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---- ... 1M • ..... JIlt III .. .... ... .... -III - ... ... .. ... III -.. These latter considerations bear heavily upon the social factors which must be considered in detormining land availabil ity. Constructing enortrous "projects" for tho purpose of housing a particular income group has had disastrous consequences in many cities. It is apparent that a maximum degree of social and economic integration is imperative. To this end, it is dosirable to influence, in so far as possible, both publ ic and private construction so as to distribute houwing for low and moderate income famil ies in al I available development areas both inside and outside the corporate I imits of Fort Wayne and New Haven. Consideration should be given to the establishment of a "land bank" in order to acquire certain sites near mass transit and other public facil ities to be in turn marketed as needed to publ ic and non-profit housing agencies for construction of housing for low and moderate income famil ies. This technique is being used with good success by several cities to encourage a desirable pattern of growth for residential as wei I as industrial development. 22
Object Description
Title | Housing study |
Creator | Beckman, Swenson, Yoder and Seay |
Contributor | Three Rivers Coordinating Council (Allen County, Ind.) |
Topic | Housing, Real Estate |
Subject |
Housing--Indiana--Fort Wayne Housing--Indiana--New Haven Housing--Indiana--Allen County |
Geographical Coverage |
Fort Wayne, Indiana New Haven, Indiana Allen County, Indiana |
Date of Original | April 1971 |
Time Period | 1900-1999 |
Source | Print version: Beckman, Swenson, Yoder and Seay. Housing study. (Fort Wayne, Ind.: Beckman, Swenson, Yoder & Seay, 1971), 1 v. |
Additional Availability | Print version might be available at IPFW Helmke Library. See online catalog. |
Rights | Copyright Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, 2006- . All rights reserved. May not be reproduced without permission. For information regarding reproduction and use see: http://cdm16776.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/about/collection/p16776coll1/ |
Date Digitally Created | April 17 2012 |
Digital Publisher | Walter E. Helmke Library, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne |
Digitization Specifications | This pdf file was derived from 400 dpi, 1-bit, uncompressed TIFF images that were scanned from the originals using a Fujitsu 5750C scanner with Adobe Acrobat 9.0 Professional scanning software, black and white configuration. |
Content Type | Text |
Digital Format | text/pdf |
Collection | Fort Wayne Area Government Information |
Identifier | 30000122013521 |
File Name | 30000122013521.pdf |
Description
Title | Page 43 |
Transcript | ---- ... 1M • ..... JIlt III .. .... ... .... -III - ... ... .. ... III -.. These latter considerations bear heavily upon the social factors which must be considered in detormining land availabil ity. Constructing enortrous "projects" for tho purpose of housing a particular income group has had disastrous consequences in many cities. It is apparent that a maximum degree of social and economic integration is imperative. To this end, it is dosirable to influence, in so far as possible, both publ ic and private construction so as to distribute houwing for low and moderate income famil ies in al I available development areas both inside and outside the corporate I imits of Fort Wayne and New Haven. Consideration should be given to the establishment of a "land bank" in order to acquire certain sites near mass transit and other public facil ities to be in turn marketed as needed to publ ic and non-profit housing agencies for construction of housing for low and moderate income famil ies. This technique is being used with good success by several cities to encourage a desirable pattern of growth for residential as wei I as industrial development. 22 |