who we are

Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity is a local affiliate of Habitat for Humanity International, a nonprofit, ecumenical Christian housing organization. We are funded through individual gifts, corporate donations, foundation grants, and through our own fundraising events.

We are active in our work to build new homes in our community, one at a time. Each home will be sold to a qualifying family at cost, and financed at 0%, or minimal, interest. We use proceeds from home sales to build more homes.

While volunteers provide much of the construction labor, helping to keep overall costs low, our buyers also help. Each buyer family provides hundreds of hours of labor, something we refer to as “sweat equity.”

A group of men and women stand behinde a banner for Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity. They are ready to break ground on a new work site.

Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity at the groundbreaking of a future home.


construction continues

Volunteers with Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity walk forward raising one wall of a future home.
Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity volunteers stand on the roof of a home under construction. Scaffelding is in from of the house and the porch trusses are exposed.

a look back at learning new building methods

On October 26, 2023 Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity Home No. 17 was dedicated. This home was started in the summer of 2022 with the first of the ICF blocks put into place. The construction of this home gave local volunteers the opportunity to build with alternative methods.

Insulated Concrete Forms (ICF) blocks are used in construction as a method of creating strong, energy-efficient, and durable buildings. Habitat for Humanity International is increasingly using Insulated Concrete Forms (ICFs) in their construction projects, primarily due to the speed and efficiency of ICF construction, making it a good option for projects relying heavily on volunteer labor. ICFs, which are essentially hollow foam blocks filled with concrete, are lightweight, easy to stack, and offer significant insulation and structural benefits.

A sign at the Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity build site reading "This building is built with Low Carbon Concrete"
Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity Home No. 17, A blue house with a white door.
A large group of Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity volunteers install IFC Blocks to create walls of a new house.
A Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity volunteer, a man, cuts an IFC Block with utility knife.
IFC Blocks forming the walls of a new Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity house.
A  Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity volunteer stands of a ladder placeing insulation around a vent. Two more volunteers look on.

Several men, volunteers with Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity, work to install IFC Blocks on foundation of a new house.
Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity volunteers standing in front of a wall made of IFC blocks with scrape IFC Blocks in a pile in front of them.

joys of home ownership

Getting to decorate your own home, without the worry of rental rules about nails in the wall is one of the little things that make being a home owner a blessing. Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity was able to provide that joy to one new home owner.

“I always wanted a military wall, and now I have one! These are photos of the military men in our family.”

A wall wth military photos hanging inside a Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity house.

by the numbers

1993

A group of local residents met to discuss establishing a Habitat for Humanity affiliate

1994

1995

Neosho Area Habitat for Humanity Established

First home dedicated

2017

Hired first Executive Director

too many

          to  

count

Number of volunteers and the hours they have dedicated