Commercial Real Estate: Difference between revisions

From Neighborhood Economics
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 5: Line 5:
;Conventional Commercial Real Estate: Most real estate, benefits the owner only
;Conventional Commercial Real Estate: Most real estate, benefits the owner only


;Neighborhood Investment Trusts: Community owns the property
;[[Neighborhood Investment Trusts]]: Community owns the property


;Community Economic Development: Developer owns the property but the community is engaged
;Community Economic Development: Developer owns the property but the community is engaged

Revision as of 19:04, 11 August 2023

Categories

Regional development initiatives, like Sage in Standing Rock country The SAGE Development Authority (SAGE), a 100% Native-led organization, is dedicated to community development, institution-building, and self-determination for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe [[1]]

Conventional Commercial Real Estate
Most real estate, benefits the owner only
Neighborhood Investment Trusts
Community owns the property
Community Economic Development
Developer owns the property but the community is engaged

Neighborhood Investment Trusts

Neighborhood Corridors are a big new that collective ownership and asset creation around commercial real estate assets are helping democratize ownershiplike the Kensington Corridor [[2]] in Philadelphia.

Links

Brookings Search

Urban Institute: New Models for Community Shareholding

Community Economic Development

(four projects in the pooled and shared session, Sharing for Impact, not a trust)

Links

TBD Projects where the developer owns the project but it creates community wealth and where under represented communities are owners. Chicago Trend Partners in Equity Local code Crenshaw Rising

TBD

Lots more: https://docs.google.com/document/d/15ln8PWYGZkVpm3AHVfF024jpB64hVO4ppBqGIdUfltQ