The Helping House: Building Community Through Compassion

Dottie Kreps, Community Engagement Specialist accepting CPS donations for the Maring-Hunt Location

Article by Alexis Dishman | CenterPoint Scholars 2024-2025 cohort

When I was selected to be part of the inaugural CenterPoint Scholars 2024-2025 cohort, I knew the experience would be one of learning, growth, and collaboration. What I didn’t anticipate was how deeply meaningful the journey would become or that it would lead to the creation of a project rooted so strongly in empathy, dignity, and community connection.

As part of the program, we were tasked with forming small groups to identify and address a pressing need within our community. While there were many important issues to consider, our group quickly found common ground around one that felt both urgent and deeply personal: food insecurity.

Our conversations revealed that food insecurity looks different for everyone. For some, it meant growing up in a household where food was often scarce. Others shared experiences of needing just one or two ingredients to complete a meal. Some group members had never personally faced food insecurity but were eager to learn and understand its broader impact. Through open and honest dialogue, we began to recognize not only the lack of food itself, but also the stigma that too often accompanies asking for help.

From these discussions, The Helping House was born.

The Helping House is designed to address food insecurity in a way that is welcoming, accessible, and free of judgment. It offers a standalone structure where individuals can access non-perishable food items and hygiene products through a simple, respectful process that honors personal dignity and autonomy.

Each Helping House structure is painted with unique, vibrant scenes meant to spark curiosity, warmth, and engagement. These designs help shift the experience from one of need to one of connection, making the act of taking or exchanging food and hygiene items feel uplifting, human, and community-centered rather than transactional or stigmatizing.

Every detail of The Helping House was created with intention – including our logo. The calming blue color represents peace and stability, while the dove symbolizes hope, love, and new beginnings. What began as a group assignment quickly became a shared passion. Our planning meetings evolved into safe spaces for laughter, conversation, and genuine connection. The Helping House became more than a project, it became a reflection of the community we hoped to build.

The inspiration behind The Helping House comes from the concept of a Little Free Library – small neighborhood book exchanges where people are encouraged to take what they need and leave what they can. We embraced this honor-system model and reimagined it with non-perishable food and essential items, creating a space that is available, accessible, and rooted in trust.

Today, we are proud to have one Helping House structure in place at the Muncie Public Library / Maring-Hunt Library, with plans underway to establish a second location. Each new structure represents another opportunity to reduce barriers, meet needs, and strengthen community bonds.

Looking ahead, we are fully committed to keeping our Helping House structures stocked, maintained, and accessible for the long term. Our hope is to continue raising awareness about these resources while expanding their presence throughout the community. By installing additional structures and increasing visibility, we aim to ensure that more individuals know support is available quietly, consistently, and without judgment. The Helping House stands as a reminder that addressing food insecurity isn’t just about providing food, it’s about offering compassion, restoring dignity, and creating spaces where people feel supported and seen.

Our Helping House is now open at Muncie Public Library – Maring-Hunt Branch (2005 S. High St., Muncie, IN 47302). Community members are encouraged to donate items or take what they need. Learn more and follow our journey by visiting our Facebook Page – www.facebook.com/TheHelpingHouseMuncie


CenterPoint Scholars is a program of the Muncie Action Plan, funded through generous support from the CenterPoint Energy Foundation and the City of Muncie.

Won’t You Be Our Neighbor!

A header image that has "Be My Neighbor Day 2025" in various colorful rectangles. An image of a cartoon tiger cub is in the lower bottom left.

It’s going to be a beautiful day in the neighborhood on Saturday, June 7, 2025 at Canan Commons for BE MY NEIGHBOR DAY 2025!

The free family event, set for 1 to 4 p.m., will include an appearance by none other than DANIEL TIGER, star of DANIEL TIGER’S NEIGHBORHOOD on PBS KIDS.

At the heart of this event is the importance of being neighborly. So why not learn about some of our community’s greatest neighbors?

A map will lead children through the streets of a very special neighborhood, where they will meet people from community centers, arts organizations, charity groups and much more. At each booth, kids will be able to participate in fun activities, many designed to show the importance of being a good neighbor.

Parents and caregivers will discover ways to give back, from volunteer opportunities to support local arts and culture. Once the maps are completed, kids can claim their Good Neighbor awards!

Ball State to Host Community Update on Village Revitalization, June 4

Ratio image of what the new Ball State Performing Arts Center will look like upon completion.

Ball State University President Geoffrey S. Mearns invites members of the campus and greater Muncie community to attend a public update on the University’s revitalization efforts in The Village—the commercial district located next to campus and IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital.

The event will take place at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, June 4, in the Legacy Room on the third floor of Cornerstone Center for the Arts, located at 520 E. Main Street in Muncie. Parking is available in the Cornerstone lots off Washington Street.

After years of planning, the University has begun to implement its comprehensive Village Revitalization Plan—an ambitious, long-term initiative to transform the district through a collaborative public-private partnership involving city leaders and development partners, including Schahet Hotels and Trademark Construction.

The vision: to create a best-in-class, multigenerational district driven by arts and culture, entertainment, and innovation. The revitalized Village will feature new venues for living, working, dining, and gathering, including a new Performing Arts Center, a distinctive new hotel, a Center for Innovation and Collaboration, and a new residential neighborhood.

At the June 4 update, President Mearns will provide a progress report on key projects currently under construction and preview upcoming phases of development. The presentation will be followed by a brief Q&A session.

Featured project updates include:

  • The Performing Arts Center and adjacent Cantio Hotel, both scheduled to open in Summer 2026.
  • The Center for Innovation and Collaboration, designed to foster entrepreneurship, interdisciplinary partnerships, and hands-on learning.
  • New market-rate apartments, a Barnes & Noble community bookstore, and for-sale townhomes and single-family homes offering expanded residential options in The Village.

“These community events have been well attended, and I’m grateful for the strong interest in this project,” President Mearns said. “With construction underway on several sites, we’re seeing real progress.”

The June 4 forum builds on a series of public presentations and community conversations that have guided the revitalization effort since its early stages. Ball State’s planning has been informed by local feedback, philanthropic investment, and national models for transforming college-adjacent districts into destinations for creativity, commerce, and collaboration.

For more information and to follow the project’s progress, visit bsu.edu/thevillage.