Foreword
Richard P. Nathan
Preface
1. A Groundbreaking in Brooklyn
New York City--Graveyard of Good Intentions
The Elusive Idea of Partnership
David Rockefeller and Ed Koch -- Wary Partners
2. Postwar New York: The Radiant City Meets Jane Jacobs
3. New York: City on the Ropes
4. After the Crisis: Groping for an Agenda
5. Moving Toward Partnership
Launching the Housing Partnership
6. In Search of a Blueprint
Housing Partnership -- Getting Organized
The "Implementation Plan"
New Homes for New York: Genesis of a Program
7. The Money Chase
Business Says No
Playing the Pierce Connection
Goign for a UDAG
The Ford Foundation Says No
8. The Elusive UDAG
The Project Fee Issue
Hitting the State
9. Getting to Production: Ceremonies and Realities
A Groundbreaking in Bedford-Stuyvesant
A Ribbon-cutting in Harlem
High Optimism, Slow Start
The Elusive "Good" Sites
Big Projections, Big Shortfalls
10. The Koch Housing Plan: Reading for New "Partners"
"Nobody Trusted Anybody Anywhere"
REBNY Strikes Out
11. Production Breakthrough
"Whose Program Is New Homes?"
The New Homeowners
The Nehemiah Plan: A Competing Implementation Model
12. Beyond New Homes: Expanding the Partnership Agenda
The Neighborhood Builder Program
A Non-"Minority" Minority Program
No Shortcuts
Rebuilding Neighborhood Economies
Neighborhood Entrepreneurs
The New York City Investment Fund
Prospects -- The Daunting 1990s Agenda
13. Community Development: The Making of a New Urban Policy Paradigm
Beyond the Anecdotal Success Story
The Community Reinvestment Act
Community Development Corporations -- "CDCs"
The Intermediaries
The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
CDBG and HOME
Vacant Urban Land
14. Urban Homeownership and the Future of Cities
Subsidizing Homeownership: The Equity Issue
A Shorter Way Home
Appendices
A. NYC Housing Partnership Projects
B. NYC Housing Partnership Housing Activity by Borough
C. NYC Housing Partnership Development Process
Notes