How a First Nation’s housing project could spark a home-rescue revolution
A small First Nation in British Columbia is showing how salvaged homes can become sustainable housing — and a blueprint for greener development.
In short:
- The shíshálh Nation partnered with Renewal Development to relocate 10 houses from Port Moody to their coastal reserve, converting each into two-level homes with local construction crews.
- This home rescue model slashes costs and emissions compared to new builds, with Lewis and Chief Joe envisioning up to 77 homes and vibrant community life for elders and children.
- With zoning reforms across California, Oregon, Washington, and B.C. set to trigger demolition of thousands of homes, the project offers a scalable, climate-friendly alternative to bulldozing livable houses.
Key quote:
“My goal is to shift the demolition-first paradigm. Renewal is a campaign disguised as a company.”
— Glyn Lewis, Renewal Development
Why this matters:
While policy hawks chase green dreams in committee rooms, the shíshálh are already building it. As cities push for denser housing, this project shows it's not necessary to sacrifice sustainability or community to meet housing demands. Relocating homes instead of demolishing them can lower emissions, reduce landfill waste, and create healthier, more affordable neighborhoods — especially for historically underserved populations.
Read more:
Josie Holtzman, Isaac Kestenbaum: Subsistence, a way of life: How climate change is affecting Alaskan traditions