Allen Touche stood underneath the apartment complex, just off the Franklin Avenue light-rail station, and pointed to the room he hoped to live in one day.
He knows the apartments well. He helped build them. A carpenter by trade, he framed the doors and walls, installed the cabinets and ran supplies up and down its six floors. The red, black and white complex will open in several weeks.
"I put my blood, sweat and tears into this place," he said. "My own physical labor built this building."
For Touche, 48, this apartment represents something he hasn't had most of his adult life: stability.
He has been homeless over the last few years, hopping from couch to couch, sleeping in his car, nesting underneath a bush. This summer, he slept in a tent across from the apartments he was building, a site known as the Wall of Forgotten Natives.
Homelessness in Minneapolis was perhaps never as visible as it was this year. The financial hardship of the coronavirus pandemic combined with the social upheaval following George Floyd's death brought hundreds out into the light to pitch tents in parks and vacant lots.
The crisis has long been pervasive among Native Americans; though they are just 1% of the state's population, 12% of homeless Minnesotans identified as Native American, according to a 2018 study by Wilder Research.
Despite a personal past marred by troubles and a year defined by losses, Touche has found people who have helped him get one step closer to the stability he is searching for. He seeks to return the favor any way he can.