Ethan Moore and Carolina Trevino Guajardo are accustomed to unsolicited mail offers to buy their 1950s rambler in Edina, where hundreds of houses have been demolished and replaced with more expensive ones.
Most of those offers land in the recycling bin. Not this spring when they received one from the city itself. It read, "Do you want to sell your house, but not for a teardown?"
The timing was perfect. The couple are moving to Maryland, so they contacted the city, which is working with a nonprofit that aims to sell some of the city's most affordable houses to lower-income buyers rather than developers.
"We'd rather see this home go to a family and not get torn down," said Moore.
With moderately priced houses on the verge of extinction, Edina's housing authority earlier this year sent thousands of unsolicited offers to owners of the most affordable houses in the city encouraging them to sell to a local nonprofit that then resells houses to working-class families for significantly less than they might otherwise pay.
"We needed to suss them out and find out who was interested in that option," said Stephanie Hawkinson, Edina's affordable housing development manager. "We needed to be more proactive."
The median sale price of a house in Edina during February was $540,000, an increase of more than $100,000 in just a year, according to the Minneapolis Area Realtors. Options for entry-level buyers there are scarce: Fewer than 30 properties listed on Zillow are priced at less than $300,000; all of them are one- or two-bedroom condos or townhouses.
While the Twin Cities housing market has flourished during the recession, a growing swath of would-be buyers are missing out on the lowest mortgage rates in a generation because they're getting priced out of the market.