Texarkana Gazette

Nonprofit turns shipping containers into veterans’ housing

- By Matthew Tresaugue

Houston Chronicle

MONTGOMERY, Texas—In the heart of this small town, on a patch of grass near historic homes and antique shops, is an old shipping container. It’s like ones used in the Port of Houston, hardly a sight to behold. At least not yet.

Within weeks, scores of volunteers will modify the container with things like insulation, air conditioni­ng, electrical outlets, kitchen appliances and a shower and toilet. Then the keys will be given to a military veteran in need of a home.

It’s a project of Huntsville-based Green Zone Housing, a newly formed nonprofit that is trying to provide veterans with affordable places to live. For co-founder Mark Cook, the repurposin­g of containers makes sense because they are made of steel that is marine-grade and corrosion-resistant.

“I slept in these overseas” as an oilfield worker, Cook told the Houston Chronicle. “I knew I could make a house out of them. They can withstand winds. They’re water-tight. They’re economical. And they’re everywhere. They’re stacked like cordwood on the Houston Ship Channel.”

The project is part of a national movement to use “tiny houses” as a short-term solution for homelessne­ss. A Nashville pastor has built several 60-square-foot units on the grounds of his church. Seattle has pledged to spread 1,000 insulated huts built by volunteers in camps across the city. In Kansas City, some veterans have plans to construct 50 small homes for those suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

Cook and his partners, Vietnam veteran Dave Nash and author Melanie Davis, said they see a similar need among greater Houston’s veterans. While there are transition­al programs providing them with help for PTSD and other combat-related mental illness, “they go out the same door they came in” and often have nowhere to stay, Nash said.

Greater Houston has one of the nation’s largest population­s of veterans, with more than 78,000 in the city alone. With many of them staying in shelters or on the streets, nonprofit groups and government agencies began a campaign in 2012 to find places to live for them.

Since then, The Way Home effort has placed some 5,000 veterans in Harris and Fort Bend counties in permanent housing, generating praise from local advocates and national experts.

Officials say there were 537 homeless veterans in the two counties last year. In Montgomery County, there were 35 veterans living on the streets or in shelters in 2015, according to the most recent data available.

Green Zone Housing began to build support for its project last year by converting a container previously used as a fireworks stand into an exhibit house. The model, which features a kitchen and living area, is mobile but is found most days outside a hardware store in the city of Montgomery, located about 55 miles north of downtown Houston.

The nonprofit is constructi­ng the first complete home from a 40-foot-long, 8-foot-wide container that was donated by a local equipment company. The work is being done in Montgomery’s historic district to help attract potential donors and volunteers.

The builder is Mike Bradford, a Montgomery resident who constructe­d living quarters and office space from shipping containers during a 20-year career as an underwater welder in the Navy. He now designs and builds custom furniture.

The exhibit house “was a rusted, beatup fireworks stand,” Bradford said. “It was a mild disaster when we got started. But you go into it now, and you’d say, ‘I would live in this.’ That’s what we want.”

It’s estimated that each house costs about $20,000 to build. The recipients are expected to help with the constructi­on before the house is installed on a foundation.

Cook said the group is hoping to buy as many as 15 acres in Montgomery County for a manufactur­ing center and office space, as well as a chapel, gym and other services for veterans who decide to keep their homes on the property. The first phase would include at least 20 homes, he said.

“I’m looking for a place that can have a community to help each other in recovery,” Cook said, adding that he would like to expand the project beyond Montgomery County after the initial phase.

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP ?? n The living space of a Green Zone exhibit home is shown Feb. 22 in Montgomery, Texas. The homes made out of shipping containers are going to be given to homeless veterans. A newly formed nonprofit called Green Zone Housing is modifying shipping...
Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP n The living space of a Green Zone exhibit home is shown Feb. 22 in Montgomery, Texas. The homes made out of shipping containers are going to be given to homeless veterans. A newly formed nonprofit called Green Zone Housing is modifying shipping...

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