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A few years ago, as a team at Ikea U.S. thought about how it could help tackle the challenges of unaffordable housing and homelessness, they decided to try something new.

“We really wanted to challenge ourselves on how we could move away from the typical onetime donations that businesses or retailers usually do, and really try to work with communities in a more strategic way,” says Samantha Eisenman, sustainability business partner at Ikea U.S. They started a new pilot project: how to design a tiny house for a permanent supportive housing community in San Antonio.



Working with local architecture firm WestEast Design Group and designers from West Elm, they used trauma-informed design principles to make a space that felt as safe as possible for someone who has experienced homelessness. It’s a step further than typical housing of this kind. “Often, it’s what can be built fastest, cheapest, and easiest,” Eisenman says.

“It doesn’t necessarily take into consideration the person who’s going to be living in it and what they may have experienced, and how to build that environment in a way that supports them on their journey and in their well-being.” | The team met with some of the residents of the new community, a neighborhood under construction that will eventually include around 200 tiny houses, RVs, and apartments on the site of a former drive-in movie theater. The neighborhood is designed for seniors who have been homeless for at least a year, have disabilitie.

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