Livening Beyond Homeless Inc. Outdoor Space

Senior Environmental Fellows Practicum

What is Beyond Homeless Inc?


Located on 309 E Franklin St, Greencastle, IN 46135

Beyond Homeless Inc. location as compared to popular grocery stores

Outlining the Project


  • With the two key elements of my projects defined (Garden and Mural), I collaborated with the shelter’s residents to establish and outline a collective set of goals and broader implications of my two projects.
  • I started with goals and implications followed by consistent feedback

Flyers hung up inside of Beyond Homeless to ensure any feedback or recommendations were heard from the residents.

The Mural Process

While the garden was the initial idea of the project, the mural became the first phase in the practicum fruition. Painting the mural before the installation of the garden became more logical, since working along the side of the shed could result in trampling of the newly formed garden.


In order to create the best canvas for the mural, a couple volunteers and I pulled weeds, cleaned the shed, primed, and then painted it white for a design.

Brainstormed a design digitally after receiving feedback from residents before making our final design decision.

We decided on a navy blue for the background and began by outlining the shapes and then filling them in. Jacob, in the first photo, (6 yo), lives at Beyond Homeless and was always an eager and enthusiastic helper!

When everything was colorful and vibrant, we sealed the mural for longevity.

The Gardening Process


  • Dimensions: two 4 x6 ft. boards
  • Pingelton White Oak Wood
  • Professor Dan Gurnon and Pete Crary helped me cut and assemble the parameter of the beds

White oak wooden beds installed into place and ready for soil

Landscaping fabric laid out to create a base layer for soil and future growth. The landscaping fabric will help flatten and kill the grass below as well as hold future vegetable and other plants in place in the spring.

After pouring in bags of organic soil, we spread and flattened it out across the beds. More soil and plants will likely be planted in the spring so that harvesting is most fruitful, and to avoid climate challenges as temperatures get colder.

Other previously existing beds were also touched up, replanted and watered so some crops could be picked and eaten for the rest of the fall season. There is lettuce, basil, & tomatoes.

Food Pantry & Maintenance

In alignment with the project’s goals, flyers and educational materials were prepared and posted at the shelter. These materials were provided to help educate current and future users about the garden and the associated food pantry once I graduate.


  • Printed out and hung up in the shelter by the kitchen sink and by the door
  • New gardening gloves, mini rakes, and watering cans purchased for the shelter with the help of the Bonner Scholar Program
  • Help the garden and mural with longevity after I graduate
  • Covers frequently asked questions, what is growing in the garden, and other supportive information
  • Can help a future Environmental Fellow or Bonner Scholar Student take over my position and manage the garden post graduation.
  • Today, the shelter still houses the food pantry. Although the vegetable and fruits are primarily intended for use by the shelter’s residents and their children, the excess produce is available to the community.

Takeaways

I had the opportunity to re-connect with Donna and Taylor through this project to discuss its inspiration and impact. Together we talked about life both at the homeless shelter and afterwards, as well as food and housing insecurities in putnam county and more about their experience in the community. We baked and decorated Halloween cookies and agreed we are collectively grateful for Beyond Homeless Inc.


My time at Beyond Homeless has provided me with lessons I will carry my whole life. While I served at the homeless shelter as my volunteer placement for a scholarship, and found a canvas for environmental impact for my practicum, Beyond Homeless is far more than an assignment to me. While serving the homeless shelter, I attended a private University just two blocks away and straddled two vastly different worlds weekly. I found myself facing the complications between different socioeconomic statuses, privileges, experiences and aspirations. Beyond Homeless supplemented my DePauw education with real life -- outside of my classroom, away from my greek house, and off campus. The opportunity to interact and support a community of women struggling with housing and food insecurity has transformed me as an individual and granted me incredible perspective. Developing a relationship with the shelter and the women that came and went has taught me invaluable lessons about systematic inequality, positivity during hardship, the work of child-care, and womanhood as a whole. From every fun existential conversation to the warm lunch they would bring to me in the office, I received love from these women in many forms. Although my time with Beyond Homeless is limited, I am undoubtedly grateful for the love, stories and exposure I recieved. It was a privilege to serve and know such people.

Additional Information


309 East Franklin Street

How to Support Beyond Homeless

  • Keep up to date! Facebook: BeyondHomelessIncorportated
  • Donations, Volunteer Opportunities, & Events beyondhomelessinc.org
  • Shop at Beyond Homeless's Thrift Shop and Boutique at 309 East Franklin Street

Special Thanks


Environmental Fellows Practicum Staff Mentor: Professor Ken Brown

Assistant Director of the Environmental Fellows Program: Amber Hecko

Director of Bonner Scholar Program: Valerie Rudolph

Volunteers: Omar Hassan, Kyle Lillwitz, Emmanuel Duah, Ryan Miller, Ella Riley, Katrina Stanger, Professor Daniel Gurnon, Peter Crary

Alumna Lily Jennings

Beth Wilkerson

Gobin Church

Senior Environmental Fellow Program

Olivia Lockette Class of 2024

309 East Franklin Street