Historic LA hostel transformed into modern group home for homeless college students

Historic LA hostel transformed into modern group home for homeless college students
📅 2025-04-21

The Evergreen Hostel, a historic building in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, once provided a safe space for Japanese Americans to rebuild their lives following imprisonment in internment camps during World War II.

Now, the space is home to The Dunamis House, a group residential living facility for students and young adults facing homelessness.

The exterior of The Dunamis House. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

It’s led by the nonprofit Los Angeles Room & Board, an organization that provides housing and critical support structures for young people transitioning into adulthood. 

“We intend to continue the legacy of providing hope and opportunity,” L.A. Room & Board founder Sam Prater said in a statement. 

“The Ancient Greek translation of Dunamis is ‘power’ and ‘potential’. Through the intentional work of our staff and community partners along with collaboration with the residents we’ll house, L.A. Room & Board hopes to unleash the power of our resident’s potential to create their very best lives and become more self-sufficient.”

Sam Prater. Photo courtesy of L.A. Room & Board

The space is reserved for young people ages 18-24 who are enrolled and currently attending college or trade school in Los Angeles County. It was the city’s first Homekey property dedicated to serving youth, part of a much larger project to create interim and permanent housing solutions for all Angelenos facing homelessness.

The Dumanis House opened in March 2023, with single and double rooms available for 40 students, in addition to a kitchen and dining area, screening room, lounge, recording studio, barbershop, inner courtyard, and on-site cafe (where residents can also work through an employment program). 

A gathering space inside of Dunamis. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

According to a statewide survey during the 2022-23 school year, an estimated two-thirds of community college students in California were experiencing food insecurity, and roughly half of these students were facing homelessness. Prater founded L.A. Room & Board to help.

The nonprofit began by remodeling a former UCLA sorority house to give 15 students a place to live. The Dunamis House is now the organization’s third house.

Rooms are similar to that of traditional dorms. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

“Offering someone a safe place to sleep is only one part of our mission,” Prater told EdSource. “The real work is trying to transform lives, and through the services that we provide and our incredible team, that’s where the real work happens.”

Residents are allowed to live at Dunamis for up to three years. After this, they are given the option to move into one of the nonprofit’s other homes and are asked to pay subsidized rent, which Prater said helps guide the young adults into remaining housed after leaving the program.

Many of the residents in Room & Board’s programming have previously lived in group homes or juvenile halls, making the stylish and modern design of Dunamis a stark — and welcome — contrast.

The interior courtyard at Dunamis. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

“Colors and fabrics and light and airflow — all those things impact people’s experience in housing,” Prater told EdSource. “I wanted to kind of create a space that felt aspirational, inspirational, that felt like, ‘Oh wow, I’m proud to come home here.’”

With warm color palettes, ambient lighting, cozy and modern furniture, and sprawling, colorful murals, residents have a place to truly relax and feel at home.

Additionally, living in Dunamis includes access to healthy and nutritious meals (and cooking classes), one-on-one tutoring, mental health support, job training and career development, and community-building activities.

The dining area for Dunamis residents. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

“There is no place like this. This is one of one,” Sherbert Diaz, a Dunamis resident, told EdSource. “It gave me the opportunity to understand who I am and to leave the survival mode.”

The space is also especially welcoming to LGBTQ+ students, like Diaz, who were referred to Dunamis House through the Los Angeles LGBT Center. The Center is the lead agency for the county’s coordinated entry system for youth, though referrals also come directly from area colleges and partner agencies. 

Other residents, like Dream Harris, found Dunamis House after navigating homelessness their entire lives. At first, Harris thought it was “too good to be true,” shocked that the beauty of the facility — and the stability it promised — came without a price tag. 

Bright, welcoming decor plays a big role for Dunamis residents. Photo by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

But now, given the resources to survive, Harris can finally thrive.

“This place gives me an opportunity to really sit down and think about my decisions and what I want to do in life,” Harris told EdSource.

“I was raised in the worst of the worst. I lived on the streets at one point. I was on drugs at one point,” he added. “Now I have a nice bed to sleep in every night. I have a job now. I have opportunities, so many opportunities.”

This kind of transformation stems from Prater’s own experiences, as well as his expertise in traditional university housing. After his mother died, Prater’s godfather took him and three siblings in.

“I felt safe in his home, and that was something I wanted the students to have when they walked into this space,” he told ELLE Decor. 

A painting of his godfather hangs in the lobby of Dunamis.

“It serves as a reminder of what it means to love someone else’s children.”

‍

Header image by Dušan Vuksanović/Courtesy of Ryan White Designs

For more details check the original news.
📈 ROBOTFX MetaTrader Expert Advisors and Indicators to maximize profits and minimize the risks

More Good News from Good Good Good

Good News This Week: April 19, 2025 - Parrots, Parks, & Peels

Your weekly roundup of the best good news worth celebrating...

