Documentary Exploring Sustainable Architecture in One of America’s Poorest Counties Airs on PBS August 23

August 12, 2010

HALE COUNTY, Ala.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--“Citizen Architect: Samuel Mockbee and the Spirit of the Rural Studio,” a 60-minute documentary on the late visionary architect Samuel “Sambo” Mockbee and his radical educational design/build program to create architecture that not only elevates the living standards of the rural poor but also provides “shelter for the soul” in Hale County, Ala.; will be broadcasted on PBS August 23, 2010 from 9-10 p.m. CDT. Citizen Architect powerfully and richly depicts the creativity, passion and dedication of Mockbee and his program, affiliated with Auburn University, known as the Rural Studio. The film explores Mockbee’s effort to instill knowledge and passion into future architects by teaching them how to improve a community’s quality of living by putting compassion and ethical responsibilities at the heart of design. “Citizen Architect” displays the immense poverty of Hale County, one of the poorest in the nation, and the students of the Rural Studio designing homes and neighborhood buildings that reflect the needs and wants of their underserved clients. Students build their designs with minimal funding and discarded materials such as old tires, carpet scraps, license plates and car windshields. Through the years and still today, they also use donated building materials from Great Southern Wood, makers of YellaWood brand pressure treated lumber and the principal underwriter of the documentary. “The results are graceful, clever and often stunning structures that provide shelter for the body and soul while fostering a healthy dialogue between disparate groups of people whose assumptions about race, class and economic disparity are upended by the experience. 'Citizen Architect' is guided by frank, passionate, never-before-seen interviews with Mockbee that provide context and insight for the story of Jay Sanders, a young Rural Studio instructor, and a group of students who design and construct an environmentally responsible home for an eccentric, destitute Hale County native known to locals as Music Man for his love of song and dance.”

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