A compilation of case studies by ULI that act as a road map for how architects, planners, and designers can positively impact health outcomes through the thoughtful design of housing developments and other aspects of the built environment.
A Study of the Relationship Between Affordable Family Rental Housing and Home Values in the Twin Cities. A 2000 white paper by the Family Housing Fund exploring the impact of tax credit family rental developments on the surrounding home values.
A 2007 report from the Southern Environmental Law Center that covers trends in housing affordability, demographics, development and transportation in the Richmond region.
This ULI case study examines an innovative planned community in New York that focuses on urban redevelopment, transit-oriented development, and health and family initiatives. NOTE: Full text may be paywalled.
This 2014 report shows that in neighborhoods where LISC invested heavily, jobs and incomes each grew 9 percent more than in similar communities with little or no investment.
A 2014 National Low Income Housing Coalition report that breaks down LIHTC properties in five states to analyze how the needs of extremely low income households are being met by federal housing programs.
This 2012 brief is the culmination of an NNIP cross-site project funded by the Open Society Foundations to explore how the foreclosure crisis affects school-age children in New York City, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C.
This 1999 study examines the early effects of seven scattered-site public housing developments on the receiving neighborhoods in Yonkers, New York, where opposition to court-ordered desegregation was particularly hostile over the last decade.