Las Vegas Review-Journal

Group picks Boulevard for its third home store

Sales to help Habitat’s Henderson housing effort

- By Wade Tyler Millward Las Vegas Review-journal

The local Habitat for Humanity has opened its third home improvemen­t store in the Las Vegas area.

The nonprofit, known for building houses for low-income families, has leased 12,000 square feet at Boulevard Mall.

The Restore, as it’s called, sells armoires, couches and other furniture. Proceeds help pay for house building around Clark County, according to a statement Monday.

More often seen in strip malls, the Habitat for Humanity Las Vegas store opened at the Boulevard Mall to attract more families and UNLV students as customers, executive director Doug Coombs said.

The store has eight full- and part-time employees and eight more seasonal ones, Coombs said. He plans to open two more stores in the next five years to serve the rest of the valley.

HABITAT

No other tenant sells building goods at the mall, Boulevard general manager Timo Kuusela said. The Restore complement­s the Goodwill at Boulevard and brings in a different type of shopper.

“We have such tremendous respect for what they do for people,” Kuusela said.

The store will hold a grand opening Friday, giving customers 25 percent off total purchases.

Caesars gave the store 1,300 rooms of furniture from renovated guest rooms at Harrah’s and Bally’s.

Money spent at the Habitat store will go toward the nonprofit’s latest project, about 20 houses in the Pittman area of Henderson.

The project, part of a series of efforts to revitalize a Henderson neighborho­od with high poverty and crime rates, is the largest build at one time for Habitat for Humanity Las Vegas.

The nonprofit will finish six homes by summer 2018.

The other Habitat stores are near the intersecti­on of Sahara Avenue and Arville Street and near the intersecti­on of Flamingo and Pecos roads.

Contact Wade Tyler Millward at wmillward@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4602. Follow @ wademillwa­rd on Twitter.

 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye ?? Las Vegas Review-journal A customer on Wednesday leaves Habitat for Humanity Restore at Boulevard Mall, 3538 Maryland Parkway. Restore is a nonprofit home improvemen­t store.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal A customer on Wednesday leaves Habitat for Humanity Restore at Boulevard Mall, 3538 Maryland Parkway. Restore is a nonprofit home improvemen­t store.

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