On November 18, 2020

Norwich University receives $20k grant for tiny house village

Norwich University has been awarded a $20,000 grant from the TD Charitable Foundation to fund the development of a construction management plan to create Vermont’s first tiny house community.

This grant supports the development of the next generation of affordable tiny houses by students and faculty in the College of Professional School’s School of Architecture + Art through Norwich’s Design+Build Collaborative (the Collaborative). This project partners with Homes First, a grassroots organization founded and based in Middlebury, to realize a village of tiny houses in Middlebury of affordable, dignified housing.

“Building on the success of our housing prototypes, we strive to integrate better solutions for community health, accessibility, and adaptability,” Collaborative Director Cara Armstrong said. “We continue to find and develop partnerships within the university and with outside organizations that align with our mission to conduct research to understand the relationship between buildings and occupant health and make refinements to a tiny house with regard to affordability, transportation, financing, mechanical systems designs and community development.”

“Supporting Norwich University’s affordable housing initiative aligns with TD’s social purpose to create sustainable, inclusive communities and make a lasting positive impact,” said Phil Daniels, TD Bank market president.

The Collaborative will work with a group of community members that has spent over a year researching truly affordable housing options for people all along the income spectrum. The Collaborative will also tap insight from “Conversations from the Open Road,” a citizen-journalism, film production program for high school students.

The Vermont Office of Economic Opportunity and Vermont’s 2016 Point in Time Count has determined that Vermont should add nearly 400 units of new supportive housing and an additional 1,250 new units of affordable housing targeted to households with incomes at or below 30% of the area median income. A tiny-house prototype offers a solution to this crisis and a replicable model that can expand Vermont’s affordable housing. The Collaborative will provide design services to Homes First along with a construction management plan to create Vermont’s first tiny house community.

Norwich’s Design+Build Collaborative calls on students to “act as well as conceive” to create solutions for local and global challenges.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Pride in Rutland: Flags, resistance, and showing up

June 25, 2025
By Emily Pratt Slatin Pride returned to downtown Rutland this June with more color, noise, and purpose than ever before. What began as a joyful celebration quickly became something deeper—something that felt like resistance. And belonging. And a promise that no one in this community has to stand alone. The day kicked off with the…

Plan to manage 72,000 acres of the Telephone Gap project is finalized

June 25, 2025
Staff report The U.S. Forest Service issued its final plan for managing 72,000 acres of public and private land on June 16. The proposed Telephone Gap Integrated Resource Project area is located on the Green Mountain National Forest (GMNF) within the towns of Brandon, Chittenden, Goshen, Killington, Mendon, Pittsfield, Pittsford, and Stockbridge. “The Telephone Gap project is…

Hot air balloons took flight over Quechee

June 25, 2025
By James Kent This past weekend, June 21-22, people came from all over New England to participate in the 45th annual Hot Air Balloon Festival. Music, food, games, and fun were available for all ages throughout the weekend, but the main attraction was the hot air balloons. And for those looking to see these gigantic,…

Killington residents push for skate park as town reimagines recreation future 

June 25, 2025
By Greta Solsaa/VTDigger As Killington celebrates the 50th anniversary of its recreation center, some residents are pushing to make a skate park a new permanent fixture of the town’s summer offerings.  The town crafted its recreation master plan to holistically determine how to best use its resources to serve residents in the future, Recreation Department Director Emily Hudson…