#TinyHomes

Jennifer Martin -South By WestJenniferMartinYT
2026-02-12

Tiny Home Financing: Can Government Money Help You Buy? 

First-time home buyer? Government loans like FHA & USDA could fund your tiny home. Down payments as low as 3.5% or even $0 in rural areas. Explore your options! from Austin Real Estate & Lifestyle

jennifermartinyt.wordpress.com

SreudianFLIP || ꟼI⅃ᖷnɒibuɘɿƧsreudianflip@mastodon.art
2025-12-27
AFC_News :verified:AFC_News@afcolegiado.app
2025-12-08

‘Tiny homes’: una alternativa real al mercado de la vivienda idealista.com/news/inmobiliari Las minicasas en Portugal ganan popularidad como opción asequible y sostenible ante el aumento de precios de vivienda. Ofrecen flexibilidad, rapidez de construcción y personalización. #TinyHomes #AFC_News #AFColegiado

Gay CurmudgeonHermitsDaily
2025-12-01

Our downsized tiny house has a pass-through between living and dining rooms, that makes a perfect display shelf. My birthday, 2025.

Nam Hendersonnamhenderson@mas.to
2025-11-30

"Rather than offering a design concept or truly accessible and sustainable solutions, the...Homes on Amazon appear as the latest manifestation of the house-as-commodity, the culmination of a commodification process that has not only structurally undermined the right to housing, but has redefined the home as an ordinary consumer good—freely purchasable and deliverable wherever and whenever you want." domusweb.it/en/news/2025/11/24 re: #Prefab #TinyHomes

2025-11-05

Experts share tiny home warning as interest from young people soars

Twenty-nine-year-old Ashley Kime thought she was doing the right thing when she bought a home in Central Queensland…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #AU #Australia #AustralianTinyHomesAssociation #buildyourownhome #HousingCrisis #howmuchdotinyhomescost? #Regulation #tinyhomes #TinyHomesExpos #tinyhouses
newsbeep.com/230048/

2025-10-20

Tiny homes are now legal in Portland! This is a huge step forward for fans of the small, often whimsical and charming dwellings (of which I’m a big one!).

youtu.be/ryUFdD7q5ys?si=8VUbBr

#TinyHomes #PDX

Hub metro areas for transitional tiny home villages

Listed below are those metropolitan areas that have the most tiny home villages currently in operation. Also provided are the total number of units currently available as well as the average number of units in each village. A minimum of three villages is required for inclusion and the data is based on the date this post was published unless otherwise noted. Please be aware that there may be some metropolitan areas with more total tiny homes, but not in three or more villages.

Source: csmonitor.com

As can be seen, the average number of units ranges from a low of 28.7 to a high of 69.3. The total number of units from all 11 metropolitan areas is 4,852 units in 98 transitional tiny home village or an average of 49.5 units per village. The median number of units of these 11 examples is 41.5 units per village. – updated on 10/1/25

Source: businessinsider.com

Probably the single biggest surprise came from the Bay Area of California, where San Jose easily leads the way in providing transitional tiny home villages. Ten of the 18 villages in the Bay Area are located there. Well done, San Jose!

The Bay Area leads with the largest total number of transitional tiny homes at 1,199, followed by Portland-Vancouver with 949, Greater Los Angeles with 784 and the Seattle-Tacoma area with 650. – updated on 10/1 25

Source: soundfoundationsnw.org

The source for all this data comes from the September 29, 2025 post entitled “Working list: Transitional tiny home villages in the USA,” published here on panethos.wordpress.com, along with updates since that publication. As new information is identified or planned villages are completed, this post will be updated.

These numbers do NOT include temporary overnight shelters, long-term shelters, transitional multi-family housing complexes (single or multi-story), safe parking sites, motel conversions, and other similar types of interim housing options.

Peace!

