Housing Inequality in America

Native American Housing Solutions

This 2020 blog post shows possible solutions to the housing crisis many Native Americans face. While these are by no means the only solutions, they offer hope that improved access to quality housing will also improve health outcomes for Indigenous communities.

Indian Country’s Housing Crisis is a Public Health Crisis
JUNE 26, 2020  • JOSEPH KUNKEL & ASPEN GLOBAL LEADERSHIP NETWORK
Overcrowding and lack of housing heighten the dangers posed by COVID-19.  

Tribal governments can no longer afford to tolerate substandard housing that deteriorates quickly. Or worse, emergency shelters that were never meant to be housing at all. Constructing sustainable, long-term housing in Indian Country is an investment worth making. Now is the time for tribal governments and those of us from the architecture and design community to come together and act. In March, the federal government passed its $2.2 trillion coronavirus stimulus package, which allocated $8 billion to tribal governments. Of that, $300 million has been earmarked for federal Indian housing programs. This funding coupled with lessons learned from recent success stories offers a way forward. It is possible to redesign, design, and construct homes that Native families can take pride in for generations to come.

Examples of such housing already exist. In Tacoma, Washington, the design firm Environmental Works partnered with the Puyallup Nation Housing Authority to develop “Place of Hidden Waters,” a 20-unit affordable tribal townhouse complex that marries contemporary design with traditional American Indian elements. The project team engaged the housing authority, community members, and an architect at the onset of the design process. This approach resulted in an affordable, culturally-responsive development that achieved LEED Platinum certification and set an impressive standard for green housing nationwide.

Another notable success is a 150-home subdivision developed on the Pueblo of San Felipe in New Mexico, which shows what’s possible when tribal governments get creative in the face of undue economic constraints. Rather than simply building a handful of homes using approximately $500,000 in annual funding from the Indian Housing Block Grant, the Pueblo’s Housing Authority used a series of 
Title VI loans for construction before converting the new mortgages into Section 184 loans. This empowered the housing authority to leverage its initial funding of $600,000 into nearly $5 million in housing development.

Housing is also a powerful vehicle for economic development. Instead of signing contracts with outside labor and importing materials, tribal governments should hire local builders, developers, and craftspeople. Not only will this help develop a skilled and unskilled workforce that redistributes profit back into the community; it will ensure completed projects reflect indigenous values.

 An investment in housing is an investment in our future health and resilience. Together as a nation, as Native and non-native peoples, we need to create models that aren’t just a quick fix, but a sustainable, long-term solution that will help us as a collective society weather the storm now and for many generations to come.

Joseph Kunkel, a citizen of the Northern Cheyenne Nation is the Director of MASS Design Groups’ Sustainable Native Communities Design Lab in Santa Fe, NM. In 2019, Joseph was awarded an Obama Foundation Fellowship for his work exploring transformational change that aligns with indigenous values and honors the worldviews of Indigenous populations. As a 2019 Civil Society Fellow, and a member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network, Joseph is working towards developing lasting impact within American society where Indigenous peoples have a seat at the table. Joseph is a recipient of the Rauschenberg SEED award, Creative Capital Award, and Enterprise Rose Fellowship.


Native Hawaiians are also beginning to see some improvements in their housing opportunities.  With the help of federal funding, thousands of Native Hawaiians may find themselves homeowners for the first time.

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