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Occupy Madison's new tiny huts for the homeless feel 'warm and like home'
Wisconsin State Journal ^ | December 10, 2020 | Dean Mosiman

Posted on 12/10/2020 6:31:59 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

As the sun began its afternoon fade, Willie Lyons stepped inside his new Conestoga-style hut, pounded a nail into a beam and hung a coat inside the tiny shelter made by volunteers that will protect him from the elements this winter.

Lyons, who is deaf, spent much of Saturday methodically moving his belongings from boxes and bags to become the first homeless person to move into a community of what will be 28 tiny huts that nonprofit Occupy Madison is building and placing at the former Wiggie’s Bar property at 1901 Aberg Ave. on the East Side.

As Lyons continued his move — laying bedding atop a raised wooden frame, setting up a light, table, and heater, storing clothing and food, and placing a small plastic chair on his tiny porch — volunteers used a jack and group muscle to set huts into spots near electrical hookups or did other tasks.

The Wiggie’s building, plastic still covering the bar, tables and chairs, is already an oasis and being renovated to offer restrooms, showers, washers and dryers, kitchen and dining area. Residents will decide future uses, such as a craft workshop and store, and/or a coffee or ice cream shop to make money to cover operating costs.

Meanwhile Saturday, 3 miles away, inside a building at 931 E. Main St., Barret Elward led a team of volunteers making parts for another 60-square-foot tiny hut, essentially wooden platforms covered by insulated fabric stretched over hoops recalling a covered wagon. The space, rented to Occupy Madison by nonprofit Common Wealth Development for $1 a month through December, hosts a rotating group of volunteers building huts seven days a week.

The construction space is near McPike Park, where Lyons, an Oklahoma City native who came to Madison in 2005 and has been homeless for five years, had been living in a tent in the city’s largest homeless encampment. Most people relocating to Occupy Madison’s tiny hut village will come from the McPike Park tent encampment. Others are sleeping in cars, shelters or the streets.

“It’s a miracle,” Occupy Madison co-president Brenda Konkel said. “This project has moved at lightning speed because over 1,000 people in the community have come together to volunteer to build houses, donate and help the project in so many ways. The city, county, and community members have worked in unprecedented ways to make this amazing thing happen in just three months.” Welcomed and supported

The effort is a more ambitious echo of Occupy Madison’s original tiny house village on a small parcel that once held an auto repair shop at 304 N. Third St. on the East Side.

The original village has five, 98-square-foot, permanent tiny houses costing $7,000 apiece, with privacy fence, landscaping, and the repair shop converted to a common area with restrooms, showers, makeshift kitchen, workshop and a store selling hand-crafted items made by residents. There is a greenhouse and large, raised-bed gardens.

Now, Occupy Madison is using emergency permission from the city to place the 28 smaller huts costing $2,000 apiece at the Wiggie’s site.

To get a house or hut, residents must put in sweat equity completing them, help run the village store or complete other activities, and follow rules. More than 50 people have expressed interest in a hut and many have attended orientation and become members of Occupy Madison, Konkel said.

“Its imperative that we get people in a place where they can be safe and warm for the winter, where they will be welcomed and supported by the community, where they can have basics like running water, heat, a place to go to the bathroom,” she said.

Eventually, the nonprofit hopes to relocate the huts to another spot and gain city approval to place 15 to 20 of the larger, more substantial, tiny homes at the Wiggie’s property next year. Building a community

Occupy Madison built its first tiny hut at the original tiny house village property, but moved indoors to the space at 931 E. Main St. in late October. On Saturday, Barret and three volunteers were completing bases — large wooden frames stuffed with insulation topped with plastic and flooring. The pieces are assembled in a loading dock area and the huts hauled to the village.

The Wiggie’s site is now screened by a 6-foot-tall privacy fence, and behind it, huts are being neatly placed along the fence in the parking lot in a semi-circle around the former bar building.


TOPICS: Local News; Outdoors; Society
KEYWORDS: bleedinghearts; brendakonkel; homeless; madison; occupymadison; tinyhomes; wisconsin
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To: Starcitizen

I have a “garden “ shack complex in the b/y. Summed up it’s about 10’ x 10’.


21 posted on 12/10/2020 7:05:44 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: Paladin2

Squirrels live there in the Winter.


22 posted on 12/10/2020 7:06:15 PM PST by Paladin2
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To: Paladin2

It is a neat idea!


23 posted on 12/10/2020 7:16:17 PM PST by carcraft (Pray for our Country)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

The Wiggie’s building is too far to walk for body excretions.


24 posted on 12/10/2020 7:16:53 PM PST by Deaf Smith (When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be takfor sure)
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To: goodnesswins

Slaves to the cause.


25 posted on 12/10/2020 7:18:56 PM PST by hercuroc
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To: Recovering Ex-hippie

This is much better than the multi-story public housing crime-ridden slums in NYC. Less population density has got to lower crime.