Since 2008, Finland has lowered their homelessness rates by 75%. Here’s their secret

Years ago, Finland made an argument for ending homelessness based on three core principles. It’s had a lasting impact decades later.

City's housing initiative gets 150+ people off the streets months ahead of schedule

The “A Home for Every Neighbor” initiative reached a major milestone several months early.

Jon Bon Jovi's 'pay it forward' cafe gets huge wave of support after mayor tries to shut it down

The foundation, run by John and Dorothea Bongiovi, recently served its 200,000th meal to underserved communities throughout New Jersey.

'Bridgerton' stars speak out, raise funds in support of trans women following UK court ruling

One actress has already donated over ÂŁ70,000 to a charity that supports trans people in the U.K.

Firefighters successfully manage 60-acre fire that could protect Rocky Mountain National Park area for the next decade

Experts say these kinds of fires create a buffer from an unwanted wildfire moving into nearby communities.

'Gayborhood' of affordable homes built for LGBTQ+ elders in Texas

The Oak Lawn Place apartment complex opened last September.

Nick Offerman is inviting people on an Earth Day hike — here's how you can join him

The “Parks and Recreation” star is encouraging people to protect and celebrate the great outdoors.

New pollen-replacing 'power bars' give honey bees nutrients they need to survive

Researchers from Washington State University liken the bee’s food supplement to human “power bars.”

One of the rarest parrot species in Brazil doubles in population: 'An unlikely comeback'

Thanks to a project to install artificial nests on an island on the Paraná coast, the number of parrots almost doubled in 20 years, taking the bird from “endangered” to “near threatened” status, the only case of its kind in Brazil.

'Dying to Serve:' Man with terminal cancer embarks on volunteer tour to all 50 states

After Doug Ruch was given 12-18 months to live, he decided to do something meaningful with them.

Retraction Notice: Travis Kelce corrects story about foster home donation

The football star issued a correction about a viral story suggesting he donated a $3.3 million mansion to homeless foster youth.

33 Ideas To Meaningfully Celebrate Earth Day

Earth Day is celebrated every year on April 22nd. We’ve put together the best ideas and activities to help you meaningfully celebrate it...

Couple builds viral 'dream home' with two $5,500 recycled shipping containers: 'Functional, cozy, and full of character'

The pair decided they didn’t want to spend their money on renting an apartment and instead built the home of their dreams.

These national parks will still be free to visitors for National Park Week, despite Trump funding cuts

As the National Park Service continues to face uncertainty in workforce and funding, parks will still be free to visitors on April 19, in celebration of National Park Week.

24 Ways To Celebrate National Park Week

National Park Week is an annual celebration in April dedicated to the appreciation and preservation of America's national parks. Here are some ways to celebrate the week-long event.

This man wants to fix America's low voter turnout with mobile phone voting. Here's what it would look like

As Congress approves the SAVE Act, venture capitalist and political strategist Bradley Tusk hopes to make elections more accessible.

This city purchased 347 market-rate apartment units to convert them into affordable housing

The acquisition is part of a larger “anti-displacement” plan to undo widespread gentrification.

Good News This Week: April 12, 2025 - Dire Wolves, Fridges, & Surfboards

Your weekly roundup of the best good news worth celebrating...

You can buy a pebble from the 'tariffed' Heard Island penguins to support wildlife conservation

The tongue-in-cheek social media campaign is finding a creative way to donate to penguin conservation through the World Wildlife Fund.

Couple transforms local motel into affordable housing: 80% of tenants 'would be homeless' without a helping hand

The Minnesota-based couple said they were inspired by similar motel transformations that occurred during the pandemic.

In TED Talk, chemist debuts 'natural peel' that extends the life of produce without 'refrigeration, pesticides, waxes, or plastics'

Food chemist Jenny Du said their natural peel works on “bananas, avocados, limes, green beans, tomatoes, bell peppers, cucumber, berries, you name it.”

Ms. Rachel adds voice to interactive art exhibit designed to comfort people on their 'roughest day'

“We set up an 800 number,” author Brad Montague said in a recent TikTok. “You call it, leave a message you would have needed to hear on your roughest day. Just something kind, something true.”

Woebot makes the case for AI therapy in new TED Talk: Therapists can't be there 'for those 2 a.m. panic attacks'

Woebot creator Alison Darcy: “Most people aren't getting in front of a therapist, and even if they are, they're not there beside you as you live your life.”

Why Sikhs celebrate the festival of Baisakhi

On the festival of Baisakhi, celebrated usually on April 13, Sikhs the world over will joyously wear yellow saffron colors, symbolizing spring harvest and the solar new year, when the Sun enters the constellation Aries.

Golden Amulets

Golden Luck Amulets, Protection Charms and Love Talismans.