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  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing is a Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex. It has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees. Rather than employ a property management company, cohousing residents take governance to a vote and are expected to be social with other residents. The movement started in Denmark in the 60's. Currently there are 120 in the U.S. and is a fast growing housing trend in The States.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing148A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing is a Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex. It has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees. Rather than employ a property management company, cohousing residents take governance to a vote and are expected to be social with other residents. The movement started in Denmark in the 60's. Currently there are 120 in the U.S. and is a fast growing housing trend in The States.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing148.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister walks through her bedroom, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 356A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister walks through her bedroom, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 352A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister walks through her bedroom, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 356.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister walks through her bedroom, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 352.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister reads the newspaper in the office of her one bedroom condo, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 335.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Joan Gildemeister reads the newspaper in the office of her one bedroom condo, Saturday, September 22, 2012. "I'm a little different than the rest of the people here," said the retired therapist who moved from a much larger place in downtown Washington, D.C. four years ago to the cohousing complex as an intermediate living space before moving into retirement housing. "Constricted space makes me feel more attached to my books and the things I love."
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 335A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..The Takoma Village Cohousing's symbol, a sun, sits atop the part of the building which makes up the Common House and Ann Zabaldo's third floor condominium.The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing074A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..The Takoma Village Cohousing's symbol, a sun, sits atop the part of the building which makes up the Common House and Ann Zabaldo's third floor condominium.The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing074.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 068.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 063.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 060.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Georgette Small always seems to lose the key to her house, so she often breaks in through her window. Her daughter JoJo Small stands with baby sitter Sidney Smith, 17, Thursday, September 20, 2012. Georgette, a school councilor, has to leave for a school function...Rather than pay a property management company, the twelve-year-old Washington, D.C. condominium complex is governed by its' residents. The Cohousing movement started in the Netherlands in the 60's and is gaining momentum in the states.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing170.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Louis Carrico-Braun, 10, straddles two chairs. Ann Zabaldo, left, and Steve Pretl, right, are amused by the spectacle taking place after the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the Takoma Village Cohousing complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 132A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Louis Carrico-Braun, 10, straddles two chairs. Steve Pretl, right, is amused by the spectacle taking place after the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the Takoma Village Cohousing complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 128A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school), chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 100A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including (L-R foreground) Libia McDonough, and Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school), chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 097A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including (L-R foreground) Steve Pretl, Libia McDonough, and Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school) chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 088A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 068A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 063A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 060A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Taco meat is fried up in Takoma Village Cohousing's Common House Monday, September 24, 2012 before the TVC's weekly Soup n' Simple community meal. Twenty-six people are normal attendees, taco night brought out 35 to 40 people.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 011A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Don Zuckerman stirs taco meat he's preparing for Takoma Village Cohousing's annual Soup n' Simple community meal in the Washington, D.C. condo complex's Common House Monday, September 24, 2012. Helping him out, in the background, is Carolyn Kinney, who is filling in for a member of the three person cook team. Each cook team signs up for days where they buy the ingredients, cook and clean up the food, and they are, in turn allowed to eat for free for a set amount of weeks when they do not cook.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 008A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Residents and friends invited to the Green Chile party thrown by Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Anne Stauffer socialize in the Washington, D.C.-based "intentional living" community's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 522A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Friends invited to the Green Chile party thrown by Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Anne Stauffer socialize in the Washington, D.C.-based "intentional living" community's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 511A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident James McDonough sits in the Common House's living room, Saturday, September 22, 2012, looking for the Michigan vs. Notre Dame football game, but struggles with the cable's intricate menu system.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 483A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident James McDonough sits in the Common House's living room, Saturday, September 22, 2012, looking for the Michigan vs. Notre Dame football game, but struggles with the cable's intricate menu system.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 467A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Libia McDonough waves to fellow Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Joan Gildemeister in the complex's Community House Saturday, September 22, 2012. Norton is prepping for a Green Chile Party he and his wife Anne Stauffer are throwing later that evening.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 461A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Norton Francis, says one of the perks about living in cohousing is being able to use the big serving bowls stored at the Common House, rather than needing to buy them and store them at their condo. In preparation for the Green Chile party, Norton and his wife also utilized one of their neighbor's refrigerators and freezers to store food while she was away on business. ..Takoma Village Cohousing in Washington, D.C., Saturday, September 22, 2012
