Origami-Inspired Personal Shelter Provides A Quick Solution For Home

Origami-Inspired Personal Shelter Provides A Quick Solution For Homeless

Tina Hovsepian didn’t just want to get an “A” on her class project —
she wanted to change people’s lives, too.

The architect is the inventor of Cardborigami — the collapsable,
transportable and origami-inspired personal shelter she started
inventing as a University of Southern California student in 2007. What
started as Hovsepian’s academic assignment has become a feasible way
to alleviate homelessness in her hometown of Los Angeles.

(Photo: Tina Hovsepian)

Hovsepian — who is currently raising funds to expand her product onto
the streets of L.A. — was honored at a Women in the World event on
March 18 for the design, and was awarded the Toyota Driving Solutions
grant of $50,000 to further her work helping the homeless.

As she explained at the event, Hovsepian was moved to advocate for
those in need after studying abroad in Cambodia, where her program
helped redesign an impoverished school.

“It was… the first time witnessing firsthand third world poverty,
and it got me really thinking about how privileged I am to be able to
live in America, in Los Angeles, have an education, have
supportive… people around me,” she said in a video produced by Women
In The World, noting homelessness on Skid Row “is worse than [in] any
third world country,” because the U.S. has the resources to do
something about it.

Hovsepian at a Women in the World event on March 18. (Photo: Tina
Hovsepian)

Hovsepian is the founder and executive director of Cardborigami, the
nonprofit, which is aiming to use the product as a way to secure
permanent, long-term housing for those who need it.

Securing permanent housing and then sustaining that housing through
job placement are the third and final steps in the group’s model.

Hovsepian is trying to better a homelessness crisis in her hometown:
Los Angeles County had 58,423 homeless individuals in 2013, according
to the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) — about a 16
percent hike from 2011.

Cardborigami — which is similar to other personal shelter inventions
that could help the unsheltered homeless — may be one small step in
the right direction. Hovsepian said she’s aiming to reduce the price
of creating her product from $30 to $20 to be able to help more people
with less funding.

“When you speak to people on the streets like I have done, you just
learn that everyone has their own story,” Hovsepian said. “I want to
be that voice to share that — maybe we can all have a new perspective
towards homelessness, and utilize design to attract more resources
towards the cause.”

To support Cardborigami, click here. To help fight homelessness on a
national scale, support PATH (People Assisting The Homeless) by using
the Crowdrise widget below.

From: A. Papazian

http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/7035452