Spring is here and
the days are getting more beautiful, offering a perfect setting for Asheville
Area Habitat for Humanity’s final kickoff ceremony in its 10-house subdivision
in the neighborhood of Shiloh. This past Wednesday, a crowd of Habitat
supporters, donors, volunteers, future homeowners, and staff gathered together
to celebrate the start of the final three homes on McKinley Avenue, a new road
off Taft Avenue.
Future homeowners
Holt Pearce, Stefan and Nina Tehnilenco, and Tim Bromley and Jenny Giannetto
mingled with the crowd as one-by-one, people stepped up to sign the studs that
will be used in their respective houses. It was also a great opportunity for
the future owners to meet the people behind the sponsorships that are helping
fund the up-front construction costs of their houses. The homeowners will pay
an affordable mortgage after they purchase their homes.
In early May of last
year, Habitat raised the wall of the first house in its Shiloh: Let’s Build!
campaign, an initiative in which the organization planned to build 15 new
houses and complete 30 Home Repair projects in the Shiloh neighborhood by
September 2017. With the start of these final three houses, Habitat is rounding
the corner on reaching its goal, thanks to support from individuals and
businesses in the community who helped by donating to and volunteering with
Habitat.
Pearce’s future home
is dually sponsored by Pisgah Foundation and “Friends of Habitat”; the
foundation is a long-time supporter of Asheville Habitat, especially for its
work in the community of Shiloh. “Friends of Habitat” is new group of caring
individuals who want to build a home in honor of Asheville Habitat’s previous
executive director Lew Kraus and in the memory of his son Jon Kraus. The
Tehnilenco’s future home is sponsored by another enthusiastic Habitat
supporter, AvL Technologies. This will be the company’s third full-house
sponsorship, not including two other partial house sponsorships. Finally, the
Bromley-Giannetto’s home, fondly dubbed “Grandpa’s House”, is sponsored by a
local family in memory of several generations of grandfathers who helped build
the communities they lived in.
The anonymous donor
behind Grandpa’s House summarized her feelings in a quote by Aja Graydon: “At
the core of who we are is the roots of those that have influenced our lives the
most, and the impact of what they have exposed us to is always there. When the
foundation is laid with love and commitment, our lives will always reflect that
of which we have been taught.”
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