How Can We Respond Humanely to the “Shelter-in-Place” Crisis?

Hazel Hepburn
An Idea (by Ingenious Piece)
3 min readJun 23, 2021
Photo by Bill Nino on Unsplash

What does “shelter-in-place” mean to us?

On Thursday, March 19, 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom announced a statewide “stay-at-home” order to prevent the further spread of COVID-19 in the state. This move follows an earlier San Francisco Bay Area “shelter-in-place” announcement on Monday by local officials. Essentially, shelter-in-place means staying at home to not spread the virus or any infectious agents through human contact.

Although the homeless populations across the Bay Area are not subject to this order, the local government has urged unhoused individuals to find shelter and told agencies to take steps needed to provide protection.

Diane Yentel, the CEO and President of the National Low-Income Housing Coalition, says in an interview about this unhoused population, “…they tend to be, on average, sicker… They have underlying conditions and are also very vulnerable to catch and spreading disease because of the very nature of homeless encampment. There are no opportunities to implement social distancing.”

Challenges for current homeless shelters:

Yentel also pointed out the challenges of implementing social distance in her comments. “Shelter providers are also really struggling right now… For shelters that are doing their best to implement social distancing, that means taking out half of the beds to space them. That means serving half as many people and not taking new residents.”

Having spent the past 15 months in social isolation myself, I am asking now how we can confront this crisis around the need for the homeless to shelter-in-place in a more humane way.

What researches told us:

Research published in late 2015 by the University of Southampton, UK, found that the rapid deactivation of human coronavirus occurs on brass and copper-nickel surfaces at room temperature (21C/69.8F). However, coronavirus stays alive on other materials such as PVC, ceramic, glass, and stainless-steel surfaces for more than 4 -5 days.

Another study published this March in The New England Journal of Medicine also indicated that “On copper, no viable SARS-CoV-2 was measured after 4 hours and no viable SARS-CoV-1 was measured after 8 hours. Likewise, no viable SARS-CoV-2 was measured on cardboard after 24 hours, and no viable SARS-CoV-1 was measured after 8 hours.”

A question for myself:

Therefore, in this prototype design series, I will use copper and cardboard/paper (and those are locally available) as essential elements for the emergency shelter for the unhoused population during the COVID-19 pandemic. We could quickly set up those materials in a park or a vacant lot.

Ingredients are:

Option 1 (this type is suitable for located vacant lots with asphalt or similar hardscape)

Option 2 (this type is suitable for located at parks, with grass and soil)

Aftermath

While we are contemplating how to end this global pandemic and helping those vulnerable, I want to share a glimpse of optimism that ending homelessness is possible. The homelessness trend goes downwards: as the national population increases each year, the percentage of homeless people decreases from 0.21% in 2009 to 0.18% in 2020. If we could spark some creative housing solutions for the homeless community, we might end the next public health crisis more swiftly.

--

--

Hazel Hepburn
An Idea (by Ingenious Piece)

Hello there, we are Hazel and Hepburn. We love art, cities, and everything in between.