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See inside an almost $1 million prefab tiny home village near Seattle trying to solve the ongoing homelessness crisis
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See inside an almost $1 million prefab tiny home village near Seattle trying to solve the ongoing homelessness crisis
- The city of Everett, Washington, and nonprofit Everett Gospel Mission opened a tiny home village to shelter unhoused people.
- The initial development and first six months of operations costed about $975,150.
- Take a look around the tiny home village equipped with 40 $7,500 64-square-foot homes built by Pallet.
In 2021, the city of Everett, Washington, partnered with a nonprofit to transform a once unused parcel of land into a colorful "village" equipped with prefab tiny homes to shelter the city's unhoused residents.
And this pilot project has seen so much success, the city now has plans to launch two additional villages next year.
This idea of using prefab tiny homes to create a microcosm of a traditional community wasn't invented by Everett's local government.
But the company behind this concept does call the Pacific Northwest city home.
Washington-based Pallet specializes in building prefab homes to shelter people who are unhoused because of natural and personal disasters.
The company's 64-square-foot units are now increasingly being used by nonprofits and local governments to create these tiny home villages.
Source: Insider
And so far, this relatively new non-congregate shelter option has seen massive success across the US.
In early 2021, the city of Los Angeles and nonprofit Hope of the Valley Rescue Mission opened its first prefab tiny home village to shelter the California city's growing unhoused population.
The goal of the project was to help people find stability and a permanent housing solution within a couple of months.
And just months after opening, the project — a "test case" for Los Angeles, Rowan Vansleve, CFO of Hope of the Valley Rescue Mission, previously told Insider — was deemed a massive success.
Since then, Hope of the Valley Rescue Mission has opened five more locations across Los Angeles, housing over 1,000 Los Angeles residents.
And it's a success story that's now being repeated in other cities as well.
Nonprofit Everett Gospel Missions’ (EGM) Pallet tiny home village — located just a short drive from Pallet’s headquarters — ran a similar timeline to Los Angeles’ wildly successful program.
And they all have the same goal: help residents find a permanent home.
EGM was tapped by the city to operate the publicly funded project, which received about $975,150 from the county and a state grant for the initial development and first six months of operation, a spokesperson for the city told Insider in a statement.
In 2021, the city equipped the site with an office and 20 $7,500 64-square-foot Pallet homes (the "Shelter 64") with amenities like beds, lockable doors, and air conditioners.
And since then, it has doubled in size.
After seeing success in its first year of operation, the nonprofit recently added 20 additional Shelter 64s …
… five bathrooms with four showers …
… a 400-square-foot community room …
… two offices, and more staff, all with the goal of building a true community for its up to 41 residents.
To do this, EGM spends about $59 per resident daily.
"It doesn't have to be a four-star hotel and it doesn't have to be permanent," Cassie Franklin, Everett's mayor, told Insider. This Pallet site is operating on a short-term contract that will "likely" be extended.
"We want them to be ready and willing to work on that next step of [stability]," Franklin said.
EGM's youngest Pallet occupant is currently in their early 20s while the oldest is in their 70s.
But no matter the age, John Hull, EGM's director of strategic initiatives, told Insider that most have substance use disorders.
All residents have access to the village's communal spaces, three meals a day, an outdoor cooking site, social services …
… and most importantly, a personal 64-square-foot Pallet unit with a locking door to (temporarily) call home.
These social services — which include case management, clothes, and medical care — are crucial for helping residents transition to permanent housing.
Along the way, the goal is to "stabilize" residents' mental and physical health, especially when so many are tackling trauma, behavioral health difficulties, and substance use.
"This is a safe place for those people to recover and to keep the whole community safe," Franklin said, calling Pallet shelters the "perfect tool."
Time is crucial when it comes to housing people, which is one of the reasons why nonprofits and governments have been flocking to the prefab builder.
The Shelter 64 can be set up in an hour, which allowed EGM to build the first 20 units in just a few months, Hull said in a YouTube video about the village.
Source: YouTube
To compare, it could take years — and significantly more funding — to build a new congregate shelter.
"Pallets are an immediate relief option that works really well," Hull said.
Despite this building efficiency, EGM has no plans to expand past its 41-person capacity: "This is the sweet spot for the number of people we can serve on one site," Hull said.
The nonprofit's tiny home village is adjacent to its men-only congregate shelter, which has been in operation for over 30 years.
Hull says the traditional congregate shelter is easier to manage …
… but according to proponents of Pallet, these communal spaces aren't the perfect solution to the ongoing homelessness crisis.
The majority of people who are unhoused don't feel "comfortable" in these congregate shelters because of COVID-19, trauma responses, and how triggering living in open shared spaces can be, Amy King, Pallet's CEO, told Insider.
This stops many unhoused people from seeking help …
… until they're offered an individual Pallet home with a lockable door, which provides a sense of security and privacy not often available at congregate shelters.
However, these Pallet villages aren't a foolproof solution to ending the ongoing homelessness crisis either.
Of the first 20 EGM Pallet residents, seven have already exited the site.
Four of these residents either successfully found permanent housing — the ultimate goal — or have moved into a substance use recovery home.
But another four of the original 20 have moved back onto the streets.
"The difficulty is if Pallet doesn't work for them, there's not a whole lot of other options in our community." Hull said. "We're not necessarily equipped to handle pretty severe mental health or psychosis."
Amy King, Pallet's CEO, says the residents at its roughly 100 Pallet sites across the US stay for an average of three to six months before they find permanent housing.
But there are no limits for how long a resident can stay at EGM's Pallet shelters.
And most of its residents stay for much longer than six months primarily because of prior substance use.
"I'm surprised we got three permanently housed after a year," Hull said.
But no matter the timing, Franklin says the Pallet project has been a "huge success" for Everett.
There's always going to be "nimby-ism" — an abbreviation for "not in my backyard" — when new shelters open up, Franklin said, noting that there's still some public apprehension about the Pallet shelters.
But according to Hull, the community and local businesses have been "really pleased" with this new community.
And soon, unhoused families in Everett may find temporary shelter in a Pallet home as well.
The success of this Pallet project has pushed Everett to open two additional tiny home villages in 2023.
And unlike this current site, the upcoming villages will house each family in a larger Pallet home.
"We have a housing crisis nationwide that isn't going to be solved in a couple of years," Franklin said. "And in the meantime, we have to be prepared as communities to house people."
Read the original article on Business Insider
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