We’re Implementing Concrete Solutions to California’s Housing Insecurity, Availability and Affordability Crisis – Literally and Figuratively
At Social Infrastructure, we’re developing supportive housing solutions through strategic Acquisitions, New Construction, Property Rehab, Building Repurposing, Mixed-Use Development, and Build-To-Rent Master Planned Community Development
While we are a national nonprofit organization, the reality is that California sits at the epicenter of the homeless and affordable housing crisis afflicting America. Currently, the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) categorized a Low-Income Household as one that earns 50% to 80% of Area Median Income (AMI). According to the County of Los Angeles, the AMI for its geographic region was $98,200 in 2023. The County of Los Angeles Housing Department supports this 80% AMI figure, and now sets rental limits for a two- and three-bedroom apartment at $2,496 and $2,885 per month respectively. Metropolitan areas throughout the U. S. are in the same affordable housing conundrum. Not surprisingly, many tenants and homebuyers cannot afford these housing units even at the 80% AMI figure.
Our Housing Social Enterprise (SE) is the group that sources, acquires, entitles, builds, rehabilitates, and manages affordable homes of all types for our nonprofit partners, developers, social impact investors, and other real estate stakeholders. Working in lockstep through entity, Social Infrastructure partners with our Design-Build-Manage construction firms and funders to deliver the following Housing Projects and Programs:
We’re Implementing Concrete Solutions to California’s Housing Insecurity, Availability and Affordability Crisis – Literally and Figuratively
At Social Infrastructure, we’re developing supportive housing solutions through strategic Acquisitions, New Construction, Property Rehab, Building Repurposing, Mixed-Use Development, and Build-To-Rent Master Planned Community Development
While we are a national nonprofit organization, the reality is that California sits at the epicenter of the homeless and affordable housing crisis afflicting America. Currently, the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) categorized a Low-Income Household as one that earns 50% to 80% of Area Median Income (AMI). According to the County of Los Angeles, the AMI for its geographic region was $98,200 in 2023. The County of Los Angeles Housing Department supports this 80% AMI figure, and now sets rental limits for a two- and three-bedroom apartment at $2,496 and $2,885 per month respectively. Metropolitan areas throughout the U. S. are in the same affordable housing conundrum. Not surprisingly, many tenants and homebuyers cannot afford these housing units even at the 80% AMI figure.
Our Housing Social Enterprise (SE) is the group that sources, acquires, entitles, builds, rehabilitates, and manages affordable homes of all types for our nonprofit partners, developers, social impact investors, and other real estate stakeholders. Working in lockstep through entity, Social Infrastructure partners with our Design-Build-Manage construction firms and funders to deliver the following Housing Projects and Programs: