What's it like to get started as a small scale developer?

Published: May 10, 2018, 4:31 p.m.

Kea Wilson is Strong Towns' Director of Community Engagement and, as of a couple days ago, the proud owner of a new four-family building in her hometown of St. Louis, Missouri. This is the second property that she and her partner have purchased and managed as landlord and developers and today we brought her on the Strong Towns podcast to talk all about that experience. (She's also been detailing her journey toward purchasing this property in\xa0a series of articles on the website this week.)\nIn this in-depth and honest podcast conversation, Kea and Rachel discuss:\nWhat does being a developer look like and why do it in the first place?\nHow do you weight the costs and benefits of a given property (both monetary and non-monetary), and make the choice to pull the trigger on a purchase?\nIs it possible to provide quality affordable housing and still break even or make a profit as a small scale developer without deep pockets?\nWhat are the challenges and benefits of being a landlord?\nHow can we incentivize more landlords to care about their tenants and neighborhoods? What financial, social or political systems would need to change to make this the norm?\nMENTIONED IN THIS PODCAST:\nIn Defense of Housing: The Politics of Crisis\xa0by Peter Marcuse and David Madden\nMr. Money Mustache\xa0(blog)\nBigger Pockets\xa0(real estate investing resource)\nIncremental Development Alliance\n"Who can afford to invest in a poor neighborhood?" (series)\xa0by Kea Wilson\nPodcast: Why a Simple, Frugal Life Will Make you a Happier Person\xa0(with Kea Wilson)\n"Find a Place You Love that Needs You"\xa0by Sarah Kobos\n"Stuck: Why rent- and mortgage-burdened Americans don't always move to cheaper pastures"\xa0by Kea Wilson\nThe Greenlining Institute