Matching grant means your gift will be doubled!
This has been a challenging year for many, including nonprofits, but the work you make possible through your support of The Fuller Center for Housing has never been more important.

The Coronavirus pandemic has limited some of our main fundraising events and curtailed many volunteer opportunities. But our dedicated supporters who know the importance of having a simple, decent place to live have helped us press onward.

Our work continues across America and around the world, and it grows ever more promising that we will soon return to normal operations in the near future. We would love to see 2021 packed with Bicycle Adventure rides, Global Builders trips and other volunteer opportunities.

The Global Home Challenge has been key to helping us survive in these challenging times. We set out with a goal to raise $200,000 for our work — an ambitious goal for a "virtual" adventure. Yet, we are now on the verge of reaching that goal (more than 80% there) thanks to a couple's generous offer to match up to $50,000 in donations, dollar for dollar, until we reach our $200,000 goal.

Please consider making a gift today and seeing it doubled as we look forward to building with renewed vigor and appreciation for this ministry.
The pandemic cannot stop us!

WDRB-TV caught up with our partners at The Fuller Center for Housing of Louisville, Kentucky, to see how they are working hard to help families have simple, decent places to live in the city's West End. It's an area where The Fuller Center of Louisville has made a huge impact over the years by taking vacant and dilapidated properties and turning them into like-new homes filled by wonderful families. In the process, these projects also help reduce crime and blight in the neighborhood.
HOMEOWNER UPDATE:
Krystal Dillon, Independence LA

It's been five years since Krystal Dillon and her children partnered with the Ginger Ford Northshore Fuller Center for Housing to build themselves a home in Independence, Louisiana. Since then, Krystal says there have been many tears of joy shed and that all the work and sweat equity they put in alongside teams of Fuller Center volunteers was definitely worth it.
Who can forget K'Hairi and the Christmas wish that came true?

The story of K'Hairi touched many hearts in 2017. He's the boy who suffers from sickle-cell anemia but asked Santa only to help his mom have a decent place to live. The Chattahoochee Fuller Center Project and its volunteers made the wish come true in West Point, Georgia. By the way, today is K'Hairi's 11th birthday. Happy birthday, young man!
Libby Bauman: Our community can roll with the punches

Broadview Heights, Ohio's Libby Bauman fell in love with our ministry during a college service trip to Albany, Georgia. That love only strengthened when she signed up for last summer's cross-country Bicycle Adventure. Now, she's tackling a different adventure with the Global Home Challenge. "It's a way to uphold the community of The Fuller Center and keep working for change even when everything is different."
This is why I've traveled nine times to build homes in Thailand

Orinda, California's Tim Buscheck first went to Lampang, Thailand in 2007. The next time he goes will be his 10th trip. While he gets joy out of building homes in partnership with families in need, it's the friendships he's formed with Thai families that keeps him coming back. It also has become a favorite mission trip for his church family at First Presbyterian Church of Berkeley.
VIDEO: A ministry founded upon basic principles