Side Streets ~ Neighborhood people and issues

Archive for the 'Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity' Tag

SUMMER CAMPERS CONVERGE DOWNTOWN, LEAVE ART IN THEIR WAKE

June 8th, 2012, 11:30 am by

Lizzy Butts, 10, of Green Mountain FallsManitou Springs artist Steve Wood and his Concrete Couch nonprofit group created SCAMP, a summer camp program that lets volunteers of all ages create public art in downtown Colorado Springs.Manitou Springs artist Steve Wood and his Concrete Couch nonprofit group created SCAMP, a summer camp program that lets volunteers of all ages create public art in downtown Colorado Springs.

Manitou Springs artist Steve Wood and his Concrete Couch nonprofit group created SCAMP, a summer camp program that lets volunteers of all ages create public art in downtown Colorado Springs.

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Lizzy Butts, a small mason’s trowel in hand, eased a ceramic tile into a dab of concrete.

She was oblivious to cars zooming past on East Pikes Peak Avenue downtown or the folks coming and going from the CenturyLink office building.

Lizzy, 10, was simplly enjoying a week at SCAMP — the Concrete Couch version of summer camp. Her group was transforming a large sidewalk vent into a piece of art.

And she was loving it.

“I always have a lot of fun doing this,” Lizzy told me as the mosaic “Tapestry Road” took shape atop the vent.

This wasn’t her first time working on a project with Concrete Couch, a Manitou Springs nonprofit founded by artist Steve Wood dedicated to creating a better community by working with kids and others to create public art.

SCAMP is a perfect example of what Wood and Concrete Couch are about.

SCAMP stands for Summer Community Art and Mural Project. Over the next three months SCAMPers like Lizzy will create a series of public art projects in the downtown area — benches, murals and a circus-style performance.

Already, the group built a concrete, ceramic and stone bench on Nevada Avenue in front of City Rock Climbing Gym. The CenturyLink bench is its second project. Six more are planned through August.

 

The Concrete Couch SCAMP program is transforming a sidewalk vent into a mosaic artwork.

Best of all, it’s free to participate and all are welcome. The crew Thursday included kids like Lizzy, teens and adults.

The city asked Wood to host SCAMP and is helping him secure permits and providing free parking at project sites. But it is giving no financial support.

The Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore is contributing ceramic materials and area concrete companies are giving reduced-price materials.

Still, Wood is seeking sponsorships, such as contributions he received from City Rock and CenturyLink, to cover the costs of each project, which total about $2,000 apiece.

“But we’re going ahead with this whether we get the sponsors or not,” Wood said. “That’s just how we work.”

Concrete Couch teachers and volunteers with the SCAMP program worked on a mosaic art bench Thursday, June 7, 2012, outside the CenturyLink building on East Pikes Peak Avenue.

All are welcome and sign-up is easy. Go to his website: www.ConcreteCouch.org and look under the “What’s New” tab. Or call program coordinate Lisbet Rattenborg at 347-1142.

The website also has details of coming projects including one starting June 18 in the Middle Shooks Run Neighborhood where a mural will be built alongside the creek.

“Kids like it because you get to work with tools,” said Jennifer Hanson, a professional potter who also teaches at Concrete Couch. “They get to use tile cutters and nippers, tile saws, do mortar and grouting. We even fire up the kiln sometimes and do glazing.”

Lizzy nodded agreement.

“I’ve been cutting tile,” she said. “But I’m not so good with the nippers.”

Concrete Couch volunteers in its SCAMP program built this rock and concrete bench, with a planter, on Nevada Avenue outside City Rock Climbing Gym.

The Concrete Couch website has information on the SCAMP program.

Click here to read a Side Streets column I wrote April 27, 2011, about Wood and Concrete Couch.

To read the associated blog entry, follow this link.

Click this link to see another cool Concrete Couch project.

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PARADE OF AFFORDABLE HOMES

August 7th, 2011, 11:30 am by
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There are some things that just don’t go together naturally. 

Terms like “sushi dinner.” 

Or  “humble politician.” 

Even “intelligent journalist.“ 

 

And I never imagined I’d put Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity in the same sentence with “Parade of Homes.” 

It just never occurred to me. 

I love the Parade, which is sponsored by the Housing and Building Association of Colorado Springs.

Each year, it gives riff raff like me a peak inside the world of the wealthy. 

Or at least inside the world of people drunk with debt. Whatever. 

Thanks to the parade, I’ve seen houses with indoor streams and mountains and theaters and gymnasiums and more. 

Houses that resemble ski lodges. Big beautiful homes. 

