Example Output • Agent Skills

Municipal Housing Partnership Fit

This illustrative example shows how the skill can frame a public-sector housing partnership conversation. It is not public-policy, zoning, legal, financing, or development advice.

Sample user prompt

"Our city wants more high-quality housing near a commercial corridor. We have a publicly owned parcel and are considering a development partner. What should we prepare before talking with Wangard?"

Partnership-fit snapshot

Promising, needs groundwork. A city-owned parcel near a commercial corridor may align with Wangard's public focus on multifamily, mixed-use, community alignment, and long-term operations. The next step is to define the public goal, site constraints, process expectations, and partnership role before asking any developer to respond.

Community objective summary

The municipality appears to be seeking housing choice, corridor reinvestment, potential tax-base growth, and a development partner who can help translate local housing goals into a feasible project concept.

Suggested prep list

  • Parcel map, ownership status, survey, zoning, future land-use guidance, and known title constraints.
  • Infrastructure details: utilities, stormwater, access, road improvements, parking, and environmental history.
  • Housing goals: market-rate, workforce, mixed-income, senior, downtown activation, employer housing, or mixed-use placemaking.
  • Public tools or constraints: TIF, grants, public land contribution, parking policy, design standards, density expectations, and public process timeline.
  • Stakeholder list: city staff, elected officials, CDA/RDA, county, neighborhood groups, employers, utilities, and community partners.

Suggested Wangard path

Start with Wangard's Multifamily, Development, Mixed Use, Case Studies, and Contact pages.

Responsible-use note

This example is informational only and does not provide legal, zoning, tax, financing, public-policy, securities, valuation, engineering, environmental, or development advice.