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Shelter Squared Featured on Interior Design

Madworkshop Fosters a Solution to the Emergency Housing Crisis

Source: Interior Design

By Edie Cohen

Shelter Squared by Madworkshop. Image by Jeremy Carman and Jayson Champlain/courtesy of Madworkshop.

The need for emergency housing isreaching epic proportions. Not just in earthquake-, fire-, and mudslide-prone California, where this project originates, but also globally. But, Madworkshop, a nonprofit architecture and design foundation in Los Angeles focusing on social and technological innovation, has fostered a solution. Shelter Squared by Madworkshop fellows Jeremy Carman and Jayson Champlain offers eating, sleeping, and lockable storage areas in a 50-square-foot enclosure that can be erected in as little as 15 minutes. “It distills shelter to the absolute minimum,” Madworkshop founder and architect David Martin states.

Shelter Squared by Madworkshop. Photography by Buddy Bleckley/courtesy of Madworkshop.

“It’s a humane, efficient solution to emergency housing situations.”

Lightweight, waterproof panels of recyclable laminated cardboard tilt together and are held in place with Velcro strips. Each unit provides benches with under-seat storage, a table that converts to a bed, and privacy curtains, and stands on a clean cardboard base. Assembled, Shelter Squared can be used individually or grouped. When not in use, it all gets flat-packed to roughly the dimensions of a king-size mattress and weighs just 50 pounds—imagine hundreds of them stored in a school gymnasium or community center.

Shelter Squared by Madworkshop. Image by Jeremy Carman and Jayson Champlain/courtesy of Madworkshop.