Students in the Jim Vlock First Year Building Project returned to the site in New Haven’s Fair Haven Heights for the third summer in a row, adding one more home to the new campus of Friends Center for Children, an early childhood education organization. This year, in addition to providing housing for a teacher, students were tasked with providing a community space for the use of the entire campus, or “village.”
The site lies down the hill from the previous years’ houses on a slope behind an existing single-family home. Behind a driveway and a small parking lot, the compact new structure will rise three stories. The community space will occupy the first floor, its leading corner filled with floor-to-ceiling windows and the rear tucked into the slope. The upper two levels are housing: entering either through a door and stairwell on the first floor or via a porch from the second floor, the resident has access to a living room and kitchen on the second floor and a bedroom, with bathroom and laundry areas, on the third floor.
This year, Building Project director Adam Hopfner is joined on site by assistant director Louis Koushouris (MArch ’23). There are other new aspects to this year’s project as well: the cladding is thermally modified pine, which improves resistance to water and insects. It will develop a patina with time but will remain resilient to environmental factors.
The stairs and cabinetry are being constructed offsite on Yale’s West Campus, to save time on installation and onsite construction. But as much as one plans, the process of construction always holds surprises. “It’s a bit like designing the plane as it’s flying,” says Koushouris. “We have design meetings multiple times a week, if not daily, as the construction process demands, resolving precise details and corner conditions, keeping the water out of the building, and adjusting site work in response to existing ledge and bedrock.” As always, the Building Project is a learning experience.