Sweat Equity
Cooperative House-Building in Newfoundland ,
1920–1974
"The lack of decent urban housing — a problem neither new nor unique to Newfoundland — was widely recognized during the twentieth century. After numerous piecemeal attempts to find a solution, a remarkable and successful government-supported “sweat equity” program was established in 1952, where homes were built cooperatively and, upon completion, became owner-occupied. This labor (about 2,000 hours per man) was accepted in lieu of a down payment.
"Tracing public policy during the Commission of Government and
the early days of the Smallwood administration, and sourced from archival
material and interviews with surviving members of the cooperatives, Sweat
Equity outlines how people in Newfoundland tried to solve the housing shortage
themselves by building more than 500 houses in the 1950s and 1960s.
Available online from the Institute for Social and Economic Research or in bookstores.
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