Over the past year, Dr. Bryce Lowery, associate professor of Regional + City Planning, has been working with a team of University of Oklahoma researchers to study how to best use the $36 million granted to the state of Oklahoma by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to support unhoused and housing-insecure Oklahomans. The team’s plan was recently approved by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, starting the process of allocating the $36 million in resources to the state of Oklahoma.
Dr. Lowery’s team conducted several surveys, meetings, and interviews to better understand the landscape of housing insecurity in Oklahoma, as the data collected on unhoused individuals often does not reflect reality.
The University of Oklahoma research team suggested that 50 percent of the federal funds be set aside for rural communities as the major population centers – Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and Lawton – in the state were given supplemental funding that rural counties did not receive. The team also proposed that the majority of the funding be spent on the construction of new housing for low-income residents. The plan for funding allocation was approved by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and will be posted on the HUD Community Planning and Development Allocation Plans website.
Another part of Dr. Lowery’s team’s work was the creation of a map of resources available to unhoused and housing insecure Oklahomans. The first draft of this map and other information about the project can be found on the project website.
Associate Professors Lee Fithian, Ph.D., and Elizabeth Pober have published a chapter in the recently released New Perspectives in Indoor Air Quality, published by Elsevier. Their contribution, titled “Chapter 16 – Architecture and the Challenges of Indoor Air Quality,” examines the relationship between architecture and indoor air quality.
Dr. Ladan Mozaffarian, Assistant Professor of Regional and City Planning, has been selected to serve as Co-Chair of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning (ACSP) Planners of Color Interest Group (POCIG) for the 2025–2027 term.
The Gibbs College of Architecture is proud to recognize Tahsin Tabassum, a recent graduate of the college’s Master of Regional and City Planning program and current doctoral student at the University of California, Irvine, for receiving the prestigious 2024–2025 American Planning Association (APA) Outstanding Student Award.