Housing: Difference between revisions

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[[MINT]] Mixed income neighborhood trusts
[[MINT]] Mixed income neighborhood trusts
[[Down Payment Innovations]]


[[Community ownership of real estate]] Brookings link [[https://www.brookings.edu/tags/community-ownership-of-real-estate/]]
[[Community ownership of real estate]] Brookings link [[https://www.brookings.edu/tags/community-ownership-of-real-estate/]]

Latest revision as of 08:27, 22 June 2024

The focus is on innovative housing access that increase home owership, including various forms of collective trusts evolved from land trusts. Trust Neighborhoods is one such innovation [[1]]


Brookings Place making postcards, blog series link to case studies around the country [[2]]

MINT Mixed income neighborhood trusts

Down Payment Innovations

Community ownership of real estate Brookings link [[3]]


The Nehemiah Project in the Bronx, which is attempting replicate in Jackson, Ms, is another [[4]]

Local Code includes both innovative democratic ownership of commercial real estate and innovative housing solutions that result in more people being housed with an element of financial innovation. [[5]]

Examples of southern community land trusts Prosperity Alliance [[6]]

Parity Homes collective purchasing of blocks by Black folks, Baltimore [[7]]

Peewee Homes for formerly homeless [[8]] in the category of Deeply Affordable Homes like those built at Land of Sky church’s land by Beloved Asheville

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