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  2. Cabrini–Green Homes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabrini–Green_Homes

    Cabrini–Green Homes are a Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) public housing project on the Near North Side of Chicago, Illinois.The Frances Cabrini Rowhouses and Extensions were south of Division Street, bordered by Larrabee Street to the west, Orleans Street to the east and Chicago Avenue to the south, with the William Green Homes to the northwest.

  3. Chicago Housing Authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Housing_Authority

    Other. v. t. e. The Chicago Housing Authority (CHA) is a municipal corporation that oversees public housing within the city of Chicago. The agency's Board of Commissioners is appointed by the city's mayor, and has a budget independent from that of the city of Chicago. CHA is the largest rental landlord in Chicago, with more than 50,000 households.

  4. Parkway Garden Homes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkway_Garden_Homes

    Parkway Gardens Apartment Homes, built from 1950 to 1955, was the last of Henry K. Holsman's many housing development designs in Chicago. Holsman began designing low-income housing in Chicago in the 1910s when an urban housing shortage developed after World War I.

  5. Robert Taylor Homes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Taylor_Homes

    Robert Taylor Homes was a public housing project in the Bronzeville neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois from 1962 to 2007. The second largest housing project in the United States, it consisted of 28 virtually identical high-rises, set out in a linear plan for two miles (3 km), with the high-rises regularly configured in a horseshoe shape of three in each block.

  6. Open Communities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Communities

    The crisis has been particularly hard on immigrants, people of color, and lower-income families who became north suburban homeowners in the last two decades. More than 14,500 homes were foreclosed in Chicago's northern suburbs between 2005 and 2013, according to an Open Communities' analysis of Woodstock Institute foreclosure filings data. [10]

  7. Subsidized housing in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsidized_housing_in_the...

    The federal government, through its Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program (which in 2012 paid for construction of 90% of all subsidized rental housing in the US), spends $6 billion per year to finance 50,000 low-income rental units annually, with median costs per unit for new construction (2011–2015) ranging from $126,000 in Texas to $326,000 ...

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