Affordable Housing Course

A practical, self-paced course grounded in the Canadian housing system — designed to move projects from concept to delivery.

✔ Canadian housing context
 ✔ Designed for rural, remote, and under-resourced communities
 ✔ Practical, applied, and capacity-focused

Why Affordable Housing Projects Stall — Even When Funding Exists

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:

  • Housing projects stall at the planning and construction phases
  • Feasibility and risk are identified too late in the process
  • Funding timelines don’t align with project readiness
  • Consultants are hired reactively instead of proactively

The challenge is rarely commitment.

It is capacity and where to start.

What Makes This Course Different

This is not a theoretical overview or a policy-focused training.

The Affordable Housing Course:

  • Focuses on real-world decision points, not abstract concepts
  • Reflects Canadian housing systems, funding environments, and governance realities
  • Emphasizes sequencing, readiness, and risk not just end results
  • Supports applied learning that can be used immediately to develop housing

Participants learn what happens, when it happens, and why it matters across the full housing development lifecycle.

Who This Course Is For

This course is designed for people who influence housing outcomes even if housing is not their full-time role.

  • Municipal and regional staff involved in housing, planning, or community development
  • Nonprofit and affordable housing organization leaders and staff
  • Indigenous organizations and community practitioners
  • Rural, remote, and northern community leaders
  • Consultants and partners new to affordable housing development

No prior housing development experience is required.

Course Content

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.

Module 1: Foundations of Affordable Housing Development

Understand how affordable housing development works in the Canadian context — and where your role fits.

  • Key concepts and terminology
  • Roles of municipalities, nonprofits, funders, and partners
  • RDN’s approach to housing development

Module 2: Initiation: From Idea to Feasible Concept

Assess whether a housing idea is viable before time and money are spent.

  • Project concept and organizational readiness
  • Housing need and demand assessments
  • Early-stage feasibility and risk
  • Business case development

Module 3: Planning: Turning Feasibility Into a Real Plan

Make informed pre-development decisions that reduce risk and control cost.

  • Planning and development process
  • Timelines and work plans
  • Consulting team roles
  • Designing sustainable housing

Module 4: Execution: From Planning to Shovel-Ready

Understand what it takes to move a project through construction with confidence.

  • Construction delivery models
  • Budget management
  • Governance and reporting
  • Authority to occupy

Module 5: Closure & Operations: Long-Term Success

Ensure projects transition into sustainable, well-managed assets.

  • Project close-out
  • Property management and leasing
  • Ongoing cost planning

Module 6: Impact Investing and Affordable Housing

Understand how impact investing fits into the housing landscape.

  • Role of impact investing in housing
  • Canadian context

Module 7: Bringing It All Together

Apply course learnings to real-world housing work.

  • Integrating tools into day-to-day decisions
  • Supporting future projects

Course Format and Delivery

  • Format: Asynchronous, self-paced online course
  • Time Commitment: Approximately 6 hours
  • Delivery: Interactive modules with applied tools and resources
  • Engagement: Optional cohort discussions and Q&A sessions with the SHI team

    Designed to fit alongside full-time roles.

What Participants Gain

  • Understand the full affordable housing development process
  • Identify readiness gaps and risks early
  • Engage more effectively with funders and consultants
  • Contribute meaningfully to housing initiatives
  • Apply tools directly to real projects
This course builds practical housing capacity not just awareness.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: I’m not a housing developer is this course still relevant?

A: Yes. This course is designed for people who influence housing decisions, even if housing is not their full-time role.

Q: How much time does the course take?

A: Approximately six hours, completed at your own pace.

Q: Is this course practical or theoretical?

A: Practical. It focuses on real-world decision points, sequencing, and applied tools.

Q: Is this relevant to rural or smaller communities?

A: Yes. The course is designed with rural, remote, and under-resourced communities in mind.

Q: Is this course specific to Canada?

A: Yes. It is grounded in Canadian housing systems and governance.

Q: Can organizations sponsor participants?

A: Yes. Organizations can sponsor cohorts.

Ready to Build Housing Capacity That Leads to Projects on the Ground?

Register Here! $349

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RDN set up Middlesex County for success by delivering quality website content and educational graphics for our homelessness communications plan. The content was provided in templates that were easy to use and adapt as our needs changed and revisions were needed. RDN also created branding for the project with a new logo, tagline and matching graphics. The communication plan outlined how to implement the communications through the various channels, including social media, to reach target audiences. The plan also provided evaluation metrics for our communications goals, so we could measure the success of our campaigns. We appreciated how RDN listened to our needs and delivered exactly what we needed and more.


