About

Co-op Casa is a Tucson-based nonprofit cooperative working to make permanently affordable housing a reality for working people in central Tucson neighborhoods.

Our mission

Co-op Casa builds permanently affordable cooperative housing in central Tucson — homes that give working people the stability, equity, and community of homeownership without the barriers, risk, or expiration date.

We are a nonprofit cooperative governed by residents, workers, and community leaders. There are no investors seeking returns. Every design decision — from Passive House construction to rooftop solar to courtyard cluster layouts — serves the goal of permanent affordability for the people who live here.

Our team

Mark Goehring

CEO & Co-founder

Dunbar/Spring resident and founder of Common Good Management Services, a cooperative business which provides property management for housing co-ops and land trusts across the country. Mark has managed and consulted with co-ops for twenty years. He was also co-founder and publisher of Tucson Weekly in the 1980s.

markgoehring@coopcasa.coop

Ruffin Slater

Co-founder

CEO of Better World Forever, a nonprofit housing development organization. Ruffin has been part of several co-op and affordable housing organizations. For 35 years he was CEO of Weaver Street Market, the largest worker and consumer food co-op in the country.

ruffin@betterworldforever.org

Advisors

Jonathan Bean

Design Advisor

Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Arizona and a Certified Passive House Consultant.

Lexy Wellott

Planning Advisor

The Planning Center. Additional advisors focused on design and implementation of Co-op Casa are being recruited.

Resources

Housing Crisis

Pima County Comprehensive Housing Study — August 2025
The definitive regional data on Tucson’s housing crisis. Pima County will need nearly 116,000 new units by 2045 — over 60% for households earning below 60% AMI.
Download PDF →

City of Tucson — 2025 Maximum Income, Rent & Purchase Price Schedule
Official HUD-based income limits and affordable rent/purchase price thresholds for Tucson. Area Median Income for a 4-person household: $96,100.
Download PDF →

Housing Affordability Strategy for Tucson (HAST) — January 2025 Update
The City of Tucson’s 10-point policy framework for affordable housing, adopted by Mayor and Council in 2021 and updated in 2025.
Download PDF →

Middle Housing Resources

Missing Middle Housing
The definitive resource on house-scale buildings with multiple units — duplexes, fourplexes, courtyard buildings — compatible in scale and form with single-family neighborhoods. Co-op Casa builds missing middle.
Visit missingmiddlehousing.com →

City of Tucson — Middle Housing Ordinance
Tucson’s new middle housing regulations explained by city planners. Essential background for understanding the regulatory environment Co-op Casa is building within.
Visit the Middle Housing hub →

Cooperatives — Building a Better World

Learn more about the cooperative model that inspired Co-op Casa.

More cooperative resources coming soon.

Sustainability

Resources on climate, water, and conservation coming soon.

Press & coverage

Press coverage links coming soon.

Financial model

Co-op Casa’s financial model demonstrates how cooperative nonprofit ownership makes permanent affordability possible — without subsidies that expire, investors who extract returns, or residents who bear market risk.

Financial model details coming soon.