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Military Families Get a Firsthand Look at the Future of Housing

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Military Families Get a Firsthand Look at the Future of Housing
Business

Business

Military Families Get a Firsthand Look at the Future of Housing

2026-06-12 03:00 Last Updated At:03:10

FORT BRAGG, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 11, 2026--

Hundreds of families stepped inside the future of military housing as Corvias invited residents at Fort Riley, Fort Meade and Fort Bragg to experience the Wellness at Home program, featuring advanced air purification, water filtration, excess humidity controls and other wellness technologies. Designed to elevate indoor living environments at scale, Wellness at Home has been implemented in nearly 3,000 residences across the three installations to date, with more than 1,000 on track for this year.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260611610325/en/

“Every category of improvement made a difference”

Throughout the events, service members, spouses and children explored hands-on demonstrations that discussed the science behind the program and its simplified installation process. The initiative delivers integrated air, water, lighting, and excess humidity control improvements without major construction or displacement.

One Fort Bragg resident said, “I automatically noticed a difference in how we lived and every category of improvement made a difference.” At Fort Meade a Soldier shared, “The wellness upgrades have been an overall improvement for my family, especially [because I] have special needs children and a newborn on the way.”

The technologies reflect Corvias’ continuing commitment to resident quality of life and mission assurance.

“Every military family deserves a home that supports their health and well-being as much as it supports the mission,” said Regional Vice President, Heather Fuller. “These sessions gave residents the opportunity to see the investments we are making in their homes, while providing us with the important opportunity to continue listening to the needs of our families to drive changes that positively impact their daily lives.”

By the Numbers

Corvias developed the program in partnership with Vitacorps, a leader in integrated indoor wellness solutions. Since its introduction in 2024, seven million square feet of indoor residential space now feature air and water purification.

Wellness at Home on-base program survey data has demonstrated measurable results in resident experience, including:

More than 800 homes at the three installations have further earned WELL Residence Certification from the International WELL Building Institute (IWBI), with over 2,000 additional certifications currently underway. The internationally recognized benchmark verifies that homes meet rigorous third-party standards for optimized indoor environments.

"The randomized in-home performance testing is an integral part of achieving certification and validates the efficacy of the Vitacorps solution and its positive impact on living environments," said Anna Obraztsova, Head of WELL Consulting. "When families are supported at home, it promotes readiness and reinforces the promises made to those who serve.”

Vitacorps employs a comprehensive seven-step process to evaluate indoor conditions, prescribe market-leading solutions that adhere to strict scientific benchmarks for performance, implement solutions at scale, and test the resulting outcomes post-implementation to ensure the prescribed thresholds for performance have been achieved. Post-implementation testing protocols were established by the Well Living Lab, which was founded as a collaboration between Mayo Clinic and Delos, a market leader in improving the impact that indoor environments have on the human condition.

Corvias is working to expand the Vitacorps implementations across its full military housing portfolio and bring the solution to more than 72,000 residents in the future. The initiative is one of multiple modernization programs underway that reflect the company’s commitment to building the Installation of the Future, where defense communities serve as platforms for resilience, innovation and total care of the force.

About Corvias

Corvias partners with the Department of War (DOW) and higher education institutions to solve infrastructure and energy resiliency challenges and to create long-term, sustainable value through our unique Solutions Through Partnerships® approach. Corvias partnerships support energy resilience and quality of indoor environments through renewable energy projects, energy savings projects, and WELL for Residential certified enhancements in homes across our communities. Our more than 72,000 residents consistently highly rank the courtesy and professionalism of our maintenance and leasing personnel. Learn more at: www.corvias.com.

A Fort Riley resident learns how Corvias' Wellness at Home program is supporting the health and wellbeing of military families.

A Fort Riley resident learns how Corvias' Wellness at Home program is supporting the health and wellbeing of military families.

MONTMELO, Spain (AP) — Alpine driver Pierre Gasly's third-place finish at the Monaco Grand Prix was reinstated Friday after racing officials accepted an appeal filed by the Formula 1 team.

Gasly finished the Monaco race third but was demoted to seventh place after race officials handed him two five-second penalties for allegedly going too fast in the pitlane.

Alpine immediately appealed the ruling, and the FIA found that the timekeepers had erred in clocking his car's speed.

The FIA said in an X post on Friday that “the stewards of the Monaco GP have rescinded Gasly’s penalties, effectively handing him back his third place finish.”

Gasly celebrated the decision, which gives Alpine its first podium since 2024, on social media.

“WE GOT IT BACK!! P3 in Monaco!” the Frech driver wrote on X. “Huge thanks to my amazing team and all the people who supported us!! Thanks FIA & F1 for the transparency of the situation. One to remember.”

Already on Thursday, the FIA said that it was considering Alpine’s appeal because the timekeepers at the Monaco race had provided evidence that they had made a mistake. FIA said that the “distance used in calculating” car speeds was wrong and “overestimated the speed” of Gasly’s car.

The decision came five days after the Monaco race while teams were getting set to practice for the next race in Barcelona.

Red Bull's Isack Hadjar will drop from third to fourth place in the Monaco results.

Gasly was one of several drivers to get penalties for speeding in the pitlane during the Monaco face, which was won by Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli.

“We were aware that there had been issues with that part of the track on Friday and on Saturday, so we had some doubts about it," Alpine managing director Steve Nielsen told reporters at the Barcelona race. "And when we saw all these penalties in the race, even though we didn’t know exactly what the error was, it was not unreasonable to think that something was wrong.”

Title hopeful George Russell was hit hardest after he initially received a five-second penalty for speeding which was then upgraded to a more severe drive-through penalty because his Mercedes team didn’t wait the required five seconds before working on his car at his next pit stop. That dropped Russell out of the top 10 and he didn’t score any points, falling further behind Antonelli, the points leader.

Mercedes and the other teams given penalties did not appeal in time, and race officials apparently are not going to alter their results.

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Alpine driver Pierre Gasly of France during the second free practice at the Monaco racetrack, in Monaco, Friday, June 5, 2026. The Formula one race will be held on Sunday. (AP Photo/Fatima Shbair)

Alpine driver Pierre Gasly of France during the second free practice at the Monaco racetrack, in Monaco, Friday, June 5, 2026. The Formula one race will be held on Sunday. (AP Photo/Fatima Shbair)

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