Residential and Housing Innovation Competitions: Designing Homes for the Planet's Most Urgent Crisis (Updated June 2026)
This is the UNI editorial home for residential and housing innovation — the competitions and briefs that confront the single most urgent design problem of the 21st century: how do we house 10 billion people affordably, sustainably, and with dignity? The global housing shortage is estimated at 330 million units. More than 2.8 billion people worldwide lack adequate housing according to UN-Habitat. The United States alone is short roughly 4.7 million homes. Urbanization is on track to add 2.5 billion people to cities by 2050. And climate displacement is accelerating the problem in every region. Housing is not a niche competition category — it is the defining architectural challenge of our century.
This section curates UNI's housing innovation briefs across every scale and type: microhomes under 25 square metres, affordable apartment blocks, social housing estates, prefab and modular housing, adaptive reuse conversions, disaster-resilient shelters, senior living, incremental housing, co-housing, ADUs, and the vernacular revival briefs reimagining tropical, desert, mountain, and floating housing. From 9 square metres to 9,000 units, every scale of housing innovation lives here.
What Is Residential and Housing Innovation?
Innovation in housing is rarely about aesthetic reinvention. The most important breakthroughs in the last century have been systemic — changes to tenure models, construction processes, financing, incremental growth, community governance, and climate response. The best housing innovation competitions reward four dimensions simultaneously:
- Affordability: cost per square metre, cost per unit, and cost per dignity. A beautiful $2 million home is not innovation. A dignified $20,000 home is.
- Sustainability: embodied carbon, operational energy, water use, material lifecycle, and end-of-life disassembly.
- Adaptability: can the house grow with its occupants? Can it be finished incrementally? Can it be reconfigured as the family changes?
- Community: how does the design support social connection, shared amenity, cultural specificity, and resident agency?
The Global Housing Crisis in 2026: The Data That Defines the Emergency
Here are the numbers architects should know by heart when entering a housing competition in 2026:
- 330 million — estimated global housing unit shortage
- 2.8 billion — people worldwide living in inadequate housing (UN-Habitat)
- 4.7 million — US housing unit shortage
- 123 million — forcibly displaced people worldwide at the end of 2024
- 2.5 billion — population expected to be added to cities by 2050
- 1 in 4 — urban residents in the global south living in informal settlements
- 30% — approximate share of global CO2 emissions attributable to buildings, most of it housing
Housing competitions matter because ideas competitions are the fastest path from concept to prototype to policy. A winning entry can reframe what a politician thinks is possible — and a generation of students studying that entry can build something real from it a decade later.
A Century of Housing Thought: The Lineage Behind Every Serious Entry
- Le Corbusier — Unité d'Habitation (Marseille, 1952) and Pessac (1925): the canonical modernist housing experiments. Pessac's worker housing has been continuously adapted by residents, making it an early proof of incrementalism.
- Walter Gropius — Dessau Masters' Houses (1926) and the Bauhaus housing estates: the modernist social housing ideal at its most rigorous.
- Frank Lloyd Wright — Usonian homes (1930s onward): Wright's attempt at democratic middle-class housing.
- Jean Prouvé — Tropical Houses (1949-51): flat-pack prefab housing for French colonies in Africa. A prototype for every serious prefab experiment since.
- Buckminster Fuller — Dymaxion House (1946): the factory-built house of the future, never mass-produced but influential forever.
- Moshe Safdie — Habitat 67 (Montreal, 1967): 354 prefab concrete modules stacked into 158 apartments. Still the canonical built example of modular housing at urban scale.
- Kisho Kurokawa — Nakagin Capsule Tower (Tokyo, 1972): the Metabolist masterpiece. Capsules bolted to a concrete core, replaceable every 25 years.
- Herman Hertzberger — Diagoon Houses (Delft, 1971): houses deliberately left unfinished so residents could complete them. Participatory design before the word existed.
- Charles Correa — Belapur Housing (Navi Mumbai, 1983): incremental housing in India. Small plots, courtyards, phased construction. A foundational precedent for Aravena.
- Balkrishna Doshi (Pritzker 2018) — Aranya Low-Cost Housing (Indore, 1989): over 80,000 residents housed through a participatory, phased model. One of the most important affordable housing projects ever built.
- Alejandro Aravena / ELEMENTAL (Pritzker 2016) — Quinta Monroy (Iquique, 2004): the "half a good house" model. The most influential affordable housing model of the 21st century, now replicated worldwide.
- Shigeru Ban (Pritzker 2014) — Paper Log Houses (Kobe 1995 and beyond): paper tube structures for disaster relief. The moral anchor of emergency housing design.
- MVRDV — Silodam (Amsterdam, 2003) and Mirador (Madrid, 2005): mixed-tenure housing as urban spectacle.
- BIG (Bjarke Ingels) — 8 House (Copenhagen, 2010), VIA 57 West (NYC, 2016), VM Houses: social housing and mixed-use residential as architectural spectacle.
- Tatiana Bilbao — affordable housing in Mexico: culturally-specific low-cost housing rooted in Mexican vernacular and climate.