Source: cob.org

——-

  1. PORTLAND-VANCOUVER, OREGON/WASHINGTON = 23 villages with 949 total units (majority in Portland) = 41.3 units per village

2. SAN FRANCISCO-OAKLAND-SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA = 18 villages with 1,199 total units (majority in San Jose) = 66.6 units per village

3. SEATTLE-TACOMA-EVERETT, WASHINGTON = 17 villages with 650 total units (majority in Seattle) = 38.2 units per village

4. GREATER LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA = 12 villages with 784 total units (majority in Los Angeles) = 65.3 units per village – updated on 10/1/25

5. DENVER-BOULDER, COLORADO = 6 villages with 249 total units (majority Denver) = 41.5 units per village

6. KANSAS CITY-LAWRENCE, MISSOURI/KANSAS = 5 villages with 148 total units (evenly split) = 29.6 units per village

7-8. EUGENE-SPRINGFIELD, OREGON = 4 villages with 135 total units = 33.8 units per village; AND

* SACRAMENTO-YUBA CITY, CALIFORNIA = 4 villages with 265 total units (majority in Sacramento) = 66.25 units per village

9-11. ALBUQUERQUE-SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO = 3 villages with 86 total units (majority in Albuquerque) = 28.7 units per village; AND

* OLYMPIA-LACEY, WASHINGTON = 3 villages with 179 total units (all in Olympia) = 59.7 units per village; AND

* SANTA BARBARA, CALIFORNIA = 3 villages with 208 total units (all in Santa Barbara) = 69.3 units per village

#cities #communities #geography #history #homelessness #housing #landUse #planning #tinyHomeVillages #tinyHomes #unhoused #villages

Working list: Transitional tiny home villages in the USA

Provided below is a working list of transitional (or interim) tiny home villages that have been developed or are in various stages of development across the United States. The majority of these have been established either to provide shelter for the unhoused, those in recovery programs, those exiting foster care, or to help reintegrate formerly incarcerated individuals back into society.

Source: bernco.gov

Those listed as proposed have not begun construction and may still be in the funding and approval phases. Those listed as under development are further along in the process, but a completion date has not been provided. A minimum of five (5) units was required to be included in the listing. The list does not include supportive parking programs, shelters, RV only sites, nor motels/hotels voucher program for the homeless.

As is evident from the list, a much larger proportion of the tiny home communities opened to date have been built in the western half of the United States, with states California, Washington, and Oregon leading the way.

The actual residential capacity of most of these sites is higher than the number of units/rooms, as some units include more than one bed and some units are designed for families versus individuals. The list will be updated periodically as more information is found. Any additions, corrections, or suggestions, are most welcome. Peace!

Source: bernco.gov

——-

Albany, Oregon: Hub City Village Co-op (2024) = 27 units

Albuquerque, New Mexico: Tiny Home Village (2021) = 30 units

Albuquerque, New Mexico: Recovery Gateway (2025) = 46 units

Amarillo, Texas: Transformation Park (2025) = 45 units

Anchorage, Alaska: In Our Backyard (2024) = 6 micro-units

Anchorage, Alaska: East Anchorage Micro-units (planned) = 16-30 units

Atlanta (Marietta), Georgia: Emmanuel’s Village (proposed) = 15 units

Austin, Texas: Community First! Village = 100+ units plus planned expansion

Bakersfield, California: Hope on Hart Street = 50 units

Bakersfield (Oildale), California: Covey Cottages for Vets (2025) = 12 units

Baltimore, Maryland: Hope Village (2025) = 13 units

Bellingham, Washington: North Haven Village (2025) = 48 units

Bellingham, Washington: Gardenview Tiny House Village (2021) = 35 units

Bend, Oregon: Benson Way Village (post 2022)= 20 units

Bend, Oregon: Dean Swift Annex (post 2022) = 6 units

Billings, Montana: William Booth Village = 28 units

Birmingham, Alabama: Homes for All (2025) = 15 units

Bloomington, Illinois: Home Sweet Home (proposed) = 56 units

Bozeman, Montana: Housing First Village (2021) = 19 units

Bridgeton, New Jersey: Village of Hope (2022?) = 6 units

Brunswick, Georgia: Tiny Home Village (2023) = 60 units

Bryan, Texas: Tiny Hope Village (proposed)

