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Putting the needs and opinions of our communities first is a critical element of ensuring that innovation benefits underinvested communities.
Putting the needs and opinions of our communities first is a critical element of ensuring that innovation benefits underinvested communities.
Since the Great Recession, several Detroit neighborhoods have seen investment, with mixed-use and multifamily buildings revitalizing communities.
The decline of industry and financial crises took a great toll on Detroit. Affordable housing is a critical resource for residents experiencing economic hardship and allows community members to participate in the economic vibrancy of revitalizing areas.
Creating space for residents, no matter their socioeconomic background, to share community deepens economic opportunity for all and keeps neighborhoods inclusive.
Capital Impact Board Member Alaina Beverly lends her expertise in empowering communities to support Capital Impact’s social and economic justice work.
Creative thinking led us to invest in Sustainable Economies Law Center, an organization looking for new ways to expand affordable housing in communities.
Preserving and creating affordable housing maintains diverse, equitable communities.
Capital Impact staffers sort and package cabbage at Gleaners Community Food Bank in Detroit
With capacity building and capital, real estate developers of color can create developments that benefit and empower their communities.
Clinical Pharmacist Krissia Funes and her co-workers at Urban Health Plan are ensuring that older adults in New York have quality, holistic health care that keeps them in their communities.