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-- .... .. ... .-... .. -• -.. --- .. ----- -.. -.. -- -- (2) If Federa I money is ava i I ab Ie, it is estimated an additional 200 units of BMIR housing including ten twenty per cent rent supplement units could be absorbed to meet apparent existing demands and re-location resource requirements. This estimate wi I I require adjustment to match specific publ ic actions that may generate high peak relocation • to (3) The land required to construct this amount of housing wil I vary depending upon the density of development. Single-family, interest subsidy housing may be constructed at a density of four to six units/acre. While publ ic housing for the elderly may generate a density of sixty to eighty units/acre. If may, however, be that most of the units that wil I be constructed wi I I be townhouse and garden apartment units with densities ranging from ten to twenty-five units/acre. Assuming an overall average of fifteen units/acre for the projected five year demand of 1,000 publ ic housing and 1,000 BMIR housing units, it is estimated that 130 to 150 acres of developable land wil I be absorbed for the housing with another fifty to seventy acres absorbed for supporting services, employment area, etc. 36
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 58 |
Transcript | -- .... .. ... .-... .. -• -.. --- .. ----- -.. -.. -- -- (2) If Federa I money is ava i I ab Ie, it is estimated an additional 200 units of BMIR housing including ten twenty per cent rent supplement units could be absorbed to meet apparent existing demands and re-location resource requirements. This estimate wi I I require adjustment to match specific publ ic actions that may generate high peak relocation • to (3) The land required to construct this amount of housing wil I vary depending upon the density of development. Single-family, interest subsidy housing may be constructed at a density of four to six units/acre. While publ ic housing for the elderly may generate a density of sixty to eighty units/acre. If may, however, be that most of the units that wil I be constructed wi I I be townhouse and garden apartment units with densities ranging from ten to twenty-five units/acre. Assuming an overall average of fifteen units/acre for the projected five year demand of 1,000 publ ic housing and 1,000 BMIR housing units, it is estimated that 130 to 150 acres of developable land wil I be absorbed for the housing with another fifty to seventy acres absorbed for supporting services, employment area, etc. 36 |