A Cincinnati nonprofit is turning a vacant church lot into a community of tiny homes designed to give homeless veterans a permanent place to land — and a path forward.
Tiny Homes for Humanity is building 14 tiny homes on the back lot of Madisonville’s Gaines United Methodist Church, organized around a shared village green. The project, called a “veterans village,” will pair affordable housing with wraparound services covering physical and mental health, recovery and job skills.
Earl Crossland, president of Tiny Homes for Humanity, spent his career as an architect designing large buildings and schools, including Taft and Mason high schools. But his latest project takes a different approach…