26 posted on 12/10/2020 7:20:38 PM PST by EinNYC
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To: HartleyMBaldwin

And like dogs I assume they still have to do their business in the street. or dare there chemical toilets in those things? If there are they will be a pollution and harm crisis soon enough.


27 posted on 12/10/2020 7:21:52 PM PST by arthurus (covfefe b...)
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To: bigbob

Agree. I contribute to local charity, “Union Gospel Mission,” that houses and feeds homeless people, some of †hem mothers with children. Cleans up their addictions, teaches them about Jesus, love, family, and hope. Trains them to do certain jobs so they can remain clean and sober

Contributed my old car to their used-car lot. When I went in with the Title to the car, young man greeted me: “Hi, I’m John, I’m an alcoholic and the sales manager.”

Bright young man was born to be the sales manager. UGM has the best used car lot in town. Men learn to salesmen, parts department employees and managers, mechanics, whatever.

The more money people contribute the ,more residence buildings they build, people they feed, hopeless cases they rescue. One of their “trained prayer warriors” prayed for my son, a brilliant tech guy who keeps walking out of six-figure jobs to drink. Son is back on track now.

All of those drunk and drugged-out street people were once beautiful children. Pray for them and help get them off the street.


28 posted on 12/10/2020 7:26:24 PM PST by Veto! (Political Correctness Offends Me)
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To: bigbob
You have a delusion that the homeless want to be productive and independent.

They don't.

They are not capable.

Understand I am talking about the chronically homeless.

They are often nuts or addicts.

There are any number places that will provide temporary assistance and move you out of the "homeless" into productive person category. But the people in these huts are never going to take advantage of them. Because they don't want to.

29 posted on 12/10/2020 7:28:34 PM PST by Harmless Teddy Bear (Dear Clare, The awkward time is almost over. Love, Normal Americans)
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To: bigbob

I’d rather see this kind of thing than a lot of other ways to deal with the problem. Set up the shop and train the homeless people to make them for others. Being productive and self-sufficient is the best way to move them out of poverty and dependency.


I ran a freedom house for guys out of prison. Local churches thought i was being mean to them for making them pay rent so they started a free one.....................


30 posted on 12/10/2020 7:30:46 PM PST by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: Veto!

Thanks for saying what you said.


32 posted on 12/10/2020 8:16:51 PM PST by golux
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Tiny homes


33 posted on 12/10/2020 9:19:15 PM PST by Crucial ( )
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

You know these Occupy people would be rioting if President Trump were putting illegal immigrants in those shelters.


34 posted on 12/10/2020 9:29:51 PM PST by Tired of Taxes
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To: Starcitizen
Looks like the tiny storage shacks the Germans have for the gardens.

The gardens (groups of small parcels of land on the outskirts of town, next to the railroad tracks, or otherwise away from "ordinary" human habitations) are called Schrebergärten (Plural). Moritz Schreber was the man who popularized them.

The sheds are called Schrebergartenhäuser.

I am always amused when I encounter American tourists or even soldiers stationed here who assume that they are normal human habitations for "poor people."

Regards,

35 posted on 12/10/2020 11:15:30 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
"As Lyons continued his move — installing a small petroleum cooker next to a pile of old newspapers he also uses as toilet paper, concealing a shiv, stashing his drug paraphernalia, putting down bedding for his 120-lb, flea-ridden Great Dane — volunteers used a jack and group muscle to set huts into spots near electrical hookups or did other tasks."

Regards,

36 posted on 12/10/2020 11:20:23 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: PeterPrinciple
Local churches thought i was being mean to them for making them pay rent so they started a free one...

And?! You've stopped at the most-interesting part! What happened then? Unintended consequences? Did your "freedom house" continue to thrive, while the church-operated one collapsed into anarchy?

Don't be coy!

You're obvious a guy with far more experience in these matters than anyone else here, so...

Regards,

37 posted on 12/10/2020 11:23:40 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: Paladin2

It looks like more space than I had, as an enlisted man, living in the barracks, with two of us sharing the cracker box room.


38 posted on 12/10/2020 11:25:59 PM PST by Mark17 (USAF Retired. Father of a US Air Force commissioned officer, and trained Air Force combat pilot. )
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To: alexander_busek

Local churches thought i was being mean to them for making them pay rent so they started a free one...


The usual:

Their sign: free rent as long as it lasts

My sign : a place to live as long as you work

They put me out of business and theirs wasn’t sustainable.


39 posted on 12/11/2020 3:55:38 AM PST by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: arthurus

From the excerpt: “The Wiggie’s building...is...being renovated to offer restrooms, showers, washers and dryers, kitchen and dining area.”


40 posted on 12/11/2020 4:34:17 AM PST by HartleyMBaldwin
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