Older San Diego Buildings Are Good for Affordable Housing and Climate Resilience
From Save Our Heritage Organization (SOHO)
Affordable Housing
Within San Diego and across the country, skyrocketing housing prices and the loss of naturally occurring, or unsubsidized, affordable housing plague our communities.
One important solution is to reinvest in and preserve older buildings for housing. This would alleviate some of the pressure for three compelling reasons: existing buildings are inherently more affordable and sustainable, enable less costly housing and more of it to be produced faster, and don’t contribute to the landfill.
Obviously, older buildings can play a significant role in meeting affordability and housing challenges.

By David Garrick / 
by Ernie McCray
By Colleen O’Connor
All events are online and free unless stated otherwise.
It’s becoming all the more apparent to critical observers in San Diego, that here in our town, the homeless don’t count. The numbers of the houseless are surging and local government seems just to sweep their encampments from place to place, never really dipping into the real crisis or affecting the real numbers of our fellow humans who don’t have a shelter over their heads.
By Michael Steinberg / Black Rain Press
Cornel West Inspires at PL Nazarene’s Writer’s Symposium
The Planning Board for Ocean Beach meets this Wednesday, March 2, and the meeting will continue to be held virtually via Zoom. (See below for registration.)




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