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DC Selects Land Trust Team to Redevelop Langston-Slater Campus


DC Selects Land Trust Team to Redevelop Langston-Slater Campus
Rendering of Lebanon Village . Click to enlarge.
The city-owned site that was the subject of DC s first EquityRFP may be redeveloped using an equity-focused model.
On Tuesday, Mayor Bowser s office and the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development (DMPED) selected a co-development team for the Langston-Slater school campus in Truxton Circle: a team that includes the Douglass Community Land Trust (Douglass CLT). 
The plan put forth by the Douglass CLT team would deliver 55 mixed-income units, including some for-sale units and units with permanent affordability, to the site of the Slater and John Mercer Langston Elementary School buildings at 33-45 P Street NW (map). More specifically, there will be 43 rental apartments and 12 infill townhouses, along with 21 surface parking spaces. Roughly 49% of the units in the Lebanon Village development will be affordable to households ea ....

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Nonprofit land trusts give low-income homebuyers a chance


Michael Friedrich: Atlanta’s land trust shows how to create affordable housing
Nonprofits that buy land, build homes and sell below market rate are giving low-income homebuyers a chance
(Monica Garwood | The New York Times)
By Michael Friedrich | Special to The New York Times
  | April 19, 2021, 3:43 p.m.
| Updated: 4:08 p.m.
If anyone knows how gentrification has displaced Black working-class residents in Atlanta, it’s Makeisha Robey, a preschool teacher. During her two decades living in the city, she has watched affordable apartment complexes vanish as new developments arise and wealthier, white residents move in.
After being priced out of renting in a series of neighborhoods, Ms. Robey, a 43-year-old single mother, became determined to buy a house of her own. “Being able to build some kind of equity, being able to have this home base where your family can come visit,” Ms. Robey said, “I wanted that for myself.” ....

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Opinion | Affordable Housing Forever


Affordable Housing Forever
Nonprofits that purchase land, build homes on it and sell them below market rate are giving low-income buyers a chance.
By Michael Friedrich
April 15, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET
Credit.Monica Garwood
If anyone knows how gentrification has displaced Black working-class residents in Atlanta, it’s Makeisha Robey, a preschool teacher. During her two decades living in the city, she has watched affordable apartment complexes vanish as new developments arise and wealthier, white residents move in.
After being priced out of renting in a series of neighborhoods, Ms. Robey, a 43-year-old single mother, became determined to buy a house of her own. “Being able to build some kind of equity, being able to have this home base where your family can come visit,” Ms. Robey said, “I wanted that for myself.” ....

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