✔ Canadian housing context
✔ Designed for rural, remote, and under-resourced communities
✔ Practical, applied, and capacity-focused
Across Canada, communities are being asked to respond to the affordable housing crisis with urgency, often without the internal capacity, sequencing knowledge, or practical tools required to move projects forward.
As a result:
The challenge is rarely commitment.
It is capacity and where to start.

This is not a theoretical overview or a policy-focused training.
The Affordable Housing Course:
Participants learn what happens, when it happens, and why it matters across the full housing development lifecycle.
This course is designed for people who influence housing outcomes even if housing is not their full-time role.
No prior housing development experience is required.
The course follows the full affordable housing development lifecycle, based on our award winning Step-by-Step Guide to Developing Affordable Housing. Expand each section to see what you’ll learn and how it applies in practice.
Understand how affordable housing development works in the Canadian context — and where your role fits.
Assess whether a housing idea is viable before time and money are spent.
Make informed pre-development decisions that reduce risk and control cost.
Understand what it takes to move a project through construction with confidence.
Ensure projects transition into sustainable, well-managed assets.
Understand how impact investing fits into the housing landscape.
Apply course learnings to real-world housing work.
A: Yes. This course is designed for people who influence housing decisions, even if housing is not their full-time role.
A: Approximately six hours, completed at your own pace.
A: Practical. It focuses on real-world decision points, sequencing, and applied tools.
A: Yes. The course is designed with rural, remote, and under-resourced communities in mind.
A: Yes. It is grounded in Canadian housing systems and governance.
A: Yes. Organizations can sponsor cohorts.
February 1, 2025
Homelessness, National Coordinated Access
August 27, 2024
Homelessness
The Rural, Remote and Indigenous Communities’ Responses to Homelessness in Alberta What We Heard Report was published in May 2024 and funded by Homeward Trust Edmonton and the Government of Canada’s Reaching Home: Canada’s Homelessness Strategy.
ViewAugust 26, 2024
Homelessness, National Coordinated Access
The development of the training materials and toolkit builds upon the Housing First philosophy while using a place-based approach along with a person-centred and trauma-informed care lens based on Reconciliation. The was based on a bottom-up, rather than a top-down approach to understanding Coordinated Access through the voices of those with lived experience and the […]
ViewApril 1, 2024
First Nations Data Collection, Homelessness, Indigenous
The purpose of this storytelling tool is to help us take steps to improve the quality of life, housing, and basic needs within our community. Click the buttons below to download/view the resources.
ViewJanuary 1, 2023
Alberta Provincial Estimations, Homelessness
October 1, 2022
Alberta Provincial Estimations, Estimating Rural Homelessness, Homelessness
This step-by-step document has been developed by the Rural Development Network (RDN) for rural communities across Canada that wish to accurately estimate the number of homeless individuals in their community. Click the button below to view the resource as a PDF.
ViewJune 1, 2021
Homelessness
Often, rural and remote communities do not have emergency shelters or supportive/ transitional housing for people experiencing homelessness. In addition, communities may be limited in the resources, staff capacity, trained volunteers, as well as the time needed to implement longer-term responses to homelessness, such as housing or shelter solutions, particularly prior to the onset of […]
ViewWorkshops & Training
Welcoming newcomers to a rural community is not only important to fill critical skill gaps in the workplace, but to create a welcoming and inclusive environment for everyone. The Rural Immigration initiative at RDN is a response to the emerging needs of rural communities to build their capacity to welcome, retain, and integrate newcomers successfully. […]
ViewWorkshops & Training
By embracing age-friendly principles, rural communities can enhance quality of life, promote social cohesion, and drive sustainable development. Our workshop covers the development and implementation of an age-friendly action plan.
ViewNewcomers, Rural Immigration, Workshops & Training
Our customizable training is tailored for service providers and municipalities. It focuses on teaching strategies to effectively meet newcomers needs and foster welcoming communities.
View