British Columbia

Kelowna's new tiny home village will provide stability, says minister

The province of British Columbia says dozens of people residing in Kelowna's homeless shelters will soon find a place to call their own.

The temporary housing initiative is set to welcome people from local homeless shelters in the next 2 weeks

Rows of tiny homes unit at a parking lot with the Kelowna city skyline in the backdrop.
A total of 60 tiny home units make up the STEP Place, a temporary housing initiative on a city-owned lot in Kelowna, B.C. (CBC)

The province of British Columbia says dozens of people residing in Kelowna homeless shelters will soon find a place to call their own.

The province unveiled a 60-unit tiny home village on a city-owned lot at 759 Crowley Ave. in Kelowna's industrial district on Friday.

Known as STEP Place, the new temporary housing initiative will not only offer a roof over people's heads, but also a range of support services, said B.C. Minister of Housing Ravi Kahlon.

"They're gonna get support, they're gonna get meals, they're gonna get life-skills training so that people can get the stability in their lives," Kahlon said. 

WATCH | Tiny home transitional housing project to start welcoming residents

Kelowna, B.C.’s tiny home transitional housing project to start welcoming residents

9 months ago
Duration 2:43
The B.C. government and City of Kelowna unveiled a “tiny homes” project with 60 units for the homeless this morning. As Tom Popyk reports, it took a little more than four months for it all to come together - from the pitch to the opening.

Tiny home models have been used elsewhere in the province, most notably on Vancouver Island. 

In Victoria, the Greater Victoria Coalition to End Homelessness and local builder Aryze Developments crowdfunded to build a 30-unit temporary tiny home village in a parking lot. In Duncan, there is a 34-unit shipping container village.

Plans are also underway for a similar government project in Prince George.

While not the first of its kind in the province, Kahlon said Kelowna's tiny home initiative stands out for its rapid completion — the entire process took just over four months from the initial pitch to the project's opening.

"Normally it takes us six to nine months to get housing set up in communities once we've identified the location," the minister said. 

Interior of a tiny home showing a bed, a desk and two windows looking outside.
Each unit is 60 square feet, with a bed, desk and storage. (CBC News)

In Vancouver, construction of a 10-unit tiny shelter pilot project at 875 Terminal Ave., was completed in December 2023, 22 months after it was approved.

"I actually go to communities throughout B.C. and say … if you want to do it in a quick way, look at what Kelowna is doing," Kahlon added.

Each of the supportive housing units are 60 square feet and contain a bed, dresser and access to a communal bathroom, laundry and kitchen facilities, according to the John Howard Society of Okanagan and Kootenay, the non-profit responsible for running the tiny home village.

"It will be a place for healing and progress, a step on the path forward," said Patricia Bacon, the organization's executive director.

A second 60-unit housing project at 2740 Highway 97 N is expected to be completed in April, the province said.

The majority of those transitioning into STEP Place's new tiny homes will be people residing in local homeless shelters, said Kelowna Mayor Tom Dyas.

A woman showing the interior of her tent at a homeless encampment.
Genevieve Begbie, who lives in Kelowna's tent city, says she hopes to find a spot at the new tiny home village. (CBC)

"[The goal is] to move individuals from encampments into the shelter systems and the individuals who are within the shelter systems…into these tiny homes [and then move them] into more of a permanent structure for their future," Dyas said. 

Genevieve Begbie is one of the residents at Kelowna's tent city along the Okanagan Rail Trail. 

She says she has applied to stay at the tiny home village. The project will begin moving people in within the next two weeks and she hopes to hear back. 

WATCH | Tiny homes taking shape in Kelowna

Tiny home village taking shape in Kelowna

10 months ago
Duration 1:58
A tiny home village, designed to get people off Kelowna's streets, is taking shape. But as CBC's Brady Strachan reports, some people sleeping in tents outside say they have not been offered a space.

After more than five years on the streets, Begbie says the temporary housing will help her find stability. 

"I just recently got funding for my paramedics course in West Kelowna and I really hope I get in there so I can do my schooling."

According to the most recent report by B.C. Housing, there are 297 people experiencing homelessness in Kelowna — higher than in neighbouring Interior communities like Vernon (224), Kamloops (206), and Penticton (114).

- With files from Tom Popyk and Brady Strachan