New JDS plans keep low-income units together

Get Our Email Newsletter
The companies, people and issues shaping business in Madison and the Capital Region.

Gebhardt Development, which is developing the housing portion of the Judge Doyle Square project, is again proposing to group low-cost apartments on three floors, according to an article in the Wisconsin State Journal.

Although the City of Madison’s Finance Committee has requested the low-cost units be spread throughout the building to avoid segregation from market-rate apartments, grouping them on separate floors is considered to be the most cost-effective way to build the housing component, a nine-story building on the block that holds the Madison Municipal Building.

Related stories

Yet another twist in JDS saga

Advertisement

Digital Partners