Housing
in sentence
1603 examples of Housing in a sentence
MO: My church group of 50 would like
housing
and meals for a week while we repair properties.
They don't have the food, health care, education, political voice,
housing
that every person needs for a life of dignity and opportunity.
Housing
is another area where we can really improve.
Mayor Menino in Boston says lack of affordable
housing
for young people is one of the biggest problems the city faces.
We think ultimately, all of this stuff can come together, a new model for mobility, a new model for housing, a new model for how we live and work, a path to market for advanced technologies.
It essentially raises charitable funds from individuals, foundations and corporations, and then we turn around and we invest equity and loans in both for-profit and nonprofit entities that deliver affordable health, housing, energy, clean water to low income people in South Asia and Africa, so that they can make their own choices.
And this is most acute for the places that house the people that are most vulnerable among us: nursing homes, hospitals, homeless shelters,
housing
projects.
Housing
550 babies, this was Ceausescu's show orphanage, and so I'd been told the conditions were much better.
So is it me particularly that you would choose to deny the right to housing, the right to adopt children, the right to marriage, the freedom to shop here, live here, buy here?
There's a cool group over in Christchurch in New Zealand looking at post-earthquake development housing, and thanks to the TED city Prize, we're working with an awesome group in one of Rio's favelas to set up a kind of community factory and micro-university.
It's one of the almost rock-solid pieces of evidence which I've never seen evidence for, that's always reeled out as "That's the problem with indigenous housing."
The problem: poor living environment, poor
housing
and the bugs that do people harm.
Maybe our challenges lie in city infrastructure: public transportation, affordable
housing.
Then people need some temporary housing, but there are no architects working there because we are too busy working for privileged people.
So I thought, even as architects, we can be involved in the reconstruction of temporary
housing.
They don't have enough flat area to build standard government single-story
housing
like this one.
Even civil government is doing such poor construction of the temporary housing, so dense and so messy because there is no storage, nothing, water is leaking, so I thought, we have to make multi-story building because there's no land and also it's not very comfortable.
He asked me to build three-story
housing
on baseball [fields].
If you're poor, you're more likely to live in rudimentary
housing
on marginal land that's poorly drained.
Singapore, as it developed its high-rises and its remarkable public housing, also developed an island of parks, and if you go there, you'll see how much of it is green land and park land.
They had to look at computer projections for the
housing
market.
Working families, which are defined as earning between 20,000 and 50,000 dollars a year in America are spending more now on transportation than on housing, slightly more, because of this phenomenon called "drive till you qualify," finding homes further and further and further from the city centers and from their jobs, so that they're locked in this, two, three hours, four hours a day of commuting.
And these are the neighborhoods, for example, in the Central Valley of California that weren't hurt when the
housing
bubble burst and when the price of gas went up; they were decimated.
They rank hundreds of nations worldwide according to 10 criteria that they believe add up to quality of life: health, economics, education, housing, you name it.
Today, you see these large residential development projects which offer cookie-cutter
housing
solutions to massive amounts of people.
And all of them are building spectacular new forms of affordable housing, but they're also building cities of difference, because they're building cities that respond to local communities, local climates and local construction methods.
Mobility in developing world cities is a very peculiar challenge, because different from health or education or housing, it tends to get worse as societies become richer.
If more money is invested in highways, of course there is less money for housing, for schools, for hospitals, and also there is a conflict for space.
There was a
housing
collapse, an auto industry collapse, and the population had plummeted by 25 percent between 2000 and 2010, and many people were beginning to write it off, as it had topped the list of American shrinking cities.
Or the garage doors that are brought from San Diego in trucks to become the new skin of emergency
housing
in many of these slums surrounding the edges of Tijuana.
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