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Are tiny homes a cost-effective solution for homelessness? This Bay Area nonprofit thinks so

DignityMoves CEO Elizabeth Funk says developing tiny home sites costs around $50,000 a unit

DignityMoves CEO Elizabeth Funk sits for a portrait in the community of tiny home shelters on Gough Street in San Francisco, CA on Friday, May 24, 2024. The homes, which started as a tent community, provide transitional housing for clients on their way to permanent living situations. (Don Feria for Bay Area News Group)
DignityMoves CEO Elizabeth Funk sits for a portrait in the community of tiny home shelters on Gough Street in San Francisco, CA on Friday, May 24, 2024. The homes, which started as a tent community, provide transitional housing for clients on their way to permanent living situations. (Don Feria for Bay Area News Group)
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DignityMoves CEO Elizabeth Funk thinks that for the most part, the public agencies and nonprofits tasked with solving homelessness are going about it all wrong.

From the federal government on down, the focus — and the funding — has long centered on moving homeless people directly into permanent housing. The problem with that strategy, as Funk sees it, is there simply aren’t enough affordable homes available, and building new units takes years and can cost $1 million per door.

DignityMoves’ solution: temporary tiny home shelters, which can be erected in months for as little as $50,000 a unit. So far, the San Francisco-based nonprofit has developed five tiny home sites totaling 450 beds across California cities including San Jose and San Francisco. It has 11 more sites in the pipeline.

But despite offering supportive services, such sites sometimes struggle to place people in permanent housing, with some residents ending up back on the street. We spoke with Funk about why she believes DignityMoves’ “interim housing” model can still be a crucial solution to combat homelessness. The conservation has been edited for length and clarity.

Q: How does DignityMoves develop tiny home sites at a low cost?

A: We borrow vacant land that somebody might have plans for someday. It can be either private or public, so the land cost is zero. And that’s already half of the problem. The other reason we can do them cost effectively is because the state has declared an emergency. And if cities declare a shelter crisis, as San Jose has (and many) cities in California have, then it allows us to use more reduced building codes that are life-safety, but not a lot else. So we don’t have to do underground foundations. We don’t have to trench the utilities. We don’t have to plan for 100-year storms. And then the third one is we buy modular units from various manufacturers. Heck, you can buy a unit at Home Depot these days. So, relocatable cabins on borrowed land and emergency building codes, and wow, all of a sudden, you’ve cut a few zeros off of the cost to construct.

Q: How are the sites funded?

A: In some cases, especially in cities, like for instance, San Francisco — which was kind of stuck in the old thinking and felt like any money they spent on anything that’s not permanent was a waste of resources — our first community there was fully funded by philanthropy. Then we walked everybody through it, and they loved it. And now the city has adopted it, and is doing it on their own budget. Cities can come up with that capital money. The expensive part is then the ongoing operations and supportive services. And we know the single biggest gating factor to cities adopting this model is how hard it is to pay for the services. And so we spend a lot of our energy helping find sources for that funding.

Q: How does DignityMove’s “interim housing” differ from traditional group shelters?

A: Traditionally, shelter is meant more than anything to be a place to get out of the elements. And shelter tends to be what we call congregate, which is for cost efficiency, lots of bunk beds in a group, in a warehouse-type facility. It works to get you out of the rain, but it doesn’t work to help people rebuild their lives, because they’re still unstable. In the old world, where we had plenty of housing coming online, permanent housing, it was fine to have shelter, and then you get either back on your feet or you go to permanent supportive housing. But now that housing is so expensive to build, there’s this missing gap, and interim housing has developed in the middle as an alternative.

Q: How can tiny homes stabilize people’s lives?

A: It makes it much more likely that they’re in a mindset where they can then start to listen to the supportive service and start thinking forward. And you just can’t when you’re still in survival mode. We learned in eighth-grade science that when you’re in fight-or-flight mode, the blood literally doesn’t even go to the logical parts of your brain. Of course, you can’t figure out getting a job — even in a group shelter, where you’re still worried you’re leaving tomorrow, and you’re trying to figure out where you’re going to go next. It’s not until you’re stable and safe that now you’ve got a chance to start thinking about rebuilding and actually applying for a job or skills training.

Q: Why have cities only recently begun to embrace tiny homes?

A: There are such deep-seated commitments to permanent housing as the only dignified and safe solution. And that’s because we only measure how many people get to permanent housing. Well, those can be your metrics, they’re not mine. My metrics are whether people are on the streets and whether we’re allowing them to degenerate to the point of chronic homelessness.

Q: But tiny home sites sometimes limit how long people can stay, correct?

A: It takes some creativity to get around time limits. We certainly don’t want somebody to stay forever, but it’s based on the funding sources and availability. It shouldn’t be expected to be six months. If there’s not the supply of permanent housing, we need to let go of those time limits. So we’re really advocating for being more open-minded with that, too. And quite frankly, what blows people’s minds is some people don’t want that permanent apartment yet. Some people prefer this living, and that needs to be okay.

Q: Critics argue that shifting scarce affordable housing funding toward temporary tiny homes is a shortsighted strategy. How do you respond to that argument?

A: The truth is, we do need more permanent housing. That is the reason we have homelessness. But the reality is, today, we’re not going to get it low enough. And we’re not going to build enough of it fast enough in order to solve this problem. The analogy I use is, if you see somebody have a car accident, you run over, you take your T-shirt off and wrap it to help the bleeding. Even if your T-shirt is dirty, right? You’re not sanitized, you didn’t stop to see if this place on the freeway is designated as an emergency zone, you’re just going stop the bleeding. And then they can get to the hospital where they can have surgery that saves their life.


Five things to know about Elizabeth Funk:

1. Funk started her career as a product manager for the first Microsoft Word program.

2. She was an early employee at Yahoo.

3. She describes herself as a steadfast optimist.

4. She was an early pioneer in what is now called “impact investing.” Her Dignity Fund connected investors with entrepreneurs in developing countries.

5. She’s a single mom of two kids who remains committed to her work.


Name: Elizabeth Funk

Occupation: CEO of DignityMoves

Education: Stanford University, bachelor’s in economics and international relations. Harvard University, Master of Business Administration.

Born and raised: Kansas City

City of residence: San Francisco

Age: 54