Toronto man creates tiny mobile homes to help unhoused people escape the cold

Homes are attached to bicycles; include heat, electricity and safety features

Image | ryan donais tiny homes

Caption: Ryan Donais built his first tiny mobile home this summer, and has now built three homes — one of which is pictured behind him — that can act as temporary shelters for those experiencing homelessness. (Saeed Dehghani/CBC)

After seeing people sleeping outside in the cold year-after-year, a Toronto man is building tiny mobile homes attached to bicycles to give temporary relief to those who are unhoused.
Ryan Donais started building the small modular homes this summer as he watched the city's housing crisis becoming more dire. He said he didn't want to go through another winter seeing people living on the streets, so he put his background in construction to use.
"I just don't see any changes. It's been many years with people outside and it's not changing. I couldn't imagine being outside for years, you know?"
Since then, Donais has built three homes at a cost of about $10,000 each, most of which has been paid for through donations to his GoFundMe page.

Image | tiny tiny homes example

Caption: Each home built by Donais has heat, electricity and running water, plus safety features including a smoke detector and carbon monoxide alarm. (Saeed Dehghani/CBC)

He took inspiration form Khaleel Seivwright, a carpenter who built wooden shelters during the pandemic — until the city removed them, claiming they were a fire hazard.
Not wanting his tiny homes to suffer the same fate, Donais said he designed his mobile shelters to hopefully avoid backlash from the city.
Each of the small units has electricity and heat, running water and a bed, as well as safety features like smoke and carbon monoxide detectors and a fire extinguisher. Donais said the units are also designed with Ontario's e-bike regulations in mind so that they can legally travel on the city's bike lanes if they have to be moved.
WATCH | Step inside his 1st tiny mobile home prototype:

Media Video | CBC News Toronto : Tiny mobile home creator hopes to offer temporary relief to unhoused people

Caption: A Toronto man is building tiny mobile homes attached to bicycles with the hope of offering temporary relief to those who are unhoused. CBC’s Dale Manucdoc has the details.

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So far, Donais said he hasn't encountered any issues.
Terra Sawler moved into one of Donais' mobile homes about a month and a half ago after spending close to three years living on the street.
"This is definitely the safest and warmest I've been since I've been out here."

Image | Terra Sawler

Caption: Terra Sawler has been living one of the tiny mobile homes built by Ryan Donais for more than a month. (Saeed Dehghani/CBC)

After burning down two tents just trying to stay warm, Sawler says this is definitely a safer option. In addition to keeping her warm, Sawler says the tiny home has also allowed her to have something she hadn't had in years — a good night's sleep.
"When you're out on the street, you don't sleep every night. You sleep every couple nights," she said.
"And you gotta take turns and shifts with people, right? 'Cause I mean, I've had my shoes stolen off my feet, I've had my [sleeping] bag cut off, it's a dog-eat-dog world out here."
WATCH | Woman experiencing homelessness grateful for tiny mobile home:

Media Video | CBC News Toronto : 'Tiny Tiny Homes' builder presents another Toronto resident with place to stay

Caption: A Toronto man who started building small shelters for those in need gave someone a new place to live today. As Naama Weingarten reports, while unhoused people appreciate his efforts, he wishes he never had to build the homes.

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As part of its housing action plan(external link) released in 2020, the City of Toronto has committed to creating 1,000 new modular homes for people experiencing homelessness. So far, the city has completed 216 homes on city-owned sites, its website says.
Other municipalities in Ontario have started to use modular homes to address a lack of housing.
Peterborough started a modular housing community filled with cabins in the site of a former parking lot
Waterloo also has a tiny home shelter run by the region that opened last year, while Hamilton is expected to open an outdoor shelter made up of tiny modular homes next month following some delays.
Since building his first tiny home in the summer, Donais has since registered his own not-for-profit organization, Tiny Tiny Homes, to help create more.
He says he's happy to be able to give people like Sawler an escape from the cold with his mini modular homes. But his homes aren't meant to be permanent, and he wishes he didn't have to build them at all.
"It's a terrible that we're letting people sleep outside. Housing is the answer."