
Low Income Housing
100 Harlan Dr, 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
210 Fleetwood St Has 1 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
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
Have you ever noticed why some communities always thrive while others seem stagnant? The answer might lie in HUD community assistance! These supports provided by HUD are not just about financial aid; they are comprehensive help and resource sharing. Let's see how these aids are transforming communities!
Have you ever been frustrated by your HUD application being rejected? Don't worry! Today, we will discuss practical tips to improve your HUD application approval rate and get you one step closer to success.
HUD helps you seize every opportunity to change your life!
The house looks charming. Original hardwood floors. Mature trees. A quiet street. A finished basement. The inspection report mentions old systems, but nothing terrifying. You are already imagining the backyard patio, garden beds, and weekend barbecue. Then someone asks one question that can destroy the entire deal: “Was this home ever heated with oil?” That question matters because many older U.S. homes once used heating oil stored in tanks. Some tanks were inside basements. Some were above ground. Some were buried in the yard and later forgotten. If an underground oil tank leaked, the cleanup can become an environmental, legal, insurance, financing, and resale nightmare.