• We have set our 2012 Schedule for homeowner education!

    These  courses are an excellent opportunity to learn about how to purchase your first home (or your next home if you have not owned one in the past 3 years), to tackle debt, develop a personal budget and other vital financial skills.  Landlord/tenant classes are especially for those wishing to purchase a multi-family home.  Homebuyers must complete these classes to qualify to purchase a CWRI affordable home and/or receive down payment assistance.

    All classes are available in English or Spanish.

    First-time Homebuyer Classes

    For anyone who has not owned a home in the past 3 years. The classes meet Wednesdays, 6:30-8:30. Each class is six 2-hour sessions.

    • February 1 – March 7
    • March 21 -  April 25
    • May 9 - June 13
    • June 27 - August  8
    • August 22 – September 26
    • October 3 - November 7

    Landlord/Tenant Education:

    This class is a necessity for those wishing to become a resident landlord.  It covers the rights and responsibilities of landlords, financial management of rental properties, and other important information. The classes meet Saturdays, 10:00 am – noon. Each class is three 2-hour sessions.

    • February 4 – February 18
    • March 10 – March 24
    • April 14 – April 28
    • May 12 – May 26
    • June 9 – June 23
    • July 7 – July 21
    • August 4 – August 18
    • September 8 – September 22
    • October 13 – October 27
    • November 3 – November 17

    Call 401-273-2330 x101 today to register and start on the path to home ownership!

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    Like neighborhoods across America, CWRI neighborhoods feel the impact of the ongoing foreclosure crisis.  Boarded-up homes create opportunities for crime and vandalism, create risks to public safety, bring down property values and frustrate neighbors who have worked so hard to create good places to live and raise families.

    Through a partnership with the National Community Stabilization Trust, CWRI is fighting this threat by acquiring and rehabilitating foreclosed homes throughout CWRI’s target neighborhoods.  After rehabilitation, CWRI sells the homes to first-time home buyers who have received training and education to make sure that they do not become the next victims of foreclosure.

    CWRI is currently rehabilitating three beautiful homes to be sold to qualified first-time home buyers.  These one- and two-family homes are an amazing opportunity to own a fully rehabilitated home with the unique architectural details typical of many of the Victorian neighborhoods CWRI serves.

    For information about purchasing one of these homes, contact Silvia Acevedo, CWRI Housing Counselor at 401-273-2330 x109 .

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    CWRI HOMES FOR SALE:

    14 Lillian single family before renovation

    14 Lillian single family before renovation

    14 Lillian Avenue, Providence

    Fully restored one-family home on a beautiful street
    1,935 sf of living space
    4 bedrooms and 2 full baths
    $130,000 to qualified buyers

    31 Mawney 2-family before renovation

    31 Mawney 2-family before renovation

    31 Mawney Street, Providence

    Totally renovated two-family home- a great investment for a first time buyer
    Owner’s unit includes 2,109 sf of living space, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths
    Rental unit includes 1,118 sf of living space, 2 bedrooms, full bath
    $165,000 to qualified buyers

    102 Mitchell Street 2-family before renovation
    102 Mitchell Street 2-family before renovation

    102 Mitchell Street, Providence

    Totally renovated two-family home- a great investment for a first time buyer
    Owner’s unit includes 2,213 sf of living space, 4 bedrooms, full bath, 3/4 bath
    Rental unit includes 1,093 sf of living space, 2 bedrooms and full bath
    $160,000 to qualified buyers

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    New Broad Street Revitalization family apartments on Reynolds Avenue

    New Broad Street Revitalization family apartments on Reynolds Avenue

    CWRI’s Broad Street Revitalization development is nearing completion, and Broad Street looks better each day as the buildings at the corners of Chester, Reynolds and Potters Avenues get their final touches. This development was made possible through Low Income Housing Tax Credits, HOME funds through Rhode Island Housing, the Building Homes Rhode Island program and the Home Depot Foundation.

    The four buildings include 25 new family apartments, eight of which will be occupied by families receiving supportive services through Crossroads Rhode Island. The apartments, two 1-bedrooms, eleven 2-bedrooms and twelve 3-bedrooms, feature Energy Star Appliances and are available at affordable rates to qualifying tenants. For information about renting one of these fantastic new apartments, contact First Realty Management at 401-272-3963 or stop by the management office at 57 Parkis Avenue at the corner of Parkis and Elmwood.

    Apartments and Commercial Space Near Completion at 640 Broad Street

    Apartments and Commercial Space Near Completion at 770 Broad Street

    The development has also created over 5,000 square feet of beautiful new commercial space on Broad Street, including nearly 1300 square feet for use by a community-based agency.

    For information about renting this prominent commercial space on Broad Street, contact CWRI Real Estate Project Manager Debora Rotondo at 401-273-2330 x102, or email her at drotondo@communityworksri.org .

    CWRI is especially excited that 640 Broad will become Rhode Island’s first LEED Platinum rated affordable housing development. The building’s nine apartments and four thousand square feet of retail space were built using green materials and designed to be extremely energy efficient, creating healthy and economical spaces in which to live and work.   More information about the LEED green building certification system

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    copy-of-514-broadway

    Community Works Rhode Island has acquired a significant historic residence at 514 Broadway, to be renovated as five affordable condominium units.

