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Homes can take many forms and be constructed in
a number of ways. Margarita Pichardo knows her
home is special because, as she’s quick to point out, "It's
built with love." Like many Habitat homeowners, Margarita is
surprised that volunteers will give of their time to help others.

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"It's a good deed," she says,
shaking her head. "One day God is going to repay them for that."
The house of love
Margarita Pichardo is calling her Habitat home "the house
of love."
"It's built with love," she explains. Margarita says
she has never had an experience like the one she has had building
her house with Habitat for Humanity of Kent County in Grand Rapids,
Mich.
Like many Habitat homeowners, Margarita is surprised that volunteers
will give of their time to help others. "It's a good deed,"
she says, shaking her head. "One day God is going to repay
them for that."
Margarita will be moving out of an apartment complex where she
has lived for almost five years. It is far too crowded for her and
her two children, William Burgos, 15, and Janelle Burgos, 12. William
has to sleep on an air mattress in the living room in their current
home, and they do not have enough storage space for clothes and
other belongings.
Not only inside their home will they have more room, but also outside.
"I've always wanted to have a yard and do gardening,"
Margarita says.
As the completion of her house draws closer, Margarita says she
can't sleep at night for all the excitement. "I never dreamed
of a new house," she says. "The bank said I would never
qualify—but now it's possible.
"I wish time would fly!"
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