Dwelling in Motion reimagines an underutilized spaces in San Rafael, Mexico City, as supportive housing for performance artists anchoring culture, care, and creativity in a neighborhood marked by decline and disconnection. Once a vibrant artistic district, San Rafael now faces fragmentation by elevated infrastructure and uneven development. This project addresses both the precarity of emerging artists and the physical rupture of the urban fabric. The design combines flexible, earthquake-resilient housing with communal kitchens, rehearsal spaces, and cultural facilities, blurring the boundaries between domestic life and performance. A central idea is the “Plus One” promenade, a linear urban intervention that stitches together theaters, plazas, parks, and dead-end streets into a continuous public journey. Inspired by the High Line, this elevated path reactivates forgotten spaces, culminating in a layered network of art, gathering, and refuge. Crucially, the project also transforms neglected voids, beneath highways and within dead ends into emergency shelters for earthquakes and displacement. Architecture becomesvnot just form, but response: a living system that supports artists, protects the vulnerable, and restores public memory. Dwelling in Motion is both housing and infrastructure, both city and stage, a new platform for living, performing, and belonging.