
A developer who manufactures homeless housing on an assembly line A suburban bureaucrat who roguishly embraces density in response to the threat of climate change. A nun who tries to outmaneuver private equity investors by amassing a multimillion-dollar portfolio of affordable homes.


A teenaged girl who leads her apartment complex against their rent-raising landlord. To tell this new story of housing, Conor Dougherty follows a struggling math teacher who builds a political movement dedicated to ending single-family-house neighborhoods. The adage that California is a glimpse of the nation’s future has become a cautionary tale.

Nowhere is this more visible than in the San Francisco Bay Area, where fleets of private buses ferry software engineers past the tarp-and-plywood shanties where the homeless make their homes. Today, however, punishing rents and the increasingly prohibitive cost of ownership have turned housing into the foremost symbol of inequality and an economy gone wrong. Spacious and affordable homes used to be the hallmark of American prosperity.
