This week, [Archinect] dips into the swamp of whether so-called "poor doors" (separate entrances for affordable and market-rate housing tenants) are discriminatory, highlighting discussion points made in the wake of New York's decision to make them illegal. It also follows up on the investigation into a balcony collapse in Berkeley, California that led to six deaths, and ask Brian Newman, Archinect Sessions' Legal Correspondent, what legal recourse is possible for everyone involved.
Virtual built environment wizards Thomas Hirschmann and Anthony Murray, founders of documentation and preservation firm The Third Fate, also join us for an interview. Their work seeks to document, preserve and activate the built environment through virtual realities.
Listen to episode thirty-six of Archinect Sessions, "Poor Doors of Perception":
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Shownotes: New York Observer's piece on so-called "poor doors" and the transition in New York City from Mayor Bloomberg to Mayor de Blasio's affordable housing policy.
Related to [Archinect's] discussion of discriminatory design vis-a-vis "poor doors", the Freakonomics podcast takes on "fitness apartheid"