In The News
As the Preservation Resource Center works to bring our hard-earned Hurricane Katrina recovery experience to so many homeowners who lost everything earlier this month, we look back at how far we have come in the past 11 years.
In The News
Education and Outreach program director Suzanne Blaum took to the airwaves to discuss the upcoming Great Neighborhood SELLabration.
In The News
The Preservation Resource Center and Rebuilding Together New Orleans are dedicated to supporting our neighbors who have been affected by the historic floods of 2016.
In The News
Rebuilding Together New Orleans is partnering with Shell to help Louisiana residents devastated by this month’s historic floods.
In The News
The Federal Emergency Management Agency offers a detailed look at what you should expect to happen after you apply for FEMA aid.
In The News
Catherine Crowell of Rebuilding Together New Orleans took to the airwaves on August 22 to offer expert guidance to victims of this month’s floods who are beginning to gut their homes.
In The News
Rebuilding Together New Orleans sent experienced flood recovery workers to St. Amant on Saturday, August 20, to help clean out flooded homes.
In The News
The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes offers a great guide to disaster recovery called Rebuild Healthy Homes.
In The News
The Federal Emergency Management Agency put out a Fact Sheet on August 19, 2016, outlining some things all residents of Louisiana affected by the recent flooding should keep in mind.
In The News
Ladies in Red 2016 was a smashing success. Check out these great images from the event by Liz Jurey.
In The News
Future Hall of Fame quarterback Drew Brees put down his football to pick up a paintbrush at a Rebuilding Together New Orleans build at a Boys and Girls Club on May 10, 2016.
April 2016
Plans are in the works to relocate a Native American tribe that has been living on an island on Louisiana’s vanishing coast for over 200 years. The people of the island are facing a thorny preservation question: how do you keep an entire culture from washing away?