London Design Silver

2025

Parts to Whole

Entrant Company

Ling Sha

Category

Architectural Design - Low Cost Housing

Client's Name

Country / Region

United States

Parts to Whole

Collective Social Housing Tower

Reframing Affordability and Urban Connection in Houston’s Midtown

Project Context

In response to the escalating housing shortage across U.S. cities, Parts to Whole investigates how collective housing typologies can expand affordability while reinforcing urban cohesion. The project is situated in Houston’s Midtown—an area historically fragmented by highway infrastructure that severed neighborhood connections and limited access to affordable housing. As the city plans to remove this highway and introduce a linear park, the proposal reimagines the site as a catalyst for inclusive, transit-oriented redevelopment.

Design Concept

The tower occupies a metro and bus interchange with a 30% buildable footprint, prioritizing shared public space over density maximization. An elevated podium functions as a civic park—bridging the urban divide while offering accessible open space for the surrounding community. Above, the tower’s vertical organization alternates between residential, collective, and public layers, establishing a “sandwiched” system that encourages interaction, cooperation, and shared amenities.

Living Collectively

The concept of living collectively drives the project’s approach to affordability: individual units remain flexible through reconfigurable partitions, while collective kitchens and shared terraces reduce redundancy and cost per household. This spatial economy transforms private excess into communal resources. Residents maintain autonomy (parts) while contributing to a broader social fabric (whole), exemplifying how design can mediate between privacy, collectivity, and urban equity.

Impact

By redefining density as a framework for coexistence rather than compression, Parts to Whole demonstrates a replicable model for affordable housing that is spatially generous, socially inclusive, and infrastructurally strategic—an architectural response to the systemic housing shortage in American cities.

Credits

Architectural Designer
Ling Sha
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