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Manitoba

Soon-to-be-built elders housing in Thompson is in demand

A northern Manitoba city will soon have a much-needed new accessible, affordable housing complex for seniors and elders.

Older residents currently living in transitional housing intended for people moving out of homelessness

A woman with red hair in a white jacket stands in front of a building called Ma-Mow-We-Tak Frienship Centre.
Dee Chaboyer is the executive director of the Ma-Mow-We-Tak Friendship Centre in Thompson, Man. The non-profit is spearheading an affordable, accessible housing complex for seniors and elders. (Rachel Bergen/CBC)

A northern Manitoba citywill soon have a new affordable housing complex for seniors and elders and Bobbi Montean hopes she'll get to move into it.

"I'm really, really, really excited for those that are going to be getting in there, and I'm hoping I'm one of them," said Montean, whohas mobility issues but lives on thethird floor of a building thatdoesn't have an elevator.

Construction has just begun on the Ma-Mow-We-Tak Friendship Centre senior complex, a 12-unit building in the heart of Thompson, and Montean's not the only onealready dreaming of living there, said Dee Chaboyer, executive director of the friendship centre.

"It's funny, because they sit outside and watch construction, knowing that one day they get to move in there and it's their own apartment," Chaboyer said in an interview on Tuesday.

The senior's complex is expected to be complete by July 2024.

The funding sourcesfor the project still aren't public because the fundershaven't signed official paperwork, but they're expected to be announced at an official groundbreaking next month, Chaboyer said.

A rendered drawing shows a person walking outside of a housing unit on a sunny day.
An artist's drawing shows the planned 12-unit accessible, affordable housing complex for seniors to be built in Thompson, Man. (Submitted by A&B Builders)

The friendship centre also owns a hostel in the city, which provides rooms for people from outlying communities seeking medical careand transitional housing geared towardpeople who are experiencing homelessness.

Some of the transitional housing is currently occupied long-term by elders, Chaboyer said.

"The intent of transitional housing is not to keep them forever. It's to help them transition into independent living, but I made a decision that I wasn't going toask them to move," she said.

"There is nowhere in Thompson that is safe, quality and affordable housing for elders to live inthat's vacant, so they will actually be moving into the [new] apartment block."

The complex will have eight regular apartment suites and four wheelchair-accessible suites, with a common area and an outdoor barbecue area, as well.

A man in a highlighter-yellow shirt stands in front of some construction gates that are blocking off a hole in the ground.
Corey Jervis, a contractor with A&B Builders in Thompson, Man., stands in front of a construction site that will be a 12-unit accessible and affordable seniors complex in about a year's time. (Rachel Bergen/CBC)

"It's huge," said Corey Jervis, a contractor with A&B Builders who is project manager and supervisorfor the project.

"Before, there used to just be a condemned building there, and to see Ma-Mow-We-Tak take it over, tear it down and they're going to build this huge, three-storey facility that's going to pretty much tower over this whole area of the town it's going to be a statement building in the area."

Bhumi Patel, a property manager with Manitoba Housing in Thompson, said they have one accessible, affordable housing location for seniors in Thompson.

There's lots of demand for the 32 units in Lions Manor, which are often all full, Patel said.

Montean, whois inher 60s, saidher mobility issues often keep her fromleaving hercurrent third-floor apartment.

"I'm not in a wheelchair yet, but I know that's coming, and having to get up and down flights of stairs into an apartment that I can just barely afford is a severe struggle," she said in a phone interview on Tuesday.

Montean's disability forces her to postpone medical appointments and stay inside some days, she said.

Living in an accessible building would mean being able to visit neighbours, go outside more easily and even take a slow walk to the grocery store, she said.