Categories
Solutions to the Problem of Homelessness

Instructor: Wes Jones

Elevated Field: Harm-Reductive Vertical Architecture for Unhoused Residents in Skid Row

This thesis argues that homelessness in Skid Row is fundamentally a condition of spatial

compression rather than mere resource scarcity. It proposes a vertical thickening of the city

by elevating unhoused life into a semi-autonomous layer above ground, thereby relieving

congestion and reorganizing coexistence. Informed by behavioral observation, the project

introduces calibrated spatial prescription to reduce conflict while maintaining agency.

Rather than solving homelessness, architecture is positioned as a harm-reduction

mechanism that redistributes space, visibility, and survival conditions without relying on

policy change.

Elevated Field: Harm-Reductive Vertical Architecture for Unhoused Residents in Skid