Heather Grenier, HRDC’s CEO, said part of the goal with the building was to create a space that was built specifically for their purposes with room to grow, and in a way that would be welcoming to the people they serve.
“There have been many times at our prior food bank location where families would sit in the car and hesitate to come in, and what we wanted this building to be was where no one ever sat in their car and hesitated to come in,” Grenier said during a media tour Friday. “We want the experience to be normal. We don’t want people to feel ashamed when they’re coming in and asking for help.”
In addition to the food bank, warehouse, restaurant, and commercial and teaching kitchens, the $16.5 million two-story building also houses the staff of several programs HRDC runs, like its housing support programs, Head Start early learning, Galavan transportation and utility assistance programs.
Read full story on the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.