Burlington, Washington: Skagit First Step Village (2021) = 45 units

Carrboro, North Carolina: Tiny Homes Village = 15 units

Chico, California: Everhart Village (2024) = 20 units

Cincinnati, Ohio: Veterans Village (proposed) = 25 units

Colorado Springs, Colorado: Working Fusion @ Mill Street = 16 units

Columbia, South Carolina: Rapid Shelter Pallet Homes (2022) = 50 units

Columbus, Ohio: Vista Village (2025) = 41 units

Coos Bay, Ocean: Coalbank Village (2021) = 19 units

Dallas, Texas: Cottages @ Hickory Crossing (2016) = 50 units – added 10/1 /25

Denver, Colorado: Monroe Micro Community (2017) = 45 units

Denver, Colorado: La Paz Micro Community (2024) = 67 units

Denver, Colorado: Beloved Community Village (2018) = 11 units

Denver (Aurora), Colorado: Peoria Street Pallet Shelters (2021) = 56 units

Denver (Aurora), Colorado: Sixth Street Pallet Shelters (2022) = 44 units

Des Moines, Iowa: Joppa Village (2026) = 50 units

Detroit, Michigan: Tiny Homes Detroit (2016) = 25 units

Detroit, Michigan: New Path Village (proposed)

El Centro, California: Lotus Living (2021) = 26 units

Erie, Pennsylvania: Pathway Homes Village (2026) = 25 units

Eugene, Oregon: Peace Village Co-op (2023) = 70 units

Eugene, Oregon: Rosa Village Co-op (under development) = 52 units

Eugene, Oregon: Cottage Village Co-op (2020) = 13 units

Eugene, Oregon: Emerald Village Co-op (2018) = 22 units

Eugene, Oregon: Opportunity Village (2013) = 30 units

Florence, South Carolina: Hope Village (2021) = 24 units

Fresno, California: Village of Hope (2021) = 30 units

Fresno (Madera), California: Madera Triage Housing (2025) = 6 units – added 9/30/25

Georgetown, Delaware: Springboard Pallet Village (2023) = 40 units

Grand Rapids, Michigan: Hope Village (2025) = 16 units

Grants Pass, Oregon: Foundry Village (2022) = 17 units

Greenville (Easley), South Carolina: Opportunity Village = 31 units

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Veterans Grove (2024) = 15 units

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Eden Village (under development) = 32 units

Honolulu, Hawaii: Kamaoku Kauhale (2021) = 37 units

Honolulu, Hawaii: Puʻuhonua O Waiʻanae Farm Village = 180 units

Huntington, West Virginia: Tiny Home Village (2023) = 8 units

Indianapolis, Indiana: Sanctuary Indy (proposed) = 27 units

Indianapolis, Indiana: Circle City Village (proposed)

Ithaca (Newfield), New York: Second Wind Cottages (2014) = 6 units

Kansas City, Kansas: Eden Village = 23 units

Kansas City (Paola), Kansas: My Father’s House (2025) = 14 units (44 total planned)

Kansas City, Missouri: Veterans Community Project (VCP) Village = 49 units

Knoxville, Tennessee: Heroes Hill for Veterans (under development) = 20 units

Lansing, Michigan: ModPod Community (proposed) = 50 units

Laredo, Texas: Lafayette Tiny Homes (2025) = 20 units

Lawrence, Kansas: Pallet Shelter Village (2024) = 50 units

Lawrence, Kansas: Monarch Village (2021) = 12 units

Lincoln, Nebraska: Hope Village (2026) = 18 units

Little Rock, Arkansas: Micro Ville (proposed)

Longmont, Colorado: VCP Village = 26 units

Los Angeles, California: Alexandria Park = 103 units

Los Angeles, California: Arroy Seco Tiny Home Village = 115 units

Los Angeles, California: Chandler Boulevard Tiny Home Village (2021) = 40 units

Los Angeles, California: Reseda Tiny Home Village (2021) = 52 units

Los Angeles, California: Tarzana Tiny Home Village = 76 units

Los Angeles, California: Whitsett West Tiny Home Village = 77 units

Los Angeles (Baldwin Park), California: Esperanza Villa (2021) = 25 units – added 9/30/25

Los Angeles (Boyle Heights/East L.A.): Tiny Home Village (2024) = 72 units – added 10/1/25

