Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Market featured on Passive House Accelerator


Charlotte Wensley
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Following the NYSERDA Buildings of Excellence award, Passive House Accelerator recently spoke with Jack Esterson and Lisette Wong about the Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Plaza project, which includes affordable housing and a large indoor marketplace for West African merchants. The result is a fascinating article about the history of the market and an in depth look into how it will achieve Passive House certification through our thoughtful design. It also touches on how Think!'s history of Passive House design for affordable and supportive housing considers the wider reaches of where responsible architecture meets social justice. You can read the full article here.

Our gratitude to the Procida Development Group and Malcolm Shabazz Development Corporation for their insight.

My Pandemic Silver Lining


Lisette Wong
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During the pandemic, my personal reboot was to step back and reassess; what came into focus were two concerns, lack of sufficient affordable housing and global warming, this notwithstanding, is the reason why I work at Think! Architecture, which is at the forefront of both concerns.

As time marches on and the end of the Pandemic recedes into the rear view mirror; its effects linger on, one single event having effectively reshaped our society; we collectively underwent an instantaneous shift from in person in the office as we once knew it, to making Star Trek communications a reality, beaming in remotely from our private homes through a computer screen, conflating our personal and work spaces, effectively redefining how we inhabit our urban, suburban, and rural landscapes.

Amidst these circumstances, it allowed me a time to slow down and re-assess, in a split screen scenario, the quotidian rhythm of remote work to a backdrop in a rural landscape.  Fortunate to have a corner to hunker down in the countryside, I took refuge amidst fields, trees, and the open sky above me, in stark contrast to my life in the urban setting of New York City.  Like many, I felt an urge to re-plant the vegetable garden I had once abandoned to the weeds and neglect; this underscored for me the ease in our industrial society and instant access to abundant food. Each day, I would repeat the rounds and care for my vegetable patch, trees, and perennial gardens like my own children watching them grow and change each day, learning firsthand about their dependency on the natural landscape and climate.

Within this frame of mind and coddled by an idyllic rural landscape, two concerns surfaced to the top, climate urgency and lack of sufficient affordable housing. I realized that I wanted to shift my focus within architecture. I believe that change can occur if we each one by one contribute, this cumulative effort will create change.

So, thrilled to have the time to cull the resources my local library offered; I drew incredible inspiration from early advocates and thought leaders of sustainability, Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) who understands that sustainability must be indelibly tied into market economy and be profitable and William McDonough, nicknamed the "father of the circular economy" who promotes the idea of shifting our idea of creating products to end up as waste to reusing, recycling, reducing, repairing, refurbishing, re-purposing, re-manufacturing, and recovering materials to cycle back into the economy, known as ‘Cradle to Cradle’.

In order to leave a world environmentally intact for the next generation, our children and their children, we must reverse global warming.  We cannot reverse back to an agrarian society; we must re-shape our technological society and global economy by reducing our contribution to greenhouse gasses through the goal of carbon neutrality.  

As an architect, I’ve been drawn to organizations at the forefront of leadership in environmental advocacy and I obtained certifications from LEED, a holistic approach to sustainability, and Passive House (Phius), a construction methodology to create durable, resilient and low carbon buildings, methods that contribute towards building industry standards that move the needle in our stewardship of our world.

Each step counts.

Think! awarded in NYSERDA Buildings of Excellence Round 4


Charlotte Wensley
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Think! is proud to announce that the Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Plaza project in Harlem, New York has been awarded in Round 4 of New York State Energy Research and Development Authority’s (NYSERDA) Buildings of Excellence, winning the distinguished project award and a $1 million development grant. The program rewards the design, construction and operation of clean, resilient and carbon neutral-ready multifamily buildings.

Designed for the Malcolm Shabazz Mosque Development Team and Procida Companies, the project includes 109 units of affordable housing across two buildings, a central landscaped garden for the residents, and provides an indoor home for the landmark, currently open air, seasonal Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Market; an iconic destination in Harlem.

The new market place will function as a local business incubator and showcases West African crafts, traditional clothing, goods and food. The market hall which spans West 116th Street to West 115th Street will act as a pedestrian arcade at street level between two city blocks, and will create a bustling ‘spine’ that activates and provides connectivity in the neighborhood. The two new 9 story buildings above the market will offer homes that conform to the City’s Extremely Low and Low‐Income Affordability (ELLA) criteria. 

Think! is collaborating with the MEP and sustainability team at Ettinger Engineering on mechanical innovations including newly efficient airtight packaged terminal heat pump technology utilizing low global warming refrigerants. Healthy comfortable spaces provide co-benefits for the residents through fresh filtered air, corridors and common areas filled with daylight, quiet spaces, and outdoor recreation.  The building’s electrical requirements will be supplemented by rooftop photo voltaic arrays.

The project will also implement Passive House design principles which increase energy efficiency up to 90% for heating energy and 75% in overall energy in comparison to traditional buildings. The choice of building materials will reduce embodied carbon by approximately 10% through the use of recycled brick façades. The energy and sustainability performance of the building will meet Energy Star, Enterprise Green Communities, Indoor airPLUS & Fitwel certifications.

The main West 116 Street entry is articulated by a grand 16 foot high glass art wall that will act as a beacon to identify the market. It will be commissioned to a culturally relevant artist or collaborative. The aim is to create an iconic piece that will continue to celebrate and elevate the landmark market and become a meaningful legacy in the community.

With today’s climate urgency, The Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Plaza project strives to address the most urgent imperatives by providing social justice, equity, resilience, and healthy environments. It will provide a home to the neediest and a year-round bustling urban gathering place for an iconic and important cultural asset, the Malcolm Shabazz Harlem Market.