission HomeGround project consists of residential accommodation with integrated health and community services, and is based on the Breaking Ground (previously Common Ground) supportive housing model developed in New York City in the 1990s,” Joshua explains. “But this is a real one-off: it’s the only project in the world to have this level of wrap-around services within the housing structure itself, and as such it was very much a brief-driven concept.”
A large number of the Auckland City Mission’s clients are of Māori or Pasifika descent, and the development of the design reflects and respects this connection, aiming to provide a sense of identity and manaakitanga. A whānau room, Te Manawa Ora, provides a sacred space to acknowledge and celebrate Māori tikanga; artwork and installations integrated throughout create a sense of home, healing and belonging. HomeGround was one of the first projects Stevens Lawson Architects tackled using Archicad – using it as the impetus to transition from its former CAD software