About Us

Overview


How we are

Helping our Community

23129

Public Housing and
HCVP Families

268

Families assisted by HANO’s
Homeownership Program

11

HANO Communities
across New Orleans

The history of public housing in New Orleans is complex, marked by economic and social challenges while providing much-needed housing and a sense of community for this city’s poverty-stricken. With the passage of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, the federal government began funding the construction and operations of housing for low-income households. The first Public Housing development was constructed shortly thereafter, in the 1940’s, in a manner similar to the government-funded communities of that era. Notably, they were built as low-rise red brick structures in superblock configurations. While attractive in its day, by the 1970s, public housing in New Orleans had deteriorated to the point where units were no longer habitable under basic living standards.

Historical Picture of HANO Apartments

In the early 1990s, HUD introduced the HOPE VI grant program that funded the redevelopment of distressed public housing sites into traditionally designed neighborhoods for a variety of income groups. This model encouraged higher quality construction, and the design of street patterns that would integrate the site into the fabric of the surrounding neighborhood. HANO and other housing authorities across the country contracted private developers and property managers to enhance the long-term viability of these new communities. Since the late 1990s, HANO has redeveloped several of its public housing sites under this model.

Much of HANO’s housing stock was destroyed in 2005 as a result of Hurricane Katrina. After assessing the damage, HANO undertook a massive redevelopment program to replace and modernize its housing communities. With cost estimates exceeding $1 billion to merely renovate the 1940’s-era buildings, HUD authorized funding for the total demolition and development of the four main public housing sites - Lafitte, St. Bernard, B.W. Cooper and C.J. Peete (known as “the Big Four”)- along with the continuation of previously started redevelopment activities at Desire, Fischer, St. Thomas and Guste. In 2011 HANO in partnership with the City of New Orleans was awarded a $30.5 million HUD Choice Neighborhoods Initiative (CNI) grant to transform the Iberville Public Housing Development while preserving a percentage of its original buildings. The grant also included the provision of enhanced supportive services to its residents and the addition of commercial retail within the community.

Historical Picture of HANO Apartments and Tenants

HANO’s overall portfolio is comprised of ten large-scale housing communities as well as scattered site properties dispersed throughout the city. HANO’s communities include The Estates [formerly Desire], New Florida, River Garden [formerly St. Thomas], William J. Fischer, Harmony Oaks [formerly C.J. Peete], Marrero Commons [formerly B.W. Cooper], Guste Homes, Columbia Parc [formerly St. Bernard], Bienville Basin [formerly Iberville], and Faubourg Lafitte.

The Housing Choice Voucher Program (HCVP), that provides Section 8 vouchers to eligible families, currently administers more than 18,000 tenant and project-based vouchers.