DENVER - The path that brings people to the Monroe Tiny Home Village looks different for everyone.
"I became homeless two years ago. I lost my house that I live in for nine years," said Kenneth Foskett, "I lived in my storage [unit]," said Anna Brown, who explained the challenges of not having a place to call her own.
"When I left the overnight shelter, I had to take everything with me. So if I had to go to work, I had to take my suitcases, my walker," she said, "I was turned down jobs being that I had so much stuff."
For the more than 130 people who have been served there since it opened in 2022, it quickly becomes a home until they get back on their feet.
"I moved out yesterday. To Lakewood and got a one bedroom apartment," said Foskett.
Brown is a resident and making progress.
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