Joe Winser, Director of Human Services, Middlesex County

Homelessness, Shared Services

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We engaged RDN to complete a full review and update of our organizational policies at a time when we simply didn’t have the internal capacity to take it on. From start to finish, they were easy to work with, asked thoughtful and insightful questions, and delivered exactly what we needed—on time and on budget. Their expertise and efficiency made a complex process feel manageable, and we could not have done it without them. We would absolutely recommend RDN to any organization looking for knowledgeable, dependable, and professional support.


Stephanie Miller, Lloydminster Region Housing Group

Shared Services

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The Shelter Pulse Database Project enabled rural and remote shelters to work together in providing trauma-informed policies and procedures for violence against women shelters in Canada. The experts from the field that gathered to share their knowledge to the Shelter Pulse Database make this new tool invaluable. Under the leadership of the Rural Development Network, many partner shelters contributed to the outcome.


Cindy Easton – Mountain Rose Women’s Shelter Association (MRWSA)

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As a previous participant in the Enabling Housing Choice project with RDN, we are excited to be making progress on key recommendations outlined in RDN’s report – Attracting Diverse Housing Development in Mayerthorpe. This report has been critical to understanding our community’s diverse housing needs, and has equipped us with  community-informed insights on how to address these needs.


Karen St. Martin – Town of Mayerthorpe

Enabling Housing Choice, Housing

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Understanding the significance of having people with lived experience and Indigenous people being at the tables of all conversations – especially those with decision making authority. The value of community, and looking after ourselves so we can serve others. That there is a community of people who I can learn from and share with in my work to serve my community.


Training Participant

National Coordinated Access

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This training was so invigorating, refreshing and very much needed. The intimate setting, I feel, made a huge difference. We left the event with a deeper understanding and a strengthened network. We were reminded to focus on the capacity that we have, not necessarily all we would love to be able to do, and take it in steps. Thank you, thank you, thank you!


Coordinated Access Training Participant

National Coordinated Access

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Creating a sense of home is so much more than just a building and the Innovation Fund gave SHI and the YWCA creative space to think differently about our approach to design. Living in Banff National Park also strongly influenced our commitment to net zero targets. Belonging, security, connection, affordability, community pride-these are all factors that have influenced how we developed the Courtyard project.


Connie MacDonald- Chief Executive Officer, YWCA Banff

Housing

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We are forever grateful to work together on this insight for our project. If not for the support from RDN on this we would not be where we are today! Our dream was to attain transitional, affordable and market housing in our community. This turned into a goal and now a reality. This housing continuum of care will be able to meet people’s needs while recognizing what their housing realities mean in a rural perspective. RDN has walked along with us and been able to connect and answer many questions, concerns and thoughts during this time.


Rebecca Wells – Executive Director, Wellspring Family Resource Center

Housing

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We brainstormed and some said nature and multiculturalism because we are a multicultural building, with people from many different countries and ethnicities here. So we wanted something to represent that, and the mural will make us a landmark in the community as there i s alot of foot-traffic in the community.


St. Joachim Tenant on the Community Mural

Placemaking for Inclusion

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There were people there who don’t normally show up to different functions. Everybody was doing something somewhere and were happy to participate and help others


St. Joachim Tenant on the Mural-Painting Event

Placemaking for Inclusion

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The atmosphere was quite welcoming for everyone. One person said they had been here for 20 years and this was the best event they had seen. The busyness of the room encouraged cliques to break up and this increase mingling


St. Joachim Tenant on the Mural-Painting Event

Placemaking for Inclusion

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It really brought the community together. Overall it was a great success. We also really enjoyed the painting, it was a great opportunity for those who had never painted before.


Senior Tenant, La Société des Manoirs Saint-Joachim

Placemaking for Inclusion

Relevant Resources

February 1, 2025

Coordinated Access Toolkit

Homelessness, National Coordinated Access

August 27, 2024

Responses to Homelessness in Alberta

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.

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August 26, 2024

Guide to Implementing Coordinated Access in Smaller Communities

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 […]

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April 1, 2024

First Nations Data Collection Training Guide  

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.

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January 1, 2023

Alberta Homelessness Estimations Reports

Alberta Provincial Estimations, Homelessness

October 1, 2022

Estimating Rural Homelessness

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.

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June 1, 2021

Developing Emergency Mat Programs 

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 […]

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