Disability Culture Center Centers disability as culture, identity, and community
- Client L.C. Cox Haven for Hope
- Location San Francisco, CA
- Size 2,400 sq ft
- Completion 2022
- Program Multifunctional community and cultural space, admin offices, hybrid meeting room, public art, patio
- Sustainability All electric, reduced energy, reduced water, reduced carbon, circular economy, inclusivity and equitable design thinking, Platinum GPR rated, part of the ILFI Affordable Housing Pilot using LBC Core
- Delivery Negotiated GMP
- Photographer Bruce Damonte
Welcome to the nation’s first publicly funded Disability Cultural Center–a space that elevates disability culture as a vital part of civic life. The center supports a wide range of programming, from virtual and in-person gatherings to advocacy events, workshops, exhibitions, and everyday social use. A flexible, tech-enabled multi-purpose room is complemented by informal gathering areas, encouraging both structured programming and spontaneous interaction. Transparency to the street reinforces visibility and inclusion, making disability culture present and legible within the public realm. Featured artist and San Francisco native, Jay D. Green of Creativity Explored was selected through a public process, and his artwork is translated onto the perforated bi-fold door, which is illuminated at dusk–extending the center’s presence into the city.