From the BBC:
"Cardboard tents distributed to Brussels homeless"
A project in Brussels, Belgium is pioneering portable cardboard tents for homeless people to sleep in. The cardboard tents, known as the ORIG-AMI project, can be transported by users on their backs as they seek shelter. In Brussels, normal tents are forbidden, meaning that homeless people are often moved on by police. Those behind the project hope that their tents will allow the homeless somewhere safe to sleep. The tents will be tolerated by police, they said. The cardboard tents were created by users of a provincial job rehabilitation centre, local news website BX1 reported. The cardboard was donated by a cardboard factory and the finished product was assembled by a workshop at the Lantin prison, the website added. Many shelters in the Belgian capital are already fully occupied by winter time and some homeless people do not want to go into shelters where they may be separated from their pets. Xavier Van der Stappen, president of an NGO involved with the project, told the French language broadcaster RTBF that the fact that "2,600 people live on the streets in Brussels, in one of the most comfortable countries in the world is hard to accept". The tents were presented on Thursday at the Gare du Nord station. Twenty of them are to be distributed to homeless people in Brussels along with backpacks containing essentials from another NGO, l'Appel du Coeur. Depending on feedback from the homeless users, a second production run could be made in 2019, the NGO said.
^ We all need to do a lot more to help the homeless, but this seems like a step in the right direction. The homeless deserve food and shelter throughout the year, but especially during the cold Winter months. Until we (local, State and Federal Governments, charities, businesses and regular people) do more to support soup kitchens, homeless shelters, food banks, etc. the least we can do are projects like this one where low-cost, portable housing from cardboard can help ease the suffering of the homeless just a little. I really hope this program expands to other countries and cities. ^
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