- IKEA / BoKlok — flat-pack housing: furniture-company discipline applied to housing. Proof that scale and standardization can work.
Types of Housing: The Full Spectrum of Innovation
Affordable and Social Housing
The core of the field. Municipal public housing (Vienna, Singapore, Amsterdam), non-profit developers, community land trusts, and mixed-income developments. The best precedents are Vienna's Gemeindebauten, Singapore's HDB, and Aravena's ELEMENTAL.
Micro, Compact, and Tiny Housing
Housing under 25-40 square metres. A response to urban land prices and the needs of single-person households, students, and downsizing retirees. Tokyo's density logic is the positive precedent; Hong Kong's coffin homes are the cautionary one. Buildner's MICROHOME has run 11 editions and defined this niche globally.
Prefabricated, Modular, and Factory-Built Housing
From Prouvé's tropical houses to Fuller's Dymaxion to BoKlok to contemporary CLT modular towers. In 2026, CLT, 3D printing (ICON, Apis Cor), and robotic assembly are finally making mass-produced housing credible.
Adaptive Reuse: Office-to-Residential and Beyond
The defining housing typology of the post-pandemic era. US office vacancy rates hover near 20%, while 70,700+ residential units are currently in the office-to-housing conversion pipeline — a fourfold increase from 2022. Design challenges: floor plate depth, natural light, plumbing cores, residential layout in commercial envelopes.
Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs)
Granny flats, backyard cottages, laneway houses. California, Oregon, and many other US states have legalized ADUs as part of affordable housing policy. ADUs could add millions of housing units to existing residential neighborhoods without displacement.
Co-Housing and Intentional Communities
The Scandinavian bofaellesskaber model — private homes clustered around shared amenities. BIG's 8 House (Copenhagen), Hertzberger's Diagoon, and contemporary cohousing projects across Europe and North America. An answer to the loneliness epidemic as much as to the affordability crisis.
Incremental Housing
Aravena's half-a-good-house model. Finish the hard parts (structure, plumbing, kitchen, bathroom); let residents complete the rest. The most important affordable housing innovation of the 21st century.
Climate-Responsive Housing
Passive house standard (up to 90% energy reduction), earthships, rammed earth, straw bale, tropical cross-ventilation, desert thermal mass, alpine insulation. Climate-responsive housing draws heavily from vernacular traditions and reinterprets them with contemporary tools.
Disaster-Resilient and Emergency Housing
Shigeru Ban's Paper Log Houses for Kobe (1995), IKEA's Better Shelter for UNHCR, and the growing field of rapid-deployment shelter. Flood-adaptive housing in the Netherlands and Bangladesh, wildfire-resistant design in California, earthquake-resistant construction in Japan and Chile.
Senior Housing and Aging in Place
The global population over 65 is projected to double by 2050. Aging-in-place design, universal design, cohousing for seniors, and intergenerational housing models. WHO's age-friendly housing principles are the international standard.
Student Housing
One of the fastest-growing residential typologies. SANAA's Okurayama Apartments, Tietgen Dormitory in Copenhagen, and the wave of purpose-built student accommodation across the UK and Europe.
Floating, Amphibious, and Water-Based Housing
The Netherlands has led floating housing for decades. Now Bangladesh, the Maldives, Nigeria (Makoko Floating School), and flood-prone American cities are catching up. As sea levels rise, this moves from experimental to essential.
Slum Upgrading and Informal Settlement Design
Over a billion people live in informal settlements. Rather than demolishing and rebuilding, contemporary thinking favours upgrading in place — better sanitation, infrastructure, services, and legal tenure while preserving the existing community fabric. The Medellín Metrocable-library-escalator model is the reference.
Open Housing Briefs on UNI Right Now
The competitions currently curated in the residential and housing innovations section:
- Ornate — Challenge to illustrate a Contemporary Castle
For more housing briefs across the platform, browse all ongoing competitions.
Technical Considerations for Housing Design
- Structural systems: CLT mass timber (lower embodied carbon), modular steel, concrete panel systems, load-bearing masonry, and hybrid assemblies.
- Energy and environmental performance: Passive House certification (PHI), LEED for Homes, Living Building Challenge. Distinguish net-zero energy from net-zero carbon.
- Envelope and climate response: orientation, shading, ventilation, thermal mass. Vernacular cues reinterpreted with contemporary performance.
- Density and unit efficiency: units per hectare, cost per square metre, space use efficiency.
- Accessibility and universal design: step-free access, wider doors, accessible bathrooms. Design for aging and disability from day one.
- Community amenities: shared laundry, workshops, gardens, childcare, rooftop space.
- Cost discipline: every housing competition is implicitly a cost competition.
- Cultural specificity: the best affordable housing is rooted in local climate, material, and culture.
- Participatory design processes: residents as co-designers, not just beneficiaries.
How to Prepare a Strong Housing Innovation Competition Entry
- Start with the problem, not the design. Diagnose the specific housing crisis the brief addresses before drawing a single line.
- Commit to a tenure model. Is this ownership? Rental? Community land trust? Cooperative? Public housing? Each implies different design decisions.
