Finding comfort, and a home, in 64 square feet
Over two months, I saw how L.A.’s tiny home villages help residents step out of homelessness.
‘When I was in the streets, I used to ask why? I’m a good person. The devil didn’t show up and God didn’t show up. Ain’t no need for me to ask why.’ — STEPHEN SMITH,
E‘I was hoping to get an apartment so I can get all of my stuff together and live a normal life.’
‘They say we gotta work on getting a job right as we get into the mini houses, but we are still readjusting from the streets and trying to become civilized.’ — SAMUEL GALSTYAN,
‘She has helped me out so much, I owe her now.’
ach tiny house is 64 square feet and comes with heat, air conditioning and a built-in bed. Each resident is someone who was once a member of the unhoused community. Each village — and there are six in Los Angeles neighborhoods — is designed to help residents take a first step out of homelessness by giving them a home to live in for three to six months.
In North Hollywood, the Chandler Boulevard Tiny Home Village, with 40 prefabricated homes and 75 beds, became the first shelter of its kind in the region when it opened in February. After happening upon the Chandler site, I realized I wanted to chronicle what life was like at these villages.
I had grown up in Los Angeles watching the housing crisis and homelessness get worse year after year. The news was often so bleak. I wondered if the story might be different here, possibly more uplifting. It was.
Over two months, I documented the scene at the Chandler village and at the Alexandria Park site in North Hollywood, with its palette of prefabricated homes painted in vivid colors to keep the location from having a sterile, institutionalized feeling. I observed a calming sense of order, an atmosphere of support and trust between the staff and residents.
All six villages are operated by the nonprofit Hope of the Valley Rescue Mission, which helps clients get back on their feet as they seek permanent housing. Village support includes a staff on call 24/7 and caseworkers to help with such basics as job applications or securing benefits. Hot meals are provided and residents have access to a communal laundry, showers and restrooms.
Funding for the project came from a $1.2-billion bond measure for homeless housing that Los Angeles voters overwhelmingly approved five years ago. The tiny home villages have been criticized for costing more than they should. The Chandler project came in at $5.2 million, while Alexandria Park, with 103 homes and 200 beds, cost $8.6 million.
Yet every day, I saw the immeasurable worth of these tiny villages in helping to create something that’s often missing from stories about the unhoused: a narrative of positive progress.
One staff member I spoke with had spent years as a social worker but sought a closer connection with clients. He found it by being on site and interacting with them every day. Another member of the administrative team, who had been unhoused as recently as last year, said Hope of the Valley’s intervention had helped him turn his life around. He was paying it forward.
The 10 village dwellers I spent hours getting to know say they are motivated to stay on track and trust the staff to help them get there. Strong bonds of mutual respect and friendship have formed between residents and staff members.
The value of these communities goes far beyond providing 64-square-foot shelters. Through my camera lens, I saw how they were making an impact on homelessness, changing lives in a humane and concrete way.