Mound City Fund
Home by Home.

Restoring Homes. Preserving Art. Rebuilding North St. Louis.

Mound City Fund makes charitable grants that help low- to moderate-income homeowners bring vacant and deteriorated homes back to life in underserved neighborhoods across St. Louis City and County.

Vacancy is not free

A vacant home is not a neutral asset waiting for a buyer. It is an ongoing expense borne by the whole community, and in St. Louis the bill has been quantified.

~$66M
Estimated annual fiscal toll of vacancy on the City's operating budget
~24,000
Estimated vacant lots and buildings across St. Louis, about 9,000 of them structures
~9×
Estimated vacancy in majority-Black census tracts compared with majority-white tracts

In many underserved neighborhoods across St. Louis City and County, the cost to rehabilitate a home exceeds its appraised value after the work is done. Lenders cannot underwrite loans against value the market does not yet recognize, and families cannot absorb the shortfall themselves. The result is a market failure: willing owners, viable structures, and no financing path. Read the full economic case.

Built to stack, not compete

St. Louis already has innovative loan products, city repair programs, and a public stabilization program for city-owned buildings. What the ecosystem lacks is the layer beneath them: grant capital at the bottom of the capital stack. A Mound City Fund grant can shrink the second mortgage a Gateway Neighborhood Fund borrower needs, supply the rehab capital a Prop NS purchaser cannot borrow, and complement the repair work of programs like Healthy Home Repair and Rebuilding Together St. Louis. We actively coordinate with lenders, agencies, and community organizations, and we welcome referrals from all of them.

Program documents and policies

The Fund publishes its program guidelines and governing policies so that every applicant, donor, and partner knows exactly how decisions are made and how donated dollars are protected.