It’s like window shopping at Tiffany’s. I know I’d never be able to buy anything but it’s fun to dream. 

Still, I would never have imagined the parade would have on display a home built by Habitat for Humanity. You know them. They are the group that builds modest homes for low-income folks. They provide no-interest, 30-year mortgages, but require homebuyers to save and invest a significant downpayment, as well as contributing “sweat equity” in the construction of their homes.

They do great work. Just not the kind of thing typically featured in the parade.

Same for the Rocky Mountain Community Land Trust. They have a home in the parade as well. You might not be as familiar with the trust. 

Since 1996, the trust has been helping low-income folks buy their first homes. Unlike Habitat, the trust typically retains an ownership stake in its homes so when a homeowner decides to sell a few years later, the trust can ensure the home goes to another low-income family.

They also help with transitional housing and finding affordable rental homes for needy people. 

Woodmen Vistas looks like any other subdivision in Colorado Springs. But instead of mini-mansions, it's a collection of new, affordable homes built by Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity and the Rocky Mountain Community Land Trust.

The two parade homes are in Woodmen Vistas, a 10-acre subdivision they have developed as partners since 2007. It is northeast of Woodmen Road and Powers Boulevard. Access it from Tutt Boulevard.

 When completed, Woodmen Vistas will have about 68 homes built with old-fashioned alleys in the back.“We want people to see our neighborhood and what our homes are like,” said Paul Johnson, Habitat executive director. “It’s very important people see you can have a simple, decent affordable home that’s very functional and a very good place to raise your family.”

Bob Koenig, executive director of the Land Trust, hopes parade visitors will come away with a different opinion of affordable housing. “There’s a lot of stereotypical thinking about affordable housing,” Koenig said. “We want to show people what it is and what it isn’t.”

Here’s a look at the house built by the Land Trust.

 It has 1,643 square feet, three bedrooms and two-and-a-half baths. To qualified buyers, it will sell for $156,000.

It it a two-story home and  has a stucco exterior and a two-car garage.

The Rocky Mountain Community Land Trust entered this house in the 2011 Parade of Homes.

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Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity built a ranch-style home with three bedrooms and one bath and 988 square feet for the 2011 Parade of Homes. It features solar heating and water systems. It sells for $159,000. Here’s a look at it.

The Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity entry in the 2011 Parade of Homes.

A solar array on the roof powers the water and heating systems in the house.

They get the full Parade of Homes treatment and even get their own webpage. 

View the Habitat entry’s page here.  

Check out the Land Trust’s Adams home here

Follow this link to the Housing and Building Association of Colorado Springs. 

This takes you to the Parade of Home website. 

Here’s a link to the Parade of Homes map for 2011. 

Click here and watch a tour of the Habitat house.

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HAPPY 100th to HABITAT FOR HUMANITY

March 7th, 2010, 12:03 pm by

Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity is celebrating its 100th!

Not anniversary. It’s 100th house in Colorado Springs.

That’s 100 affordable houses for the working poor.

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Habitat opened its Pikes Peak-area operations in 1986.

Over the next 11 years it built 25 houses, relying on an all-volunteer staff and an annual budget of less than $100,000.

In 1997, Habitat hired Paul Johnson as its executive director and its first paid employee.

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Paul Johnson, executive director of Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity

Johnson has overseen sweeping changes in the nonprofit organization’s operations. 

He added a handful of professionals who found sponsors and contributors as well as scouting out properties to rehab, vacant lots to build on and families to buy them.

As the inventory of single lots in Colorado Springs disappeared, Johnson and Habitat turned to larger pieces of property for construction. The first was a 1.3-acre parcel in the Mill Street neighborhood south of downtown.

Habitat achieved savings by clustering its projects. It could move from house-to-house quicker. Plus it could rent one portable potty and rolling trash dumper among other savings.

Then it bought 10 acres near Woodmen Road and Powers Boulevard and launched Woodmen Vistas subsdivision.

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Habitat is building 36 homes there and its partner, Rocky Mountain Community Land Trust is building 31 more.

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The first house built by Pikes Peak Habitat for Humanity in its 10-acre Woodmen Vistas subdivision

So far, Habitat has built a dozen. 

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The 100th house will be the lucky 13th and two or three more are poised to start soon.

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 In fact, Habitat is having a groundbreaking ceremony at 3 p.m., on Wednesday, March 10.

Everyone is invited.

The ceremony will feature My Tien Truong and her family, who will help build the house and then move in when it is completed in about six months. They will pay off their zero interest loan to Habitat over 30 years.

Here’s a story I wrote about the project in September 2007.

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