This project proposes an immigrant-centered affordable housing collective in New York City conceived not as a fixed residential block, but as an adaptive social infrastructure. Organized through a porous through-block framework, the project interweaves modular dwelling units with shared spaces for cooking, bathing, learning, cultivation, and repair, encouraging everyday interaction across cultural and generational boundaries. Rather than treating communal programs as amenities, the design positions them as spatial anchors for collective care, mutual support, and informal knowledge exchange. The project is not as symbolic decoration, but as a way of understanding relationships between body, environment, material, and community. Gradients of openness, light, humidity, sound, and circulation shape distinct atmospheres throughout the block, producing spaces that support both privacy and collective life. Movable partitions and reconfigurable interiors allow residents to adapt their homes over time, reinforcing agency, familiarity, and long-term attachment to place. As residents modify and contribute to the shared environment, the architecture evolves with them. Over time, the housing collective becomes more than a site of shelter: it operates as a living cultural corridor that extends social life into the surrounding East Village, supporting forms of belonging, exchange, and coexistence often absent from conventional affordable housing models.