Employers
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- lowernine.org
Nonprofit / Museums
Rebuilding Together New OrleansNonprofit / Museums
- Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater New Orleans
Nonprofit / Museums
Crowley Holdings, LLCConstruction / Skilled Trades
Louisiana SPCANonprofit / Museums
- The Ehrhardt Group
Marketing / PR
GBP DirectOther
- bargeboard
Construction / Skilled Trades
ThreeSixtyEightDigital Media, Software, and IT
Minacore InvestmentsReal Estate
Ville Ste. Marie Senior Living CommunityAdministrative and Support Services
- Ogden Museum of Southern Art
Nonprofit / Museums
- Zekaja, LLC
Administrative and Support Services
- FSC Interactive
Marketing / PR
- Pete's Papercrafts
Business Organizations
School Food and Nutrition Services
iSeatz, Inc.Digital Media, Software, and IT
- MDL Enterprises
Waste Management
- unCommon Construction
Nonprofit / Museums
- Baby T-Rex Farms
HRI Hospitality
lowernine.org
Nonprofit / Museums
Orleans Parish
1-5 Employees
lowernine.org is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to the long-term recovery of New Orleans’ historic Lower Ninth Ward following Hurricane Katrina and the levee breaches of 2005. We are actively engaged in the long-term recovery of the hardest-hit, slowest-recovering community in the Gulf Coast region. We use volunteer labor under skilled supervision to rebuild and repair the homes of pre-Katrina residents of the neighborhood.
The 2005 population of the Lower Ninth Ward (prior to the levee breaches) was 98.1% African-American, and over 60% lived below the area mean income. Despite this, we enjoyed one of the highest rates of Black homeownership in the nation, because our residents were the descendents of some of New Orleans’ first free people of color. Many owned their homes outright, as they had been passed down from generation to generation.
Volunteers and skilled staff rebuild flood-damaged properties, bringing the cost of construction down to approximately 30% of open market rate. Since 2007, lowernine.org has completed 89 full rebuilds and more than 300 housing repairs, such as siding and roof replacements. These efforts have brought more pre-Katrina families back to this community than any other organization.
