At BRIDGE’s large-scale, multiphase developments on Potrero Hill in San Francisco and at Jordan Downs in Watts, the first new apartments are rising from the ground among other elements that help communities thrive: jobs, services, retail and educational opportunities. On the horizon, in places such as San Francisco’s Mission District and the Eliot neighborhood in Northeast Portland, we are proud that we’ll be serving people of color and longtime residents who are at risk of being displaced.

These developments require fortitude, and the results take years. But we are firmly committed to the intentional creation of equitable communities, where everyone has access to housing opportunities, regardless of race or income–factors that have historically and systematically segregated our nation’s neighborhoods.

Concept for a new community center at Jordan Downs, where a broad spectrum of stakeholders is helping to shape the vision for a vibrant, mixed-use, mixed-income community.
The 157 apartments at 1950 Mission will be affordable to households with low incomes, with 25% set aside for formerly homeless families. Affordable gallery and work spaces will cater to the Mission District artist community.
The community building process at BRIDGE’s Potrero redevelopment reinforces social connectivity by instilling hope, strengthening relationships, and reaffirming a commitment to individual and shared responsibility.
At North Williams, priority will be given to longtime and displaced residents of North and Northeast Portland, creating a unique opportunity to heal and rebuild a community impacted by decades of discrimination.
25 Sanchez, one of seven former public housing properties BRIDGE acquired and rehabilitated with partners, provides a healthier, well-managed home for people like Michael O. (right).
The Potrero Walking Club meets three times a week, bringing residents and neighbors together for socializing and exercise.
At Potrero in San Francisco, BRIDGE is rebuilding 619 units of distressed public housing and creating another 1,000 new homes with a range of affordability.
The Jordan Downs redevelopment in Los Angeles includes family supports, job training and community programs to empower families towards self-sufficiency.
Half of the proposed 1,110 homes at Balboa Reservoir, which BRIDGE is master-developing with partners, will be affordable to low- and moderate-income families.

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