Danielle La’Porte’s autism community centre design turns a 13th-century church into a neuroinclusive interior architecture project for local young adults.
The project is useful because it treats inclusion as a design problem, not just a statement of intent. Light, texture, quiet zones, communal areas and sensory experience all need to work together.
Project images



Why the brief is more than adaptive reuse
A church conversion can easily become a visual exercise. Danielle’s project is more interesting because the user group changes the priorities of the scheme.
- Sensory rooms need control and calm.
- Open communal areas need to encourage social contact without pressure.
- Quiet zones need to be easy to find and genuinely restful.
- Material and colour choices need to support comfort, not only style.
What this shows in a portfolio
Inclusive design projects need evidence. A practice or tutor should be able to see the design response in the plan, sections, visuals, access strategy and material choices, not only in the written explanation.
That is the wider lesson here. If the project is about a specific community, the drawings should show how daily experience has shaped the architecture.
Project routes and links
Use these links to view more of Danielle LaPorte’s work and browse similar projects.
Showcase an inclusive design project
If your project has a strong social or user-led brief, make sure the page explains the people, the setting and the design evidence clearly.
- Lead with the user need.
- Show drawings or images that prove the response.
- Add a short explanation of what the project changes for people using the space.
Next step
Browse more work in the Architecture Social Projects directory, or share your own student or graduate project with Architecture Social.



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