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    Home»Investments»Hamilton affordable housing project looks for investments big and small with launch of community bonds
    Investments

    Hamilton affordable housing project looks for investments big and small with launch of community bonds

    November 18, 2025


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    For a new affordable housing project, a non-profit builder is turning to Hamilton residents to help get it off the ground. 

    On Dec. 3, anyone who is able can invest in “community bonds” for a 164-unit building on King Street East. 

    It’s among the first projects by Gather Housing Communities — launched in May as part of social housing provider Indwell’s “family” of companies, said Michael Brathwaite, senior associate of impact investing. 

    The minimum investment is $1,000 over three, five or seven years, said Brathwaite. Rates of return range from 3.75 to 4.85 per cent depending on the amount and length of maturity. 

    “The beauty of the community bond is it really is designed to be accessible to a huge portion of your community,” Brathwaite said. 

    “It does get people able to contribute to positive social projects and feel like they’re doing something.” 

    Filling the ‘missing middle’

    Gather Housing is looking to fill the “missing middle” of affordable housing — geared to people who are working but earning less than Ontario’s median income of $90,000, he said. 

    For its first Hamilton project, its goal is to raise $15 million within two years to cover pre-construction costs such as the design work and city approvals, he said. 

    The apartment building at 1907 King St. E. will be 10 storeys and most rental rates will cost 30 per cent of the household’s income, said Brathwaite. A third of units will be eligible for city subsidies to make them “extra” affordable. 

    Traditional financing for non-profit housing is “very expensive,” or banks are unwilling to provide any, Brathwaite said. And federal and provincial funding is usually available only once a site is ready for construction. 

    Government programs usually reimburse pre-construction costs afterwards, which Indwell and Gather Housing can use to replace the bond financing, freeing up that capital to get started on more projects, Brathwaite said. 

    “We’ve found community bonds are a really great way to involve supporters, raise funds and get these projects on track to their long-term [government] financing.” 

    Research before investing important: expert

    Indwell did its first community bond program in Hamilton in 2024 to great success, Brathwaite said. It raised its $5 million goal, plus an extra million dollars, from 96 individuals and corporations. 

    The money went towards pre-construction costs for four affordable, supportive housing projects — Acorn Flats, Century Manor, Ottawa Street Apartments and Stonehouse Apartments. 

    WATCH | How social bonds are being used to pay for affordable housing:

    Affordable housing projects skip banks, look to community for funding

    As Canada’s affordable housing crisis drags on, some non-profits are borrowing directly from neighbours to bankroll rental unit construction through a new financial tool called ‘community bonds.’

    Now the projects are almost ready to start building, he said.  

    Community bond programs are gaining popularity in Canada for affordable housing, as well as music venues and renewable energy projects. 

    A portfolio manager, Patti Dolan, told CBC News last year that people need to research the organization before investing to ensure there’s a source of cash flow. She noted community bonds aren’t independently evaluated by credit rating agencies. 

    In Gather Housing’s case, that cash flow is through the government funding it plans to eventually receive, which doesn’t have to be paid back. 

    Nearly a year ago, Hamilton’s housing secretariat Justin Lewis said his office is looking at creating its own municipal bond program. 

    Lewis said in an email Tuesday that staff will soon be looking at whether a “social debenture framework” could work in Hamilton, as it has in Toronto.

    More updates are expected in 2026, he said.



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