
Low Income Housing
210 Fleetwood St, Coatesville, PA, 19320
The Project Has 2 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
1st Time Homebuyers Has 15 Units Available
230 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
232 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
238 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
244 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
25 N Second Ave Has 6 Units Available
252 Fleetwood St Has 1 Units Available
Brandywine Health & Housing Has 24 Units Available
Elmwood Garden Apartments Has 60 Units Available
Oak Street Replacement Hsng Has 66 Units Available
Quarry St Project Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 1 Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 3 Has 1 Units Available
Quarry St Project 5 Has 1 Units Available
Roymar Hall Apartments Has 24 Units Available
Second Ave Has 5 Units Available
Second Avenue Revitalization Proj Has 62 Units Available
Third Avenue Apartments Has 12 Units Available
W C Atkinson Project Has 18 Units Available
West End Housing Dev Has 8 Units Available
Woodland Parkway Homes Rev Has 47 Units Available
Coatesville Towers Has 90 Units Available
Regency Park Has 125 Units Available
Freedom Village at Brandywine Has 1 Units Available
Every real estate investor wants the same thing: a property nobody else has seen yet, priced low enough to create instant equity. Not a polished Zillow listing. Not a bidding war. Not a renovated flip with every dollar of profit already squeezed out. That is why many investors chase real estate wholesalers. These are people or companies who find motivated sellers, put properties under contract, and then assign that contract to an end buyer for a fee. A good wholesaler can bring you deals before they hit the open market. A bad wholesaler can sell you a fantasy spreadsheet, a fake discount, a contract they cannot assign, or a property with repairs that destroy your budget.
Two apartments have the same rent on paper. One is a high-rise unit with an elevator, lobby, package room, gym, rooftop lounge, and city view. The other is a garden apartment in a low-rise community with trees, outdoor walkways, easy parking, and a quieter neighborhood feel. At first, the choice feels obvious: pick the prettier unit, better view, or cheaper rent. But the real difference between a high-rise and a garden apartment often appears after move-in, when you are carrying groceries, waiting for elevators, paying amenity fees, dealing with packages, hearing upstairs neighbors, or discovering that the ground-floor unit gets more moisture than expected.
Want to buy a home but worried about all the costs? HUD Homebuying Programs are here to help! They make it easier and cheaper to get into your new home. Here’s why these programs are a game-changer!
The cost of renting an apartment often includes more than just monthly rent. Many renters pay additional fees for services, insurance, and usage-based expenses that may not always be necessary. Understanding which costs are optional or avoidable can help reduce overall housing expenses.