The U.S. housing crisis is a multifaceted mess. Exclusionary zoning, skyrocketing home prices, stagnant wages, and lackluster public investment in affordable housing are just the tip of the iceberg.
As Americans struggle under backbreaking rental prices, builders are turning to innovative ways to churn out more housing, from 3D printing to assembling homes in an indoor factory to using hemp — yes ...
At a time when homeownership is out of reach for many lower-income individuals and families, manufactured homes could provide a path forward. If you need a car, you don't hire a team to find the parts ...
Most homes are built the old-fashioned way, hammered together on site. That old-fashioned way has not created enough housing in Oregon. It has not created enough housing at a reasonable price. Oregon ...
After several years of mountain town-living, Kellie Shaltes faced a sobering question: Could she sustain it? Shaltes had taken around a $10,000 pay cut when she relocated from San Diego to teach at ...
Syracuse, N.Y. – The one-story home in Syracuse’s Valley neighborhood looks like a lot of starter homes. It has three bedrooms and two bathrooms, with stainless steel appliances and a small front ...
This 2,800-square-foot home was built with an expansive porch in Menlo Park. Photo courtesy Toby Long Design. For decades, factory-built homes carried a stigma. People pictured boxy, cookie-cutter ...
Read full article: Detroit renters’ rights: How to navigate landlord disputes and evictions Homes in the Chaldean Town neighborhood of Detroit. Read full article: Empowering Detroit: Revitalization ...
Many of us have a mental picture when we think of a housing innovator. Maybe it’s a Silicon Valley engineer who cut their teeth in the automation-heavy factories of Tesla or Amazon, bringing a ...