
Affordable housing [SD] now includes three bedrooms (Sioux Falls Argus Leader, SD)
Sioux Falls Argus Leader
(9/4/2014 9:33 PM, J.L. Atyeo)
An affordable housing program that delivers inmate-built homes to aspiring homebuyers across the state shipped to an unusual destination last month: Sioux Falls’ Whittier neighborhood. Governor’s House homes are typically ordered in areas where there’s more room to spread out — not a denserbuilt, urban core community such as this one northeast of downtown. But new homeowner Lim Bun said he wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. "If I became a billionaire, I would live there on this little corner," said Bun, standing outside his home Thursday morning at Second Street and Highland Avenue as contractors shingled the attached garage. Narrow lots in older neighborhoods like Whittier present some challenges. Bun couldn’t place the house and garage exactly as he wanted it because of setback regulations. It also took extra effort to cut down trees and make the lot ready to move the house in. That’s a few thousand dollars that came out of Bun’s pocket. He’ll also have to rebuild sidewalks once construction is complete. Bun, a 29-year-old banker at Home Federal Bank, was disappointed with the housing options that fit his budget until he heard about the Governor’s House program from a friend in Pierre just over a year ago. The program has been around for 18 years. Its mission is to help provide affordable housing and help prisoners learn job skills they can use once they’ve served their time. Inmates build the homes in warehouse in Springfield, S.D.
PD&R Leadership Message Archive
International & Philanthropic Spotlight Archive
Spotlight on PD&R Data Archive
Publications
Collecting, Analyzing, and Publicizing Data on Housing Turnover
Resilience Planning: What Communities Can Do to Keep Hazards from Turning into Disasters
Cityscape: Volume 26, Number 3
Case Studies
Case Study: Former School in Charleston, South Carolina, Transformed into Affordable Housing for Seniors
Case Study: Avalon Villas Combines Affordable Housing and Services for Families in a Gentrifying Phoenix Neighborhood

The contents of this article are the views of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development or the U.S. Government.
Note: Guidance documents, except when based on statutory or regulatory authority or law, do not have the force and effect of law and are not meant to bind the public in any way. Guidance documents are intended only to provide clarity to the public regarding existing requirements under the law or agency policies.