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Volunteers Turn Abandoned Buildings into Apartments for Homeless Vets

Volunteers Turn Abandoned Buildings into Apartments for Homeless Vets
Volunteers are turning abandoned buildings into more than 100 apartments for homeless veterans in Ohio, with businesses doing work for free.

Volunteers have started remodeling hundred-year-old apartments in Ohio to serve as new homes for homeless veterans.

Iron Soup Historical Preservation is reworking old buildings in Campbell, Ohio, and hope to have the first apartments completed shortly. They believe they can remodel 160 old apartments in town to create a "veteran community" and roll back homelessness among vets.

Brian Reed owns a construction company and spent the weekend putting down tile, setting up drywall, and modernizing bathrooms in two apartments—all for free. Other companies and professionals have donated building materials and furniture to the cause.

The old apartments are part of a "company town" housing development constructed by Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company for its workers a century ago, which are abandoned but now on the National Registry of Historic Places.

Work started on the first pair of units which will provide shelter for four vets until they can find permanent housing.

"There are all kinds of units around here," Iron Soup's executive director Linda Gens told WKBN News. "They can all be rehabbed and it doesn't take much money."

Iron Soup has raised thousands of dollars toward their goal, but volunteer labor is going a long way in rehabbing the apartments. DONATE toward this major effort at the group's GoFundMe campaign.

(WATCH the video below from WKBN News) — Photo: YouTube

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