Across the country and in Colorado, we simply cannot build our way out of the affordable housing crisis. Preserving our supply of currently affordable homes is an essential strategy to one day ensure everyone can stably afford a home in their own community.
In addition to building new homes, we must also preserve the affordability of currently affordable rental homes through recapitalization, acquisition, rehabilitation, and adaptive reuse.
The Enterprise Climate Resilience Academies bring together experts, local stakeholders, and participants to identify critical vulnerabilities, offer solutions and technical assistance to improve portfolio resilience to future threats, and incorporate community resilience strategies.
Early adopters of the latest version of the Enterprise Green Communities Criteria set the standard for healthy, efficient and resilient affordable homes.
Adams County’s Community Safety and Well-Being Department asked Enterprise and partners to present When Zip Codes Doesn't Matter, which shows connections between race, residential segregation, homeownership and public safety.
Enterprise recently closed three Denver Regional Transit-Oriented Development Fund deals, which brings its total investments to $50 million and 2,100 homes.
On May 11, the Colorado legislature wrapped an intense 2022 session where policymakers tackled a myriad of enduring issues alongside one-time allocations of billions in federal aid.
Enterprise is pleased to announce $540,000 in grants to 11 Colorado affordable housing organizations through the HUD Section 4 Capacity Building program.
Learn more about connections between residential segregation, access to homeownership and public safety, and actions you can take to pave of a path forward to a time When Zip Code Doesn’t Matter -- anymore.