The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

A model for neighborhood renewal

Two lawyers have helped build thousands of affordable houses in 30 cities using an obscure federal tax incentive

By
August 18, 2022 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
A home built by Habitat for Humanity St. Louis using New Markets Tax Credits joins historic homes along Park Avenue in the city's Gate District neighborhood. (Sid Hastings/For The Washington Post)
13 min

ST. LOUIS — For decades, the Jeff-Vander-Lou neighborhood on the north side, with its boarded-up rowhouses and empty lots, was one of the most distressed areas of this city.

Now the neighborhood — once the only place where Black people could own property in the city — is transforming into a vibrant, working-class community, thanks not to gentrification but to a program that sells homes with mortgages as low as $550 a month.