FlyawayHomes

FlyawayHomes FlyawayHomes was founded with the principal that the only way to provide housing for the homeless sustainably is to make it a viable real estate investment

03/20/2023
07/30/2021

KTLA 7-28-21 - Ray Grutzmacher Family Community

07/30/2021

KCAL 7-28-21 - Ray Grutzmacher Family Community

07/30/2021

KABC 7-28-21 - Ray Grutzmacher Family Community

https://youtu.be/YOizH1EuBro
07/30/2021

https://youtu.be/YOizH1EuBro

Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson opens a new supportive housing project, The Grutzmacher FlyawayHomes, in partnership with The People Concern. The homes...

https://youtu.be/rV0ye252rWI
07/30/2021

https://youtu.be/rV0ye252rWI

Flyaway Homes, in conjunction with its partner The People Concern and Councilmember Marqueece Harris-Dawson announced the opening of a 32-bed permanent suppo...

11/23/2020

November 23, 2020 - Good Day LA - "Shipping Containers in South Los Angeles becoming homes for the homeless"

10/18/2020

Los Angeles (CNN) - Jonelle Kilgore tapped away at his online homework with Jasmine the puppy on his lap in their South Los Angeles home.
The 12-year-old boy and his dog sat on a couch in not just any home, but one made from four recycled shipping containers.

"I like it, I liked moving in here," Jonelle told CNN on a recent September day. "It's a home for us."

Two years ago Jonelle, his father John and four siblings received the keys to their four-bedroom container apartment and it seems like a glimmer of hope in the quest to get Los Angeles County's estimated 66,000 homeless residents off the streets.

John Kilgore said his family constantly moved from floor to floor and the couches of anyone who would take them in. That is, until he got a call from homeless advocates that he'd been approved to move into a recycled shipping container home.

"When we walked in, man! Their faces lit up," John Kilgore said of his family's reaction to the new home. "They were all smiles and so happy. And that made me happy."

Much-needed housing

Recycled shipping containers are a cheaper alternative and faster way to provide much-needed housing to homeless families and veterans, and others who may be experiencing hard times, including during the coronavirus pandemic.

Besides four bedrooms, the Kilgore's furnished unit has one bathroom, a kitchen and a small front room. Their complex of stacked shipping containers is made up of seven other units, housing 32 people, a community room and a room for a resident manager.

John Maceri, CEO of The People Concern, a homeless services agency and key partner on the project, explained that an on-site social worker helps the formerly homeless tenants with everything from how to pay rent to arranging transportation and obtaining health care.

"That manager is a facilitator and connector to community resources so that people reintegrate back into the community," Maceri said.
The Kilgore's complex was built by Flyaway Homes, which describes itself as a non-profit organization aimed at finding solutions to the homeless crisis.

FlyawayHomes reports a second refurbished container project is under construction in South Los Angeles, and three others are in the pipeline.
"We recognize a solution is building enough permanent supportive housing rapidly at an affordable cost in order to make a difference," said Flyaway Homes' Chief Operating Officer Kevin Hirai.

Hirai says the second complex being built will include 16 two-bedroom units that house up to 33 people, including unrelated roommates, like in a college dormitory. Other shipping container units are rising up throughout the country and world, including in Detroit, Washington DC and Puerto Rico.
Shipping container apartment complexes for veterans who are homeless have been built in Orange County California and Las Vegas, Nevada.
Clifford Beers Housing is teaming with American Family Housing to construct the five story Isla Intersections wedged into a lot near Harbor Freeway Station on the Metro in Los Angeles.

Builders say shipping containers can easily be moved and stacked, allowing the units to fit varying and odd sizes of land parcels. The Beers website says Isla Intersections will offer 53 affordable studios to people earning less than 40% of the area median income and one apartment for management staff.

Hirai of FlyawayHomes says the value of the containers is they can quickly be converted to residences, because the design, permitting and construction process is shorter and more simple to complete.
"So our target (construction completion) would be 12 to 15 months from site acquisition, that's in the ideal world," Hirai said.

FlyawayHomes reports it received grants of $1 million from Los Angeles County and nearly $20 million from the city of Los Angeles, as well as private funding for its projects.

