Residential Real Estate
Aug 29, 2025

Building Homes, Building Futures 

Sponsored Content provided by Marlowe Foster - President and CEO, Cape Fear Habitat for Humanity


September is a season of fresh starts. Children return to classrooms, sharpened pencils in hand, and our community turns its attention to learning, growth, and the future. At Cape Fear Habitat for Humanity, we see every school year as a reminder that education and housing are deeply connected—and that the stability of a home can shape a child’s path for decades. 

Research confirms what families tell us every day: when children grow up in safe, stable, and affordable homes, they are more likely to succeed in school, graduate on time, and go on to higher education and better-paying jobs. In one well-known study, children who moved into affordable homes in mixed-income neighborhoods were significantly more likely to attend college and earn higher wages as adults. Stability at home quite literally changes the trajectory of a child’s life. 

That’s why our mission is both urgent and forward-looking. Over the next five years, Cape Fear Habitat has committed to building 85 homes. Each of these homes represents a family no longer forced to make impossible choices between rent, food, or school supplies. Each home gives children the quiet space to study, parents the stability to plan, and entire neighborhoods the strength to thrive. 

At the same time, we are actively embarking on an even larger vision: a mixed-income development that will bring families from different walks of life together in one community. Mixed-income neighborhoods don’t just add housing units—they create opportunity. They have been shown to improve educational outcomes, support healthier families, and increase long-term upward mobility. These neighborhoods take time—seven years at minimum, sometimes up to a decade—to move from vision to reality. But like education itself, the return is worth the investment—and we are beginning that work now. 

Housing is a long game. It takes patience, persistence, and the partnership of our entire community--including businesses, municipalities, individuals, civic organizations, faith organizations, foundations and other nonprofits--to make it possible. But the payoff is generational. When we help a family achieve affordable homeownership today, we don’t just give them keys to a house—we open doors to a brighter future for their children, their grandchildren, and for the health of our entire region. 

This fall, as our children settle back into classrooms, I invite our business community and neighbors alike to stand with us. Join us in building homes, investing in mixed-income communities, and making sure every child in the Cape Fear region has the stability to learn, grow, and succeed. Together, we can do more than build houses—we can build futures that last. 

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