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[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Small Town Hotel Becomes a Safe Haven in an Expensive World

Feb 20, 2024-- In Little Current, Ontario, Canada, the owners of a local hotel have transformed their lodgings into affordable apartments for those struggling to make ends meet. Denise, "D" as she's lovingly called, was an employee of the Anchor Inn for over 15 years when she and her partner purchased the property in 2017.


Pay attention because this is replicable in many places. Lots of towns have more hotel or motel space than they need. A room typically includes a bed and a full bathroom. Often there is a little sitting area and sometimes a kitchenette. In other words, it's an efficiency apartment. Where two rooms are linked by a connecting door, you could leave one as a bedroom and turn the other into a kitchen-dining-living room. A business hotel will have some suites that are literally apartments, with one or more bedrooms, a living room, and a full kitchen. Usually the facility has some common amenities including a nice lobby/lounge, which sometimes has brunch eatery, some meeting rooms, a gym, and a swimming pool. Some have a lot more than that, up to a whole amenity floor. If not, you have the option of turning some of the rentable rooms into amenity rooms, such as for childcare. You could put a craft room or sport lounge on each floor for the residents to gather since private living space is tight.

This will work best in small towns, which very frequently have more hotel space than they need. If the zoning laws don't allow single-room-occupancy then you can just change them because any problem people made is a problem that people can solve. Zones only exist because people say they do. If your town has a hotel standing empty and people who need affordable housing, then use what you have.

However, if you have a city that's being proactive about affordable housing, this may work there too. It's especially helpful if you need to tear down slums and build something livable: buy a hotel, shift people from the first building there, build the replacement, move people in, and from there you can knock one, build one because you have space to put the displaced people during the build phase.

Hotels also work great for housing refugees or internally displaced persons. Over Terramagne, you can see examples of this in "A Matter of Balance" with Syrian refugees arriving and "Fresh Springs Break Out in Dry Places" when Ibrahim suggests taking in refugees from the Big One.

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Date: 2024-02-28 05:23 am (UTC)
kellan_the_tabby: My face, reflected in a round mirror I'm holding up; the rest of the image is the side of my head, hair shorn short. (Default)
From: [personal profile] kellan_the_tabby
I was SO ANGRY when an old motel closed back where I used to live in New Mexico, & instead of doing something USEFUL with it, they brought in a backhoe or something & used it to knock down the front wall of each room. So homeless people wouldn't squat there; that's what I read in the paper when I went looking. ARGH.

Course this is the same town where, right at the beginning of the plague, the mayor claimed that 'his people' hadn't brought the plague to the Navajo; the Navajo had brought it to 'his people'. Pretty fascinating thing for a white guy to say in a town that's 60% Navajo. They started calling him Mayor Plague Blankets after that.

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