By Abby Cohn | Photos by Ryan Shelby
Engineering students working on a balsa wood model of their design for Pinoleville Pomo Nation homes include (from left) Tobias Schultz, Ryan Shelby, Yao Yuan, Yael Perez, Che (Tommy) Liu and Cynthia Bayley.
PHOTO COURTESY RYAN SHELBY
What
started as a six-week project for engineering freshmen is helping to create
culturally sensitive and energy-efficient housing for a small California Indian
tribe.
A
yurt-style house design conceived in last spring’s E10, Engineering Design and
Analysis, was used as the base concept for several successful housing grant
applications by members of the Pinoleville Pomo Nation (PPN), who will use the
funds to build up to 26 new homes in the Mendocino
County community of Ukiah, California.
“There’s an
acute need for housing here,” says David Edmunds, environmental director for
the tribe, which has about 300 members scattered throughout northern California. “Housing is
considered a linchpin for a lot of things the tribe wants to accomplish.”
Sustainability
is also important to tribal members, and this spring new teams of E10 students
are investigating the possibility of retrofitting existing Pomo homes with
solar hot water heaters, photovoltaic systems and other energy-efficient
improvements.
The
collaboration started last year when Edmunds and tribal representative Linda
Noel approached a Native American student group at UC Berkeley for help. Their
request found its way to mechanical engineering professor Alice Agogino, who
teaches an E10 section on human-centered and sustainable design.
The students’ design features a central communal kitchen and living room for extended families and tribal gatherings, with five small attached units that can be used for bedrooms and storage.
PHOTO BY RYAN SHELBY
Her
students, co-advised by graduate student instructor Ryan Shelby, eagerly
accepted the challenge. They made the 115-mile trip to Ukiah for a day-long
fact-finding meeting with 20 tribe members to solicit input on the community’s
needs. That kind of exchange is precisely the idea behind human-centered
design, Agogino says. “Tribal members know more about their needs than we do.”
The new
design features a large communal kitchen and living room to accommodate
extended families and tribal gatherings, with five small attached units that
can be used for bedrooms and storage. The first home, now under construction,
incorporates sustainable features like rainwater capture systems, passive
heating and cooling systems and plenty of natural lighting.
“It
resembles our traditional roundhouse,” says tribal Vice Chair Angela James,
“and would strengthen our community, not only economically, but traditionally.”
Centralized housing, the tribe hopes, will unify the Pinoleville Pomo and help
members take advantage of job training and other services. Sponsoring the
overall effort is CARES (Community Assessment of Renewable Energy and
Sustainability), a student-run community outreach program.
“It’s a
real-world project that is going to directly impact the lives of people,” says
Shelby, a third-year Alfred P. Sloan Ph.D. student in mechanical engineering
and CARES cofounder. Along with supervising the students, Shelby is incorporating the work into his
doctoral research on sustainability and alternative energy.