- Show the money. Include real cost-per-square-metre estimates. Juries reward honesty about economics.
- Design for incremental growth. Show how the building can start smaller and grow as budgets allow. Aravena's lesson is universal.
- Represent the resident. Who lives here? What is their daily life? What does morning look like in this apartment?
- Argue for replicability. A one-off beautiful house is not innovation. Why can this model be built 1,000 times?
- Cite your lineage. Reference Aravena, Doshi, Correa, Safdie, or Bilbao where relevant.
- Section drawings matter more than exterior renders. Housing is lived inside.
- Address sustainability quantitatively. Not "sustainable materials." Say: "CLT structure, 70% lower embodied carbon, passive house envelope, projected 85% energy reduction vs code baseline."
June 2026 Platform Snapshot
- 1 open brief currently curated in the residential and housing innovations section
- 54 competitions currently open across all themes on the platform
- 767 total competitions hosted on UNI since 2017
- 7449 total entries submitted across all competitions
- 898 jurors have evaluated work on the platform
- 270K+ architects and designers in the global UNI community
- 68 disciplines across architecture, landscape, urban planning, product, and allied fields
Frequently Asked Questions About Housing Innovation Competitions
What is a housing innovation competition?
A housing innovation competition is a design brief that asks architects to propose new solutions to the global housing crisis — affordability, sustainability, adaptability, and community models. Unlike conventional residential design briefs, housing innovation competitions explicitly reward systemic thinking: new construction methods, new tenure models, new financing, new responses to climate, and new forms of community living.
Who can enter housing architecture competitions?
Almost all housing competitions on UNI are open to students, emerging architects, practicing professionals, and multidisciplinary teams. Some briefs restrict entries to specific regions or career stages, but the vast majority welcome international participants of every experience level. Many are free to enter — see free architecture competitions for no-fee briefs.
What is the difference between affordable housing and social housing?
Affordable housing is any housing priced to be accessible to households at or below local median income, regardless of ownership model. Social housing is specifically state-owned or non-profit-owned housing provided at below-market rates as a public service. Vienna, Singapore, and Amsterdam run large social housing programs; the US tends to rely on subsidized affordable housing through private developers.
What is the half-a-good-house model?
The "half a good house" model was developed by Alejandro Aravena and ELEMENTAL in the early 2000s and most famously realized at Quinta Monroy (Iquique, Chile, 2004). If the budget only covers half of what a family needs, build the half that is hardest to build yourself — structure, plumbing, kitchen, bathroom, roof — and leave the rest for the family to complete over time.
What is a passive house and how does it apply to residential design?
A passive house is a building designed to the Passive House Institute (PHI) standard, which requires extreme insulation, airtight envelopes, heat recovery ventilation, and strategic solar gain to achieve up to 90% energy reduction compared to conventional construction. It is the most rigorous voluntary energy standard in widespread use.
What is adaptive reuse for housing?
Adaptive reuse for housing is the conversion of existing non-residential buildings — offices, factories, warehouses, silos, department stores, churches, schools — into residential use. It is the dominant housing strategy of the post-pandemic era.
What is an ADU (accessory dwelling unit)?
An ADU is a secondary dwelling unit on a residential lot, typically in the form of a backyard cottage, garage conversion, or basement apartment. California, Oregon, and many other US states have legalized ADUs as part of affordable housing policy.
What is MICROHOME?
MICROHOME is an annual international architecture competition run by Buildner in partnership with Kingspan. It is the most recognized housing competition brand globally, now in its 11th edition (2026) with a €100,000 prize pool. The brief restricts entries to homes of 25 square metres or smaller.
How do I find housing competitions on UNI?
This section curates open briefs at every scale. For more adjacent briefs, check temporary and modular architecture (prefab, disaster shelter), Type 1 civilization (speculative housing), and free architecture competitions. A UNI Membership gives you unlimited access to every competition on the platform.
What makes a strong housing competition entry?
A clear diagnosis of the specific housing problem being addressed, a credible cost model, a tenure and financing model, a replicable design that can scale, cultural specificity rooted in local context, quantitative sustainability claims, a section drawing that reveals interior spatial quality, and a representation of the resident's daily life.
Recommended Reading for Housing Innovators
Start your library with: Alejandro Aravena ELEMENTAL: Incremental Housing and Participatory Design Manual; Moshe Safdie Beyond Habitat; Balkrishna Doshi Paths Uncharted; Shigeru Ban Voluntary Architects' Network; Jane Jacobs The Death and Life of Great American Cities; David Madden and Peter Marcuse In Defense of Housing; Matthew Desmond Evicted; and the collected writings of Tatiana Bilbao. For technical standards, consult the Passive House Institute publications and UN-Habitat reports.
Explore More on UNI
Beyond residential and housing innovations, browse all ongoing competitions, see what's trending, preview upcoming launches, or study the past competitions archive. Related sections include temporary and modular architecture, Architecting for a Type 1 Civilization, and free architecture competitions. Want unlimited access to every brief on UNI? Explore UNI Membership.