Projects
A glimpse of what we’re building together—homes, communities, and hope for the next generation.
Grand Canyon (40 acres, 48 units)
At the Grand Canyon gateway, 48 housing units rise from 40 acres not just as shelter, but as anchors of resilience. Community gardens turn food desert landscapes into sources of nourishment, echoing the WWII Victory Gardens, where Americans grew 40% of their vegetables at home. By pairing housing with food production, we lower grocery costs, boost nutrition, and reduce anxiety—studies show gardening can cut depression by 40%. Like FDR’s Civilian Conservation Corps, this site blends work, housing, and purpose to restore both land and people.
Olympic (29 acres, 25 units)
On the Olympic Peninsula, 25 units provide affordable homes in a region where seasonal workers are often priced out. Integrated gardens transform vacant ground into sources of fresh produce, reducing dependence on distant supply chains and improving community health. Just as Sears once shipped 70,000 kit homes to families eager to build their futures, these homes and gardens equip Gen Z with tools to build lives rooted in stability, sustainability, and belonging.
Bryce (420 acres, 40 units)
On Bryce’s sweeping 420 acres, 40 housing units are surrounded by fertile land dedicated to gardens, greenhouses, and food production. This scale allows for measurable impact on local food insecurity while creating agricultural jobs alongside construction and services. Like the Amish barn raisings, this project is deeply communal: neighbors building for neighbors, food and housing growing hand-in-hand. It becomes more than homes—it’s a generational reset toward ownership, health, and hope..