Building Homes on Religious-Owned Land
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- public_title: Building Homes on Religious-Owned Land
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- carousel_summary: In a riff on other acronymic housing movements, Yes in God's Back Yard (YIGBY) advocates promote building housing on land owned by churches and other faith-based organizations.
- published_date: 04/14/2026
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Enabling Environments: Local Strategies for the Redevelopment of Public Land
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- public_title: Enabling Environments: Local Strategies That Support the Redevelopment of Public Land
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- carousel_summary: Charlotte, Boston, and other cities are partnering with developers to build affordable housing on municipally owned land. Discover how they’re doing it, why they’re doing it, and what lessons other communities can learn.
- published_date: 04/14/2026
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Lots of Opportunity: How Communities Can Address the Affordability Crisis on Land They Already Own
- sort_date: 04/15/2026
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- public_title: Lots of Opportunity: How Communities Can Address the Affordability Crisis on Land They Already Own
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- carousel_summary: Across the country, more than 276,000 acres of land owned by municipalities, states, and federal agencies could feasibly be built on, according to a Center for Geospatial Solutions analysis. This abundance could help communities address the housing affordability crisis.
- published_date: 04/15/2026
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A New Ground Lease on Life: In Virginia, County-Owned Land Becomes a Site for Student and Senior Housing
- sort_date: 03/31/2026
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- public_title: A New Ground Lease on Life: In Virginia, County-Owned Land Becomes a Site for Student and Senior Housing
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- carousel_summary: With a temperate climate and a location adjacent to Washington, DC, Fairfax County, Virginia, is a popular place to live—and increasingly unaffordable. Officials are making new homes available to residents by redeveloping county-owned land as a site for student housing, senior housing, and more.
- published_date: 03/31/2026
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Tying Consumerism to Conservation
- sort_date: 03/25/2026
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- public_title: Tying Consumerism to Conservation
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- carousel_summary: In 2008, in the midst of an economic recession, voters in Minnesota approved the idea of increasing the state sales tax to protect land. Nearly two decades later, former Kingsbury Browne recipient David Hartwell reflects on why the campaign succeeded, the impact it has had, and the lessons other states can learn from it.
- published_date: 03/25/2026
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