
Low Income Housing
1 Amethyst Ct, 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
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
Coatesville Towers Has 90 Units Available
Regency Park Has 125 Units Available
Freedom Village at Brandywine Has 1 Units Available
A clean apartment can still be hiding expensive dirt. That is the part most renters and buyers do not realize during move in. The floors look vacuumed. The counters feel wiped. The bathroom mirror is shiny. The leasing office hands over the keys, the move in checklist looks simple, and everyone acts like the unit is ready for a fresh start. But surface clean is not the same as truly clean. The dirt that costs money is rarely sitting in the middle of the living room. It hides under appliances, inside vents, behind toilets, along window tracks, under sink cabinets, inside filters, beneath old rugs, and around places nobody wants to kneel down and inspect on move in day.
Trying to understand income limits for HUD Public Housing? Here are six tips to help you navigate the process!
A high walk score can make a neighborhood look healthier than it really is. You open the listing, see a big number, and feel relieved. The apartment is “very walkable.” The house is “close to daily errands.” The map is covered with little icons that make the area look convenient, connected, and full of options. Suddenly, the location feels safer to choose because a website has turned the neighborhood into a clean, confident score. Then you move in and realize the nearest “grocery” is a gas station with energy drinks, chips, lottery tickets, and one tired banana near the register. That is the trap. Walkability and real food access are not the same thing. A neighborhood can score well online because there are businesses nearby, while still leaving residents with weak access to fresh produce, affordable groceries, full-service supermarkets, and everyday food choices that make life easier.
Life is always surprising and you don't know forever what happens next moment. You just were told to restructuring the company in the aid plan of section 8. As the fear of unemployment hit me at once, you started to worry: does this affect my housing aid? Don't worry, let's look at this together. What kind of help can you get after you get lost?