A New Angle: Recent efforts demonstrate benefits of permanent supportive housing
AHN (Affordable Housing News) Features Skid Row Housing Trust
Heidi Genrich is the Communications Manager at Skid Row Housing Trust. You can contact her at heidi.genrich@skidrow.org.
AHN (Affordable Housing News) Features Skid Row Housing Trust
The wonderful team from Marinello Schools of Beauty in Downtown LA donated their time to give our residents a day of pampering! We hope to have these days on a regular basis.
The concept of the Coordinated Entry System (CES), which was launched by the Home for Good initiative of the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, is to create a comprehensive system to quickly and effectively match homeless individuals throughout Los Angeles to housing and services. The Trust has seen a great deal of success in the […]
LA Downtown News covers Marilyn Bruce in: The Power Behind the Power in Downtown Offices – In honor of Administrative Professionals’ Week, which runs Sunday, April 20-Saturday, April 26, Los Angeles Downtown News reached out to six top Central City gatekeepers. If you want to get to the power players in any these offices, these are the people you’ll have to speak with first.
LA Downtown News covers The Star Apartments: Move-ins at the permanent supportive housing complex at 240 E. Sixth St. began late last year, and Los Angeles Downtown News reported on the structure again last week. The $21 million project was developed by Skid Row Housing Trust and designed by Silver Lake-based Michael Maltzan, a prominent architect who has made his name on market-rate buildings, but who also has several low-income residential complexes on his resume.
Architizer covers architecture, housing development and homelessness in LA.
LA Downtown News: Downtown Breakfast Club Honors Local Projects and Zings a Central City Holdout. The Home Sweet Home award went to the Star Apartments, Skid Row Housing Trust’s stunning $21 million project designed by architect Michael Maltzan that opened in November.
The developer of a skid row apartment building that houses recovering alcoholics and drug addicts said Friday he would appeal a zoning decision that denied a beer and wine permit for a restaurant planned for the ground floor of the complex. LA TImes Online follow-up.
CityWatch covers housing development in Los Angeles.
In a victory for skid row advocates, the city has rejected beer and wine sales at a restaurant on the ground floor of an apartment complex that houses recovering alcoholics and drug addicts. LA Times Online.