Skip to content

Most Influential Seattleites of 2017: Sharon Lee

Seattle Magazine presents the Most Influential Seattleites of 2017.

By Alison Krupnick December 8, 2017

sharon-lee-crop

This article originally appeared in the November 2017 issue of Seattle magazine.

Sharon Lee has the creativity of an architect and the practicality of an urban planner, wrapped up with a compassionate soul. And thanks to her vision and tenacity, as founding executive director of the Low Income Housing Institute (LIHI), tiny houses have emerged as a promising temporary solution to Seattle’s growing homelessness crisis.

After working with the City of Seattle to provide space for squatters at a vacant LIHI site, in 2013, Lee emerged as a champion of this cost-effective, transitional method of providing shelter. There are now seven tiny house sites including locations in Ballard, Interbay and Georgetown. 

The 8-by-12-foot insulated, heated, lockable domains cost just $2,220 each and can quickly be built from DIY kits. While not a total solution, Lee believes the psychological boost of having a roof over one’s head and access to sanitation facilities can make all the difference in helping people transition out of homelessness. Last year, 157 tiny-house village dwellers moved into permanent housing, and 103 found employment.

Lee says the program has received a fabulous outpouring of support from community and business partners. LIHI recently opened two new sites, set aside for people affected by citywide homeless sweeps. By the end of 2017, she expects to have more than 200 tiny houses in place.

“We have a model that people across the country are trying to follow,” says Lee, who believes this quick, relatively easy solution is urgent. “We have more people dying from homelessness than from homicide. It’s an outrage.”

Read about the rest of 2017’s Most Influential Seattleites here.

 

Follow Us

Older Workers Thrive in Washington

Older Workers Thrive in Washington

State ranks No. 1 for older workers

A former colleague retired last year at age 64. He was, he says, “burned out” on everything from office politics to his difficulty understanding younger teammates. He had worked hard, saved money, and figured now was the time to begin to enjoy it. His father had died literally the day after cashing his first retirement…

Downtown Seattle Again Draws More Workers, Visitors

Downtown Seattle Again Draws More Workers, Visitors

The number of visitors approaches pre-pandemic levels

Downtown foot traffic hit yet another milestone last month. The Downtown Seattle Association says March averaged 101,000 daily workers, the highest average since March 2020. The figure is still only 60% of foot traffic in March 2019 as employees continue working remotely, but is a 12% increase from a year ago. More than 2.5 million…

Curvy Cactus, Chub Rub Launch Seattle’s First Fat Mall

Curvy Cactus, Chub Rub Launch Seattle’s First Fat Mall

The new pop-up marketplace highlights local makers and body-affirming fashion

Seattle Fat Mall — the city’s first-ever  — will turn the Curvy Cactus storefront on Fourth Avenue into a monthlong pop-up marketplace for plus-size fashion, art, and gifts from local makers. “We envision Seattle Fat Mall as more than just a retail space. It’s a celebration of our community,” say Amber and Alyss Seelig, sisters…

New Federal Rules Hit Eastside Youth Services

New Federal Rules Hit Eastside Youth Services

The Kirkland nonprofit is forced to scale back in response to shifting federal policy

In a region already struggling to meet the needs of unhoused youth, one of the Eastside’s most prominent youth service providers is cutting key programs in response to a rash of federal funding restrictions. Friends of Youth will no longer accept certain federal funding, citing recent executive orders and new restrictions tied to U.S. Department…