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 409A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Candice Naidoo, an au pair living with one of the families at Takoma Village Cohousing, helps Norton Francis warm food in the Washington, D.C. complex's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012. Later that night Norton and his wife Anne Stauffer, who moved from D.C. to New Mexico and back again, threw a Green Chile party for TVC residents and friends.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 387A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Candice Naidoo, an au pair living with one of the families at Takoma Village Cohousing, uses a an electronic key to gain entrance to the complex's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 378.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident Georgette Small always seems to lose the key to her house, so she often breaks in through her window. Her daughter JoJo Small stands with baby sitter Sidney Smith, 17, Thursday, September 20, 2012. Georgette, a school councilor, has to leave for a school function...Rather than pay a property management company, the twelve-year-old Washington, D.C. condominium complex is governed by its' residents. The Cohousing movement started in the Netherlands in the 60's and is gaining momentum in the states.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing170.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents Georgette Small gets her mail from the Common House Thursday, September 20, 2012. ..Rather than pay a property management company, the twelve-year-old Washington, D.C. condominium complex is governed by its' residents. The Cohousing movement started in the Netherlands in the 60's and is gaining momentum in the states.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing136A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..A tricycle sits in the Takoma Village Cohousing's common outdoor space Thursday, September 20, 2012. The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing080A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..A view of Takoma Village Cohousing's complex from the third floor Thursday, September 20, 2012. The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing027A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Mailboxes adorn Inside Takoma Village Cohousing's Common House (two words, capitalized) in Washington, D.C., Thursday, September 20, 2012
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing019A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Bulletin boards and calendars are put up at Takoma Village's Common House (two words, capitalized) to keep residents informed of events.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing017A.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Louis Carrico-Braun, 10, straddles two chairs. Ann Zabaldo, left, and Steve Pretl, right, are amused by the spectacle taking place after the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the Takoma Village Cohousing complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 132.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school), chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 100.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Louis Carrico-Braun, 10, straddles two chairs. Steve Pretl, right, is amused by the spectacle taking place after the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the Takoma Village Cohousing complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 128.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including (L-R foreground) Libia McDonough, and Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school), chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 097.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including (L-R foreground) Steve Pretl, Libia McDonough, and Candice Naidoo (an au pair living with a family while going to school) chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 088.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 068.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 060.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents, including chat during the weekly "Soup n' Simple" dinner held in the complex's Common House, Monday, September 24, 2012. Tacos are on the menu.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 063.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Don Zuckerman stirs taco meat he's preparing for Takoma Village Cohousing's annual Soup n' Simple community meal in the Washington, D.C. condo complex's Common House Monday, September 24, 2012. Helping him out, in the background, is Carolyn Kinney, who is filling in for a member of the three person cook team. Each cook team signs up for days where they buy the ingredients, cook and clean up the food, and they are, in turn allowed to eat for free for a set amount of weeks when they do not cook.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 008.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Taco meat is fried up in Takoma Village Cohousing's Common House Monday, September 24, 2012 before the TVC's weekly Soup n' Simple community meal. Twenty-six people are normal attendees, taco night brought out 35 to 40 people.
    120924 Takoma Village Cohousing 011.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Residents and friends invited to the Green Chile party thrown by Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Anne Stauffer socialize in the Washington, D.C.-based "intentional living" community's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 522.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Friends invited to the Green Chile party thrown by Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Anne Stauffer socialize in the Washington, D.C.-based "intentional living" community's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 511.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident James McDonough sits in the Common House's living room, Saturday, September 22, 2012, looking for the Michigan vs. Notre Dame football game, but struggles with the cable's intricate menu system.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 483.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing resident James McDonough sits in the Common House's living room, Saturday, September 22, 2012, looking for the Michigan vs. Notre Dame football game, but struggles with the cable's intricate menu system.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 467.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Libia McDonough waves to fellow Takoma Village Cohousing residents Norton Francis and Joan Gildemeister in the complex's Community House Saturday, September 22, 2012. Norton is prepping for a Green Chile Party he and his wife Anne Stauffer are throwing later that evening.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 461.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Norton Francis, says one of the perks about living in cohousing is being able to use the big serving bowls stored at the Common House, rather than needing to buy them and store them at their condo. In preparation for the Green Chile party, Norton and his wife also utilized one of their neighbor's refrigerators and freezers to store food while she was away on business. ..Takoma Village Cohousing in Washington, D.C., Saturday, September 22, 2012
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 409.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Candice Naidoo, an au pair living with one of the families at Takoma Village Cohousing, helps Norton Francis warm food in the Washington, D.C. complex's Common House Saturday, September 22, 2012. Later that night Norton and his wife Anne Stauffer, who moved from D.C. to New Mexico and back again, threw a Green Chile party for TVC residents and friends.
