URBANbuild

Screenshot of CBS News video of students sitting inside a large workroom with a boom mic operator in the left-side of the screen.
BY David Begnaud, Kelsie Hoffman
CBS news

Before finishing school this past semester, students at Tulane University completed one final project. They designed, created and built a tiny 440-square-foot home to benefit someone in their community who hasn't had a place to call home in nearly two decades.

Benjamin Henry used to live under Interstate 10, which runs right through the heart of New Orleans. He said that his story is one of bad decisions involving drugs and alcohol.

"Sometimes you have to go through some things awhile to see how bad you really want it better, you have to see how bad you really want it," Henry said. "But if you hang in there, hang in there and keep hope, things are possible for you. Now look where I am. I'm about to get a home, not a place just to lay my head, but a home."

For nearly 10 months, the students worked to build Henry's piece of paradise as part of their assignment for the URBANbuild program at Tulane.

"It's gotten even more personal as we've found out that this is gonna go to someone," said student Noah Lion.

Each student had to submit a design for the home. A team of professional architects came in and chose one of the designs.

Lion's design was picked. He said he was passionate about the porch section of the design.

"It's really important in New Orleans to spend time on your porch -- to spend time in the community, with your neighbors and that was really important to me to make the porch part of the living space," Lion said.

The team assembled the structure inside a warehouse owned by Tulane. From there it was disassembled and moved to where it would reside in the hurricane-ravaged, then rebuilt Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans.

The students didn't know who would get the house until the very end of the project. 

"A lot of architectural education doesn't give you like a real client or a real person at the end of the project, but to be able to like meet somebody who's going to live in your space -- and experience what you've worked on is just kind of this really, I think, rewarding moment that's gonna serve all of us incredibly well going forward," said student Brendan Cook.

To view the full story and video, visit CBS News.