In John Kilgore's shipping container home, he recovered from open heart surgery -- something that he could not do easily if he was still homeless.
He smiled when he reported great academic and other successes for all of his five children with the initials J.K.: John'son 16, Janiya 16, Ja'onna 15, Jonelle 12 and Jareesa 11.

"You walk in here and you don't see a shipping container, you see a home," said a glowing father. "I'm a fan because this take a lot of pressure off, raising kids."

https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/18/us/los-angeles-homeless-shipping-container-home-trnd/index.html

"FlyawayHomes continues its mission of building alternative housing for the homeless"- The People Concern
09/22/2020

"FlyawayHomes continues its mission of building alternative housing for the homeless"- The People Concern

FlyawayHomes continues its mission of building alternative housing for the homeless.

"The $15-million project - which includes $4.1 million in HHH funds - would cost roughly $360,000 per residential unit. ...
09/04/2020

"The $15-million project - which includes $4.1 million in HHH funds - would cost roughly $360,000 per residential unit. Construction is expected to begin in the second quarter of 2021 and conclude by the fourth quarter of the same year.

The second FlyawayHomes development would rise from a property at 828 W. Anaheim Street in Wilmington. The proposed modular apartment complex would include 49 two-bedroom dwellings, in addition to offices for services and open space amenities for residents.

FlyawayHomes anticipates a $17.2-million price tag for the project, with $4.9 million of the cost footed by Measure HHH funds. The per-unit cost for the development is approximately $345,000.

As with the South Los Angeles project, construction is scheduled to begin in the second quarter of 2021 and conclude by the fourth quarter of the same year."
The People Concern Bella Vista Property Management Incorporated Gensler Los Angeles CBRE

Three votes taken on September 2 by the Los Angeles City Council have advanced plans for affordable and supportive housing projects in South Los Angeles, Boyle Heights, San Pedro, Koreatown, and Wilmington.Marcella Gardens

08/25/2020

FlyawayHomes Builds Affordable Housing Fast and Cheap
By Kate Cagle Los Angeles
PUBLISHED 12:51 AM ET Aug. 24, 2020

They once carried goods across the Pacific, but Kevin Hirai says a few walls, cabinets and plumbing transforms a shipping container into a home.

“These are pretty straightforward and are meant to be pretty simple in design because what we’re doing is we’re replicating and then we’re stacking these,” said Hirai, the founder of Flyaway Homes, as he stood inside a refurbished shipping container in South LA.

What You Need To Know
Flyaway Homes is a private-sector development company that is pioneering modular design in 837 W 82nd Street

The company aims to do it in a third of the time at a third of the cost

As many as one in five California renters is at risk of losing their apartment once a state-wide eviction moratorium ends later this year

The companies goal is to turn affordable housing into a business that cares about more than just the bottom line

The private-sector development company is pioneering modular design at 837 W 82nd Street. It is the company’s second affordable housing project in the neighborhood. The project is financed with private equity and Hirai says investors can expect about a five percent return.

With the city of Los Angeles spending about $500,000 to build a single affordable apartment, Hirai’s company has a mission to do it in a third of the time at a third of the cost. As the United States faces a possible “eviction avalanche” in the wake of COVID-19, the need for the company’s developments is greater than ever.

As many as one in five California renters is at risk of losing their apartment once a state-wide eviction moratorium ends later this year.

“I think people are starting to realize how important a home is and how close a lot of us are to not having a home,” Hirai said.

The company’s first development at 820 West Colden Avenue was built in 7 months for $3.85 million and currently houses 32 formerly-homeless individuals. The apartments are managed by The People Concern.

The company just closed on another property and two more are in escrow, according to the company’s spokesperson Mike Mena. With the goal of turning affordable housing into a business that cares about more than just the bottom line.

“The private-sector development company is pioneering modular design at 837 W 82nd Street” Spectrum News 1 SoCal visited...
08/24/2020

“The private-sector development company is pioneering modular design at 837 W 82nd Street” Spectrum News 1 SoCal visited 82nd Street to learn more about the supportive housing production model being pioneered by Teams at ThePeople Concern and FlyawayHomes.


The company aims to do it at a third of the cost.

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