    January 21, 2011, Providence, RI Community Works Rhode Island (CWRI) is pleased to announce the acquisition of the architecturally significant building at 514 Broadway in Providence, RI. CWRI will renovate this neglected and foreclosed property into five condominium units that will be set at a price that is affordable to income qualified buyers.

    Carrie Marsh, Executive Director of CWRI said “CWRI is thrilled with the opportunity to acquire 514 Broadway, a significant property which retains its beauty, dignity and grace, despite decades of neglect. It is a building that captures the interest of many people who wonder at its past and envision its potential. The federal funding for this project will allow CWRI to save this foreclosed property and renovate it into bright, beautiful and energy-efficient living spaces, to be sold to homeowners at an affordable level. This project is a key piece of the ongoing transformation of Broadway as a vital main street of the West Side neighborhood.”

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    Great things are happening on Broad Street!

    On Saturday, April 24th join Community Works Rhode Island and our partners at the Environmental Justice League of Rhode Island, Quisqueya en Accion, the Providence Department of Public Works and many others for the first annual SOUTH SIDE SHINES Community Clean-up and Celebration! (rain date May 1st)

    Projects will include a Broad Street clean-up, planting Providence’s first public fruit orchard at Locust Grove Cemetery with Southside Community Land Trust, spreading compost at CWRI’s Laura Street youth gardens, installation of custom street furniture created by The Steelyard and the unveiling of CWRI’s Broad Street banner campaign!

    9:00 am: Meet at Algonquin House (807 Broad St.)
    9:00-1:00: Join over 100 neighbors to plant trees, clean up litter, sweep streets and make the South Side Shine! on Broad Street and the surrounding neighborhoods
    1:00-3:00: Community celebration at Algonquin House, featuring lunch, music, environmental activities, bike repair and the Mayor’s Mobile Help Desk

    For more information or to volunteer, please contact Jerome  at CWRI: 273-2330

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    2009 Annual Report and 2010 Annual Plan

    by Peter on December 23, 2009

    in Announcements

    Community Works Rhode Island is proud to release its 2009 Annual Report and 2010 Annual Plan. The report is available as a PDF, click here to view the report.

    Community Works Rhode Island creates opportunities within the neighborhoods it serves for people to live in affordable and healthy homes, to improve their lives and to strengthen their communities. The goal is to transform underserved neighborhoods to be more sustainable.

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    (Providence, RI September 28, 2009)

    Community Works Rhode Island’s Youth Garden Club will celebrate its partnership with Local 121 restaurant, with an onsite cooking demonstration by Executive Chef Dave Johnson. The event will take place on Tuesday September 29th from 5:00-7:00 pm at the community garden at 75 Laura Street in Providence’s Elmwood neighborhood

    A dozen Elmwood neighborhood youth ages 9-14 participate in CWRI’s Garden Club under the supervision of teacher Gregg DeMaria. The children grow produce for their families and also sell vegetables and herbs to Local 121 restaurant in downtown Providence. Chef Dave Johnson will tour the garden and demonstrate how simple cooking techniques can bring vegetables straight from the garden to the dinner plate. This event will mark the end of the growing season for the Garden Club. Local families and other community members will join the club in celebrating their successes and enjoying expertly-prepared garden-fresh foods.

    The Elmwood Youth Garden Club is made up of young residents of Community Works Rhode Island housing. For the last five years, the youth have been beautifying the neighborhood and producing bushels of fresh vegetables on two Laura Street gardens. In 2008, the gardeners began visiting Dave Johnson in his kitchen at Local 121 to learn about how professional kitchens work and to show off their produce. Their visits soon turned into weekly sales, generating hundreds of dollars a season to support the youth program and providing Local 121 with tomatoes, salad greens, herbs, cucumbers and other vegetables grown by the youth in their own neighborhood.

    Carrie Marsh, Executive Director of Community Works said, “The Garden Club provides an opportunity for youth to engage in an enjoyable and rewarding activity, learn stewardship over their plots of land, and feel pride in their accomplishment – easily measured by their smiles as they show off their prize cucumbers. They are rewarded with the fun of the experience, the fruits of their labor, and also with the business partnership that they have with Local 121. We are grateful for this connection to Local 121, which understands the value of sustainable community-based agriculture – in this case raised by children in the heart of an urban neighborhood.”

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    Executive Chef Dave Johnson of restaurant Local 121 will celebrate the end of CWRI’s successful summer gardening program for youth. Chef Johnson will demonstrate cooking with vegetables fresh from the garden for children and families at the community garden at 75 Laura Street on September 29th from 5:00-7:00pm. Teacher Gregg DeMaria runs the summer youth gardening program for CWRI. He works with a dozen children ages 9-14 to grow vegetables and herbs. The youth share the fruits of their labor with their families, and also sell the produce to Local 121 restaurant in downtown Providence.

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    CWRI is thrilled to announce that The Steel Yard will be making benches, planters, and trashcans for the front of several main street properties in Providence. The Steel Yard collaborates with local artists, vendors and industry to produce functional public sculpture. This street furniture will be completed over the winter and placed in front of four properties on Broad Street in Providence.

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    Thank you Josie Moray!

    by Sally on September 16, 2009

    in Uncategorized

    CWRI is so happy with our new art by Parkis Avenue resident and artist Josie Moray!

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