The Christian Science Monitor

Rent-then-own tiny house village seeks to reinvent Detroit's low-income housing

Keith McElvee stands outside his new tiny house in Detroit. Residents, who are formerly homeless people, senior citizens, or young adults who aged out of foster care, pay $1 a square foot a month for their homes, which range from 250 to 400 square feet. After seven years, they will be given the deeds to their homes.

In 2013, when Keith McElvee got out of prison after a 12-year stint for a drug conviction, he returned to a neighborhood in northwest Detroit that he didn’t recognize. “This is like Beirut,” he thought. “Like a war zone.”

Mr. McElvee is naturally gregarious and social-minded. Out of prison he struggled, but then found work doing homeless outreach at Cass Community Social Services (CCSS), a nonprofit. Four years later he’s a full-time employee tasked with helping more than a dozen clients secure housing and jobs, and speaks proudly of success stories, like the man he helped to curb alcoholism and earn his truck-driving license. “My passion is people,” he says. “I like to help people.”  

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