Rion Rizzo
Columbia Parc at Bayou District New Orleans
Rion Rizzo
Columbia Parc at Bayou District New Orleans
As the flood waters of Hurricane Katrina lapped through their living rooms, the residents of New Orleans’ St. Bernard Housing Project climbed onto their roofs to flash “help” signs to helicopters overhead. Seven years later, nothing of that unhappy scene remains. In place of a stereotypical troubled housing project is a development of 466 townhomes and “mansion” houses on 17 new city blocks reintegrated into the neighborhood’s street grid that would make any New Orleans neighborhood proud. The buildings, steeped in the architecture of the city’s Gentilly area, are built high enough to keep their residents safe from floods like those triggered by Katrina, sturdy enough to thwart hurricane winds, and LEED Silver certified to make them energy efficient.
Columbia Parc was the first of the four large housing projects destroyed by Katrina to be rebuilt. Yet “housing project” is a misnomer. The new buildings are home to low-income residents and those who can afford market-rate rents. And there is no difference in the accommodations between the two.
There were challenges with the project, including several levels of government approval. Approval by the former residents wasn’t easy to come by either. “They were worried about being displaced and being left out,” says John Schrader, a partner with JHP, the project’s land planner.
Category Affordable housing community
Entrant/Land plannerJHP Architecture/Urban Design, Dallas
BuilderBBL Builders, Irving, Texas
ArchitectBroadmoor Design Group, Metairie, La.
DeveloperColumbia Residential, Atlanta
Interior designerHolt Interiors, Atlanta
Landscape architect Wood + Partners, Atlanta
Photographer Rion Rizzo/Creative Sources Photography