-
An 89-unit affordable housing apartment complex reopened on Hartford's Park Terrace. The apartments, spread among 14 buildings, were refurbished by the Mutual Housing Association of Greater Hartford.
-
A new federal bill proposed by Senator Richard Blumenthal was expand protections for mobile home residents against predatory community management.
-
A state-funded pilot program will dedicate $85 million to sewage flood mitigation efforts, as climate change brings more powerful and frequent storms.
-
This mother paid her rent, turned to the city for help with housing code violations, and won a complaint for an unjust rent hike. Why was she still forced to leave?
-
The Hartford, New Haven and Bridgeport areas lead the U.S. in lost "for sale" housing inventory since 2019. Fortune Magazine housing reporter Lance Lambert explains why.
-
A groundbreaking ceremony for 10 "zero energy" affordable homes marked Habitat for Humanity of North Central Connecticut's 35 years in operation.
-
A new study by the Urban Institute found Connecticut's municipal zoning laws may be contributing to segregation across the state.
-
Violent evictions are rare in Connecticut, but the state has no method for tracking these instances when they do occur.
-
A Bridgeport-based nonprofit that provides housing for veterans began an expansion, including the building's first elevator and private bedrooms.
-
Vietnam veteran and Bridgeport resident Leonard Hunter received a home renovation complete with a new kitchen and flower beds as part of the program from Rebuilding Together Hartford.