    120922 Takoma Village Cohousing 387.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Takoma Village Cohousing residents Georgette Small gets her mail from the Common House Thursday, September 20, 2012. ..Rather than pay a property management company, the twelve-year-old Washington, D.C. condominium complex is governed by its' residents. The Cohousing movement started in the Netherlands in the 60's and is gaining momentum in the states.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing136.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..A tricycle sits in the Takoma Village Cohousing's common outdoor space Thursday, September 20, 2012. The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing080.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..A view of Takoma Village Cohousing's complex from the third floor Thursday, September 20, 2012. The Washington, D.C. "communitarian"  condominium complex has 43 units of different shapes and sizes, a Community House (two words, capitalized), a shared/private garden space, a hot tub, a tot lot, and is home to a diverse crowd. There are several single parents, gay parents, single gay parents, parents who adopt, traditional families, interracial couples, people with disabilities, people of different religions and retirees.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing027.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Mailboxes adorn Inside Takoma Village Cohousing's Common House (two words, capitalized) in Washington, D.C., Thursday, September 20, 2012
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing019.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth..Bulletin boards and calendars are put up at Takoma Village's Common House (two words, capitalized) to keep residents informed of events.
    120920 Takoma Village Cohousing017.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, left, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, talks with one of her two roommates Carol Sutton, in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 327.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, left, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, gets a reaction from her roommate Carol Sutton, while telling an "embarrassing story" in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 294.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, left, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, gets a reaction from her roommate Carol Sutton, while telling an "embarrassing story" in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 290.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, left, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, gets a reaction from her roommate Carol Sutton, while telling an "embarrassing story" in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 281.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, right, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, and her roommate Carol Sutton, hang out in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 229.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, left, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, gets a reaction from her roommate Carol Sutton, while telling an "embarrassing story" in the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 272.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, background, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, and her roommate Carol Sutton's hang out in the kitchenThursday, October 4, 2012. Lewis uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 189.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 113.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 109.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 107.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 071.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, mills about in her kitchen Thursday, October 4, 2012. To keep costs down and stave off the potential effects of loneliness, she uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 039.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, sips from a mug while "playing around" on her computer Thursday, October 4, 2012. To keep costs down and stave off the potential effects of loneliness, she uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 066.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, background, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates like Ben Ware, foreground, who is leaving for class at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville, Thursday, October 4, 2012. ..Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.
    121004 homesharing 020.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA,  uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to screen and find compatible roommates like Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville. ..Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.
    121004 homesharing 014.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Carol Sutton, one of Eileen Lewis's tenants, walks from the kitchen to the computer room Thursday, October 4, 2012. Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 224.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 133.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 129.JPG
  • photo by Matt Roth.Thursday, October 4, 2012..Eileen Lewis, a widow from Catonsville, Maryland, USA, tends to her plants in her sun room Thursday, October 4, 2012. To keep costs down and stave off the potential effects of loneliness, she uses the Baltimore Maryalnd-based St. Ambrose Homesharing program to find roommates. While she says she appreciates the company, she admits she does enjoy her home on the occasions she has it all to herself...Homesharing pairs two parties based on various levels of compatibility and offers tenants and home owners the chance at reduced living expenses. Potential tenants go through background checks. Eileen Louis currently homeshares with two people, Ben Ware, a student at the Community College of Baltimore County, Catonsville and Carol Sutton, a friend of Lewis's for 15 years. "I have a home in Pennsylvania that I couldn't sell," says Sutton.  ..
    121004 homesharing 087.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_073.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_065.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_036.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_022.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_011.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_014.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_105.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_104.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_101.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_102.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_100.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_094.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_089.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_090.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_076.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_087.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_074.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_070.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_069.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_064.JPG
  • Egg Harbor City, New Jersey - June 21, 2015: <br />
Claire's twin sister Emily is life guarding at the Blue Heron Pines pool this summer. We visited for an hour and change. Before we got there, Emily rescued a dragonfly from the pool. At first the dragonfly looked dead, but, once out of the water, she (Emily assigned a gender :)) started moving, she wanted to do what she could to ensure it's survival. So, she created a healing haven from a tampon box. <br />
CREDIT: Matt Roth
    150621_Suburbia_Pool_060.JPG
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