Big Plans, Tiny Homes: Can Biz Brains Solve Homelessness?

DignityMoves Unveils Prototype for Homeless Cabins in Downtown Santa Barbara

Big Moves: Dignity Moves’ Elizabeth Funk wields a big pair of scissors at a ceremonial ribbon cutting for the tiny-home village slated for a parking lot on the 1000 block of Santa Barbara Street. To her right is Sylvia Barnard of Good Samaritan, the nonprofit homeless shelter provider charged with running the community of 33 temporary homes. To Funk’s immediate left are supervisors Gregg Hart and Das Williams.

Wed Dec 08, 2021 | 02:01pm

To counter mounting public despair, fatigue, and frustration over the seeming intractability of homelessness, movers and shakers with DignityMoves — a statewide nonprofit made up of entrepreneurs working in conjunction with the County of Santa Barbara — held their second grand unveiling gala in one month for a new village of 33 tiny homes slated to house people experiencing homelessness on what’s now a parking lot on the 1000 block of Santa Barbara Street. 

Credit: Andy Davis

On hand Sunday for this event was a prototype of one of the custom-designed, custom-made tiny homes. By any reckoning, it’s a far cry from the glorified toolsheds many earlier tiny-home models have been. Efforts were made to fit into Santa Barbara’s s demanding architectural standards; an archway will span the entrance to the site, and the homes themselves will offer terra-cotta roofs. The aim, explained DignityMoves founder Elizabeth Funk, was to find a solution that was quick to build, cost-effective, temporary, well-run, moveable, and replicable elsewhere.

Funk is an impact investor from the Bay Area who got her start with Yahoo; she lives in a neighborhood where the sale price of homes is north of $2 million, yet she has a homeless person living in a tent across the street from her house. As an entrepreneur, Funk said, she hoped to bring a business mind and fresh set of eyes — perhaps even naïveté, she said — to a problem that appears to be getting worse, not better. She primed herself by holding 300 Zoom interviews with people already working the field. 

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