Ek Shelter - mHS City Lab

Ek SHELTER – A roof for everyone by mHS City Lab

Ek Shelter - mHS City Lab
Ever so often you may hear about multi-crore residences and swanky commercial complexes from up and coming designers and architects. Seldom do we hear about initiatives for the urban poor. With the ever increasing urban development, and harsh living conditions, it is a sorry state in which our country leaves its homeless populace. From among the rare breed of socially conscious designers, comes mHS City Lab, which brings new concepts and technical expertise from diverse fields like architecture, design, finance and social sciences together, to work for their upliftment and betterment. With a vision for providing technical construction assistance for informal settlements to those in need, they believe in the power of self-building efforts.
Being selfless is an admirable trait, and mHS delivers on its vision, starting projects, taking feedback, and then improving, working for the larger population of the country which is in need, rather than the privileged few. With over 6 years of leading the charge in Indian cities, affordability and constructional simplicity remain the primary criteria for their projects. Affordable design solutions are being provided to the poor and homeless, which is commendable. It is clear that for a nation to develop with all its populace behind it, economically weaker sections need more initiatives like ekSHELTER by mHS at the grass root level.

mHS City Lab
mHS City Lab is an inter-disciplinary team whose vision is to enable the creation of socially inclusive cities by studying, designing and creating a portfolio of viable solution. Their work in India has focused on enabling self-construction housing in informal settlements which is the main supply of affordable housing for low-income dwellers today. Rather than dismissing informal settlements or slums as a problem, they believe in catalyzing self-build efforts while improving outcomes related to safety, health and social inclusion.
Over the past 6 years, mHS has been working with homeless in India with the objective to provide solutions which are financially affordable and thus scalable. In the framework of this engagement, mHS has envisioned a simple shelter for homeless individuals and families living in urban spaces as a bottom-up approach.

Ek SHELTER – An introductory Video

ekSHELTER aims to be one possible option, particularly for people living on pavements and under flyovers. Here, technical difficulties to anchor a tent or any other structure to hard pavements and the police not allowing any permanent or semi-permanent structures, force homeless to lie on the ground wrapped in blankets without any other physical protection. In Delhi alone, there are over 150,000 homeless people. The poorest of them live with their families on pavements without any basic services or protection.

The shelter design makes its fabrication possible everywhere in India, as the materials are available all across the country and no special skills are required. The design is easy to understand, build and copy. Its form is based on the typical shelters the homeless in India manage to put up on their own – with many improvements such as a self-supporting structure, a waterproof skin that will keep them warm in the winter with openings for ventilation during the hotter months and mosquito net to protect from dengue and malaria, along with pockets for storage. All the components are locally available and affordable and can be easily repaired or replaced. It uses affordable and locally available materials such as bamboo and waterproof canvas which can be easily repaired or replaced, and locally available skills such as that of a local welder to fabricate welded rebar joints and a tailor to stitch the canvas. 

During the design process, various prototypes were built through interaction with homeless families and getting their feedback. A 100 Shelters project was launched to build 100 such shelters for homeless families in Delhi. The goal was to directly improve the life of the 100 homeless families, but the long-term vision is to again obtain feedback and input from the distribution of these shelters to develop a product that is affordable, accessible and works for all homeless people across Indian cities.

Drawings and details

Some more details about the initiative can be found HERE.

And, it just takes two minutes and a little contribution from you to provide roofs to the homeless. Watch the video below:

Introduction Credits: Abhiviraj Dev Singh

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent

Edwin Lutyens' bust which was replaced by C. Rajagopalachari's bust in Rashtrapathi Bhavan

“Changing The Statue Does Not Change the Room”—Geethu Gangadhar on Edwin Lutyens’ Bust Removal

The current Indian government replaced Edwin Lutyens’ bust with freedom fighter C. Rajagopalachari’s at Rashtrapati Bhavan, framing it as decolonisation. But symbolic gestures don’t dismantle colonial mindsets embedded in governance, caste, and institutions. Geethu Gangadhar raises an important question: whether this removal is a way to eradicate colonial baggage or systemic removal of history.

Read More »
Massing during construction, retaining the exposed concrete facade composition, cross columns and profiled beams. Archival collection of Tibet House, 1977. Accessed in 2026

Brutalist India | Tibet House, New Delhi

As part of Brutalist India series Bhawna Dandona writes about Tibet House in New Delhi which is a non-profit cultural centre dedicated to preserving Tibetan heritage, founded in 1965 at the Dalai Lama’s request. The current building’s foundation was laid in 1974, with architect Shivnath Prasad.

Read More »
Vivek Rawal

Architecture, Power, and the Poor | “As a profession, architecture lacks moral position and has become complicit in the neoliberal dispossession of the poor.”—Vivek Rawal

Vivek Rawal argues that architecture—as a profession—is structurally aligned with political and economic power rather than social justice. He critiques how architectural education and practice prioritise developers and real estate over communities, turning housing into a market commodity. Even movements like sustainability and participation, he says, often become tools for elite consumption rather than genuine empowerment. True moral reform, according to Rawal, would mean architects relinquishing control and enabling community-led design and housing decisions.

Read More »
The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG 1

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG

The Chunli Guesthouse, Shanghai, China by TEAM_BLDG’s response to nature, memory, and the spirit of place. The design takes “Catching” as its spiritual core, emphasizing the relationship between the architecture and the surrounding rice field landscape.

Read More »

Featured Publications

New Release

Stories that provoke enquiry into built environment

www.architecture.live

Subscribe & Join a Community of Lakhs of Readers

We Need Your Support

To be able to continue the work we are doing and keeping it free for all, we request our readers to support in every way possible.

Your contribution, no matter the size, helps our small team sustain this space. Thank you for your support.

Contribute using UPI

Contribute Using Cards