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Related: About this forumShipping Containers From Makeshift Border Wall Being Converted Into Homes
Each one-bedroom tiny house will feature a full kitchen as well as a bathroom and a washer and dryer
Published 09/12/23 11:07 AM ET|Updated 3 hr ago
Chris Harris
An Arizona non-profit is taking large shipping containers officials had used to prevent migrants from crossing the Mexican border, and turning them into tiny homes for people aging out of the foster care system.
Based in Tucson, the company's called Wholistic Transformation, and is a faith-based organization that's transforming the thousands of white shipping containers previously stacked at the border by the state's previous governor, forming a makeshift border wall into livable spaces.
Bryan Benz, the founder and CEO of Wholistic Transformation, intends to create a community of seven tiny homes on two adjoining lots.
Each one-bedroom tiny house will feature a full kitchen as well as a bathroom and a washer and dryer. Their future occupants will have a say-so in the interior design of each shipping container.
More:
https://themessenger.com/news/arizona-shipping-containers-makeshift-border-wall-being-converted-into-homes
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Minnah Arshad
USA TODAY NET
PHOENIX Some shipping containers that once stood on Arizonas border to keep people out are now being converted into tiny homes that welcome people in.
Wholistic Transformation, a Tucson, Arizona, faith-based nonprofit organization, is using shipping containers from former Arizona Gov. Doug Duceys makeshift border wall to build tiny homes for young people transitioning out of the foster care system.
Ducey, who stacked thousands of shipping containers last year to create a barrier along the Arizona-Mexico border, came under pressure from a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Justice against Arizona, Ducey and agreed to dismantle the wall in December 2022. The federal government contended the wall was illegal, dangerous and interfered with federal duties.
Now, more than 2,000 containers removed from the border are available to government entities and nonprofits that can find uses for them, the state has said. The Arizona Department of Administration said any left by October will be available for public sale.
More:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/09/11/makeshift-border-united-states-arizona-border/70827811007/