Tiny-Home Village in Dallas Aims to Revolutionize Homeless Care
https://www.yahoo.com/realestate/tiny-home-village-in-dallas-1322025837772854.html
Next spring, on a 3-acre strip of land near the intersection of two Dallas highways, just south of the Deep Ellum neighborhood, Keith Ackerman will help kick off a radical experiment in helping the citys homeless population.
The Cottages at Hickory Crossing development, which will consist of 50 tiny homes measuring 400 square feet each, looks and sounds like a miniature subdivision exactly what Ackerman, the executive director, aims to create. But theres a lot more to it than placing cute buildings and manicured lawns near a crook of land between I-30 and I-45. The former social worker and therapist sees this project, a collaboration between area nonprofits, as a socially, morally and financially sound investment. By creating a model community that offers round-the-clock, on-site care to the neediest of the citys homeless population, many of whom struggle with drug addiction and mental health issues, itll provide space to recover and thrive, all while saving the city a considerable amount of money. An area of town once known as a shooters gallery for heroin users may become a model for helping some of those addicts recover.
By putting people into a housing environment where they have case management support, they will no longer resort to county services at the same volume, says Ackerman. Weve done a case study that shows its going to cost less. The goaland I dont mean to sound morbidis for people to be able to die at home, to give them a place to live so their last chapter is much better than the previous few....
The idea for Hickory Crossing was inspired by another at-risk population, evacuees from Katrina who came to Dallas. Initially conceived of by John Greenen, executive director of Central Dallas Community Development Corporation and architect Brent Brown of buildingcommunity Workshop, the tiny house concept would have provided a quick method of creating individualized shelters for a large population. By the time they had devised the concept, it proved too late to roll out for Katrina evacuees. But it proved readily adaptable to the at-risk homeless population.
"The Cottages at Hickory Crossing"! I love it!