Kansas City Our completed Village sustains Veterans through 49 tiny homes, personalized 1:1 support, and preventive outreach services to fix Veteran homelessness. Thanks for having us out, Veterans Community Project! About Veterans Community VCP Village, located at 89th and Troost in Kansas City, Missouri, is an innovative community of 49 tiny houses for homeless Veterans. The homes range in size from 240 to 320 square feet, meet all local city code requirements, and connect to city utility services.
A tiny home village for the houseless is expanding in Kansas City, Kansas. The Kansas City Coalition for Digital Inclusion recently welcomed Chris Admire, Executive Director of Veterans Community Project (VCP), to present on their innovative housing solutions and support services for veterans experiencing homelessness. The Veterans Community Project, located at 89th and Troost, is dedicated to moving unhoused veterans off the streets.
The organization owns a village of tiny homes that houses veterans free of. Tiny Homes for Veterans Founders of the Veterans Community Project hope to help their fellow servicemen by building a village of 52 tiny homes for homeless veterans in Kansas City. The 240-square-foot homes will include a bed, kitchen and bathroom.
Three friends in Kansas City, MO - U.S. veterans themselves - decided to do something about it. Chris Stout, Bryan Meyer and Brandonn Mixon joined together to form the Veterans Community Project (VCP).
The nonprofit is dedicated to ending veteran homelessness by building a specialized community of tiny homes. Enter the Veterans Community Project, a charitable organization founded in 2016 by Bryan Meyer, Mark Solomon, and other combat veterans in Kansas City, Missouri, who were frustrated by the rampant homelessness and suicide among veterans. VCP builds communities of tiny homes as transitional housing for homeless veterans.
They also provide on-site case management to address underlying issues such as mental health and employment skills, helping veterans get back on their feet and transition into long-term, permanent housing. Marvin Gregory, a veteran who has been homeless, on Monday checked out a tiny house in Kansas City from the Veterans Community Project that he can call home for the next six to 12 months.