In Sacramento, a low-income housing complex replaces the defensive design typical of public housing with a porous system based on social spaces and ecological stewardship
Close to the confluence of the American and Sacramento Rivers, Northview Pointe Apartments is a vibrant new Sacramento landmark. An open, permeable composition defined by its color and texture palettes, the low-income housing complex comprises 67 units.
The work of Brooks Scarpa Huber Architects, the project eschews the typically defensive design of suburban social housing to offer an alternative model centered on shared spaces.

Located in California’s Central Valley, Sacramento has an extreme Mediterranean climate with summer temperatures frequently exceeding 38°C. Building in this location requires passive strategies to create comfortable microclimates, including in outdoor areas.
Proximity to the river confluence is another challenge, with the riparian habitat among the most sensitive in the San Francisco Bay watershed. Low-density urban sprawl has frequently compromised these natural corridors, altering both water runoff and biodiversity.

The third challenge is social. In a suburban neighborhood dominated by detached housing, low-income projects are traditionally designed with a defensive posture – high fences, blank walls, and controlled access – which tends to isolate residents from the surrounding fabric. These conditions inform a design that combines climate and ecological strategies with a clear community vision.

Northview Pointe Apartments turns the paradigm of the closed residence on its head with a porous, inward-facing site plan. The two-story buildings line the perimeter, creating a series of central shared spaces that include a garden and a communal courtyard. The apartments face these central voids, maintaining physical separation while ensuring visual and social connectivity.
Centered on breezeways and open walkways, exterior circulation promotes airflow and accessibility while turning paths into meeting places.

Strategically positioned between the two outdoor spaces, a community room with large sliding doors serves as a threshold between interior and exterior. A two-story trellis provides shade and dappled light. Fragmented and dynamic, light functions as both an environmental and expressive element.

Environmental stewardship is a key organizing principle of the design. The complex achieved LEED Platinum certification via low-impact materials, passive cooling strategies, and new habitats that extend ecological connectivity into the surrounding landscape.
Limiting impervious surfaces and using drought-tolerant native landscaping both filter stormwater naturally before it reaches nearby waterways. This approach protects water quality while supporting local ecology through processes such as pollination and species migration.

Northview Pointe Apartments offers a vision for housing where social spaces, environmental responsibility, and urban integration converge to foster identity and a sense of belonging.
>>> Discolver also MLK + PCH: Affordable Housing as Urban Stewardship







Location: Sacramento, California, USA
Client and Owner: Excelerate Housing Group
Gross Floor Area: 2890 m²
Architect: Brooks Scarpa Huber Architects
Lead Designer: Lawrence Scarpa
Principal-in-Charge: Angela Brooks
Project Architects: Eleftheria Stavridi, Flavia Christi, Carlos Garcia
Design Team: Jeffrey Huber, Dionicio Ichillumpa, FAIA, Iliya Muzychuk, Yeawon Min, Eric Mosher, Yimin Wu, Juan Villareal
General Contractor: Snyder Langston
Consultants
Landscape: Brooks + Scarpa with PLAN(t) Landscape Studio
Structural, Civil: Labib Fun
MEP: IDiaz Design
LEED: Homage Design (Shellie Collier)
Geotechnical: Southern California Geotechnical
Photography: Brooks Scarpa, courtesy of the author