Doreen Mitchell slept alone in her van on the summer night her family broke apart.
Mitchell, 57, parked within view of the St. Anthony mobile home park where she had lived for 17 years, sharing a roof with two of her children and four grandchildren. Here, she had barbecued with neighbors and found belonging.
The sale of Lowry Grove and its resulting June 30 closure displaced nearly 100 households, leaving families scrambling to find affordable places to live. Some found refuge with relatives and local volunteers. Most left town. A handful, former neighbors say, remain homeless or are unaccounted for.
"I'm split up and broke up in my heart," said Mitchell, who now lives alone two hours from the metro. Stress from the move, she said, left her estranged from the family members she hugged goodbye when Lowry Grove closed.
Researchers from the University of Minnesota are looking to document stories like Mitchell's. A proposed impact study would dig into what happened to Lowry Grove residents after losing their community, taking note of the private and public costs incurred along the way. The aim, researchers say, is to make displacement and the loss of affordable housing more visible to policymakers.
The impact of recent park closures is evident in the steep decline of a state fund established to help displaced residents, which dropped to just over $80,000 from about $1.2 million in the past year alone.
No new mobile home parks have opened in the metro area since 1991, and a dozen have disappeared in that time. The trend is energizing preservation efforts by the Metropolitan Council, including a pilot grant that would help mobile home parks connect to the regional wastewater system.
Some parks, like Lowry Grove, are pushed out by redevelopment as land values around them increase. Across the region, mobile homes offer a largely unsubsidized, affordable refuge for low-income families and residents of color, including the elderly and immigrants.