Los Angeles (Long Beach), California : two locations planned – added 10/1 /25

Los Angeles (Thousand Oaks), California: Thrive Grove (2025) = 30 units

Los Angeles (Torrance), California: Tiny Home Village (2022) = 40 units

Louisville, Kentucky: Eden Village (planned) = 35 units

Louisville (Shelbyville), Kentucky: Tiny Home Vets Village (2021) = 6 units

Madison, Wisconsin: Occupy Madison Village 1 (2014) = 8 units

Madison, Wisconsin: Occupy Madison Village 2 (2020) = 22+/- units

Medford, Oregon: Hope Village (2018) = 38 units

Medford, Oregon: Joy Community (2025) = 10 units

Midland, Texas: The Field’s Edge (2022) = 9 units with plans for a total of 90 units

Milwaukee, Wisconsin: VCP Village = 40 units (under development)

Minneapolis, Minnesota: Avivo Village (2020) = 100 units

Modesto, California: Dignity Village (2025) = 42 units

Modesto, California: Grace Gardens (2025) = 12 units – added 9/30/25

Muncie, Indiana: Penny Lane (2016) = 6 units

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina: Veterans Welcome Home (2024) = 25 units

Nashville, Tennessee: Infinity Village = 6 units

Nashville, Tennessee: Village at Glencliff = 12 units

New Haven, Connecticut: Rosette Village (2023) = 6 units

Newark, New Jersey: Hope Village (2021) = 7 units

Oakland, California: Dignity Village (2025) = 41 units

Oakland, California: Youth Empowerment Village (2021) = 26 units

Oakland (Alameda), California: Dignity Village (2023) = 47 units

Oakland (San Leandro), California: Fairmont Tiny Homes (2021) = 34 units

Oklahoma City (Norman), Oklahoma: McKown Village (2017) = 32 units

Olympia, Washington: Plum Street Village (2013) = 29 units

Olympia, Washington: Franz Anderson Village (2018) = 50 units

Olympia, Washington: Quince Street Village = 100 units

Omaha, Nebraska: The Cottages (2023) = 50 units

Ontario, Oregon: Oasis Village (2020) = 16 units – added 9/30/25

Oshkosh, Wisconsin: Tiny Home Village (2024) = 32 units

Phoenix, Arizona: Eden Village (proposed)

Portland, Oregon: Dignity Village (2000) = 60 units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: Beacon Village PDX (2021) = 10 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: St. Johns Village (2021) = 19 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: Kenton Women’s Village (2019) = 20 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: Agape Village (2019) = 16 units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: Clinton Triangle (2023) = 160 units

Portland, Oregon: Parkrose Village (2022) = 10 units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: North Portland Safe Rest Village (2024) = 90 units

Portland, Oregon: Multomah Safe Rest Village (2022) = 100 units

Portland, Oregon: Reedy Safe Rest Village (2023) = 120 units

Portland, Oregon: Menlo Park Safe Rest Village (2022) = 50 units

Portland, Oregon: Weidler Village (2021) = 38 units

Portland, Oregon: Naito Village (2022) = 35 units

Portland, Oregon: Oak Street Village (2025) = 29 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland, Oregon: Avalon Village (2024) = 10 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland (Hillsboro), Oregon: Safe Rest Village (2023) = 30 units – added 9/30/25

Portland (Hillsboro): Shelter Village (2025) = 40 pod units – added 9/30/25

Portland (Clackamas), Oregon: Veterans Village (2025) = 24 units

Portland (McMinnville), Oregon: Property Point (2023) = 8 units – added 9/30/25

Port Townsend, Washington: Pat’s Place (2022) = 9 units

Providence, Rhode Island: ECHO Village (2025) = 45 units

Redding, California: S. Mark Micro-Shelters (2023) = 8 units

Redding, California: Good News Micro-Shelters (2025) = 17 units

Redmond, Oregon: Oasis Village (2024) = 15 units with 15 more planned

Reno Nevada: Hope Springs (2020) = 30 units

Reno, Nevada: Safe Camp ModPods (2023) = 50 units

Richmond, Virginia: Eden Village (2029)

Sacramento, California: Stay Safe Community 1 (2023) = 100 units

Sacramento, California: Stay Safe Community 2 (2023) = 45 units

Sacramento, California: Stay Safe Community North (2024) = 100 units/trailers

Salem, Oregon: Micro-Shelter Community (2022) = 30 units

Salem, Oregon: Village of Hope (proposed) = 40 units

Salisbury, Maryland: Anne Street Village (2023) = 23 units

Salt Lake City, Utah: Other Side Village = up to 430 units (under development)

