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Wacky Cardboard Homeless Shelters Fold Out Like Origami

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  • Wacky Cardboard Homeless Shelters Fold Out Like Origami

    Wacky Cardboard Homeless Shelters Fold Out Like Origami

    10/26/2010

    Fold a thousand, make a wish?

    Origami has inspired countless gadgets: bicycles, MP3 players, and now,
    homeless shelters?

    Sounds like a gimmick, but yeah. Tina Hovsepian, a recent grad of USC's
    architecture school, has invented a cardboard shelter that pops up like an
    origami balloon. A repeating diamond shape in the walls keeps the structure
    stiff. When it's time to move, the shelter folds flat, making it easy to
    cart around. She calls it -- wait for it! -- Cardborigami.

    A glorified cardboard box? Sure. The idea, though, is to make the shelters
    (which can also be deployed in disaster situations) waterproof and
    fire-resistant so they hold together better than something you'd find in the
    parking lot of Office Depot. At the moment, she's testing a treatment made
    of a non-toxic by-product of sugarcane.

    Hovsepian first created the structure in her fourth year at USC. Of course,
    she isn't the first young designer to turn a hand to housing the homeless. A
    bunch of students at MIT made shelters out of recycled junk they found in
    and around Cambridge a few years back. And in L.A., Eric Lindeman and Jason
    Zasa designed EDAR, a shopping cart that converts into a tent, when they
    were students at the Art Center in Pasadena. Hovsepian's project is
    different because, if all goes according to plan, it can be mass produced
    for a pittance.

    Visit www.cardborigami.org for more information.


    The Architect's Newspaper
    a.. Copyright © 2010 Mansueto Ventures




    From: A. Papazian
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