Build a Home. Build a Job. Keep Building.
Stone Locket is building three prototype ADUs in Portland. One is nearing completion. These units will be used to house workers, prove the model, and show donors what the next builds can become.
Stone Locket is building three prototype ADUs in Portland. One is nearing completion. These units will be used to house workers, prove the model, and show donors what the next builds can become.
Three demonstration units are planned in Portland.
The first prototype is already moving toward donor-ready status.
The pilot is led by a founder with bachelor’s and master’s degrees in computer science.
Build three demonstration units in Portland and use them to show donors, partners, and future supporters the model in real space.
Use the prototypes to launch repeatable ADU work, housing, and jobsite experience for the first crew.
Extend the model beyond construction with QA, AI-assisted workflows, content work, and software support.
Lumber, fasteners, roofing, housewrap, doors, windows, insulation, drywall, flooring, paint, trim, cabinets, and fixtures.
Drills, saws, blades, bits, chargers, batteries, ladders, PPE, extension cords, storage bins, and jobsite consumables.
Food, cookware, bedding, toiletries, laundry supplies, workwear, boots, gift cards, bus passes, and utility support.
Capital supports prototype completion, crew operations, donor demonstrations, training systems, and the software path that follows construction.
Donate materials, tools, daily living supplies, surplus stock, or store credit for the three prototype ADUs and the people building them.
Support a concrete phase: three prototype ADUs, donor demonstrations, founder-led training, and the first repeatable work loop.
If you are rebuilding after addiction and ready for structure, work, and responsibility, this pilot is designed around that path.
The browser-based prototypes matter because they show that some workers can keep growing beyond the jobsite into QA, AI-assisted workflows, content work, and software support.
Materials, tools, daily living support, and pilot capital all move the prototypes closer to donor-ready completion and the first recurring work cycle.