San Antonio, Texas: Towne Twin Village = 200 units

San Bernardino, California: Dignity Village (2025) = 140 units

San Bernardino (Victorville). California: Tiny Home Village = 14 units – added 9/30/25

San Diego (Chula Vista), California: Village at Otai = 65 units

San Diego (El Cajon), California: Tiny Home Village (2022) = 6 units with plans to expand to 10 units

San Diego (Lemon Grove), California: Tiny Home Village (proposed) = 70 units

San Francisco, California: Dignity Village (2022) = 70 units

San Francisco, California: Mission Cabins (2024) = 60 units

San Francisco (Richmond), California Tiny Home Spirit (2025) = 12 units

San Francisco (Rohnert Park), California: Lambeth Landing (2022) = 72 units

San Jose, California: Branham-Monterey Interim Housing (2025) = 216 units

San Jose, California: Cherry Avenue Village (2025) = 100 units

San Jose, California: Evans Interim Housing (2021) = 48 units

San Jose, California: Felipe Interim Housing (2021) = 40 units

San Jose, California: Guadalupe Interim Housing (2023) = 96 units

San Jose, California: Mabury (2020) = 40 units

San Jose, California: Rue Ferrari Interim Housing (2021) = 189 units with 2025 expansion

San Jose, California: Salvation Army Campus (2026) = 74 units

San Jose, California: Via del Oro Interim Housing (2025) = 135 units

San Jose (Watsonville), California: Dignity Village (2025) = 34 units

San Luis Obispo, California: Dignity Village (2025) = 54 units

San Luis Obispo (Grover Beach), California: Dignity Village (2024) = 36 units

San Marcos, Texas: Eden Village (planned) = 30-50 units

Santa Barbara, California: Downtown Dignity Village = 34 units

Santa Barbara, California: Hope Village = 94 units

Santa Barbara, California: La Posada = 80 units

Santa Fe, New Mexico: Safe Outdoor Space/SOS (2024) = 10 units

Santa Fe, New Mexico: SOS 2 (under development) = 30 units

Santa Maria, California: Hope Village (2023) = 94 units

Santa Maria (Lompoc), California: Bridgehouse Pallet Shelters (2021) = 20 units – added 9/30/25

