A plan to turn church land into housing is moving forward in Chattanooga. City leaders and Enterprise Community Partners have picked eight faith-based organizations to take part in the effort.
The City of Chattanooga and Enterprise Community Partners selected eight faith-based organizations to create affordable housing and community-serving developments on unused land.
A former military facility in Yakima, Washington — declared surplus in 2014 — is now Chuck Austin Place: 41 affordable homes serving veterans who have experienced homelessness along with on-site health clinics and behavioral health services.
California has made significant investments over the past decade in programs that are keeping Californians housed and building critical affordable homes.
This issue brief draws on learned lessons from on-the-ground examples, discussing considerations, strategies, and attainable outcomes for repurposing underutilized federally owned property to create affordable multifamily homes.
Enterprise Community Development joined city and state leaders, community partners and residents to celebrate the grand opening of the newly renovated Park Heights Place in Baltimore City.
Enterprise announces its inaugural Land Use Network cohort, marking the first phase of a three-year effort to support up to 15 cities and counties nationwide.