Savannah, Georgia: Cove at Dundee (2019) = 46 units

Seattle, Washington: True Hope Tiny Home Village (2018) = 33 units

Seattle, Washington: Whittier Heights Village (2018) = 15 units

Seattle, Washington: Southend Village (2022) = 40 units

Seattle, Washington: TC Spirit Village (2020) = 24 units

Seattle, Washington: Rosie’s Village (2021) = 35 units

Seattle, Washington: Othello Village (2016) = 30 units

Seattle, Washington: Lake Union Village (2018) = 42 units

Seattle, Washington: Interbay Village (2017) = 76 units

Seattle, Washington: Georgetown Village (2017) = 46 units

Seattle, Washington: Friendship Heights Village (2021) = 42 units

Seattle, Washington: Camp Second Chance (2018) = 66 units

Seattle, Washington: Northlake Village (2018) ~ 19 units

Seattle, Washington: Central District Village (2016) = 16 units

Seattle, Washington: Brighton Village (proposed) = 14 units

Seattle (Burien), Washington: Burien Village ecoCottages (proposed) = 27 units

Seattle (Skyway), Washington: Progressive Tiny House Village (2021) = 33 units

Seattle (Tukwila), Washington: Miracle Village (2022) = 28 units

Sioux Falls, South Dakota VCP Village = 25 units

Spartanburg, South Carolina: Bridgeway Village (2023) = 18 units

Spokane, Washington: Waters Meet Village (proposed) = 30 units

Springfield, Missouri: Eden Village (2018) = 30 units

Springfield, Missouri: Eden Village 2 = 25 units

St. Cloud, Minnesota: Avivo Village (2026) = 48 units

St. Louis, Missouri: VCP Village = 50 units

St. Louis, Missouri: Tiny Homes Transition Housing (2021) = 100 units

Stockton, California: Turnpike Commons (2021) = 11 units

Sumter, South Carolina: Tiny Home Village (2025) = 5 units

Syracuse, New York: Tiny Homes for Good = 16 units

Tacoma, Washington: Village at 6th & Orchard (2020) = 39 units

Tacoma, Washington: Tacoma Village (2022) = 66 units

Tampa, Florida: Tampa Home (2023) = 100 units

The Dalles, Oregon: Pallet Shelter Village (~2021) = 18 units

Tucson, Arizona: I Am You 360 (2025) = 10 units

Tulsa, Oklahoma: Eden Village (2025) = 63 units

Tulsa, Oklahoma: City Lights Village (2026) = 75 units

Vancouver, Washington: Stay Safe Hope Village (2022) = 20 units

Vancouver, Washington: Stay Safe Downtown (2023) = 20 units

Vancouver, Washington: Stay Safe Outpost (2023) = 20 units

Vancouver, Washington: Stay Safe Kiggins Village (2023) = 20 units

Visalia, California: Neighborhood Village (2024) = 53 mobile homes

Waco, Texas: Creekside Community Village (2025) = 40 units initially with 346 units total planned

Walla Walla, Washington: Conestoga Tiny Huts (2023) = 38 units – added 9/30/25

Wenatchee, Washington: Tiny Home Village (2023) = 44 units

Wilmington, North Carolina: Eden Village (2023) = 32 units

Worcester, Massachusetts: Tiny Home Village (planned) = 21 units

Yakima, Washington: Cottage Hill Village (2025) = 16 units (permanent housing)

Yuba City, California: 14 Forward (2016) = 20 units

SOURCES:

#charities #cities #geography #government #history #homeless #housing #humanity #landUse #nonProfits #planning #tinyHomeVillages #tinyHomes #unhoused

ArchUpArchup
2025-09-28

Innovating Tiny Homes: More Than Just Limited Space

Matt Trower didn’t initially aim to revolutionize small-scale living, yet his recent innovations have increasingly captured the attention of people seeking alternatives to massive mortgages and cramped apartments. One of his standout creations is The Overnighter, which demonstrates how small spaces can be more than just a place to sleep or store belongings.

archup.net/tiny-homes-innovati

Anna Saultron :progresspride:AnnaSaultron@nerdculture.de
2025-09-22

I just watched this video and I can't deny that it has a strange inspirational effect.
I don't want to judge the person running that ... RBNB. Life is complicated and this place is full of history.
But imagine a story set in such a place. It would be such an amazing location for a post apocalyptic setting in a town, or a cyberpunk underdog setting. It reminds me to Kowloon the walled city.
And for the price if you desperately want to make it to Japan and live there...

youtu.be/ea8Mg1hbqDA
and if you haven't heard about Kowloon the walled city this was also a real city (a part of Hong Kong)
de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kowloo

#Gaming #Fallout4 #Fallout76 #Art #VisualInspiration #writing #CyberpunkGenre #Cyberpunk #TinyHomes #Japan #Kowloon #HongKong

ArchUpArchup
2025-09-09

Smart Design Innovation in Tiny Homes

The French design firm Quadrapol has brought a clear transformation to the concept of tiny homes with its Nid Luxe project. This mobile home demonstrates that high-end design does not necessarily depend on large spaces or high costs, but rather on smart planning and well-considered architectural choices.

archup.net/nid-luxe-tiny-home-

2025-09-03
Screencap of a Wiktionary definition: 
"caravanserai

noun

1. A roadside inn having a central courtyard where caravans can rest.

2. A home or shelter for caravans.

3. An inn in some eastern countries with a large courtyard that provides accommodation for caravans.

Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. More at Wordnik"
Nevar23nevar23
2025-08-31

Smol rant:

I understand having *some* zoning regulations, but I feel like if someone owns the land and pays taxes on it, they should be able to put a tiny home on it, dammit.

GBS Media ProGBSMedia
2025-08-27

Lansing Plans Tiny Home Community for Homeless 🏠

The city of Lansing is developing a 50-unit modular tiny home community, expected to open by next summer, offering an alternative to homeless camps.

👉 Read more on the project: bluewaterhealthyliving.com/new

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