The Winners of the Zillow Housing Hackathon Created a Renter Affordability App

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Via inman.com

The HBCU Housing Hackathon was a 7-day virtual competition to challenge students to create and pitch tech solutions to help consumers overcome obstacles in finding a home. The winning team was from Morehouse College

A team of four students from Morehouse College have won first place in Zillow’s first-ever HBCU Housing Hackathon for creating an app that uses machine learning in order to predict rising rent or utility expenses at an address over time and give renters warning about affordability challenges, Zillow announced on Thursday.

For winning first place, the Morehouse students received $20,000, and Zillow donated $25,000 to the College’s computer science program.

The HBCU Housing Hackathon was a seven-day virtual competition to challenge students attending Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) to create and pitch to a panel of judges tech solutions “that align with Zillow’s goal to help consumers overcome obstacles on their journey to find a home.”

The competition was hosted in collaboration with nonprofit and philanthropic organizations United Negro College Fund (UNCF), Black Tech Ventures (BTV) and Amplify 4 Good.

“It’s awesome to conceptualize a project that could help a lot of people and not only win this hackathon and receive prizes that are great for my team, but also help earn a donation for our college,” Paul Locket, a member of the winning team “Househouse” and senior computer science student at Morehouse, said in a statement. “Coming into this, we had a plan, we executed on it and we are so happy we had this amazing opportunity to work and learn with Zillow.”

A total of 49 teams across 17 HBCUs competed in the event. During the final round, six remaining teams gave five-minute virtual presentations to a panel of judges comprised of Zillow and other tech industry leaders.

The first-place Househouse team included Morehouse students Kendall Camp, Grant Commodore, Joshua Curry and Paul Lockett. The group’s “Reliby” app gives users a “stability score” to help make more transparent large increases in living expenses that may be coming down the pike.

“We are incredibly impressed with the ingenuity, passion and leadership the students showed at Zillow’s HBCU Housing Hackathon,” Aldona Clottey, Zillow’s vice president of corporate social responsibility and a competition judge, said in a statement. “It was inspiring to see everyone dig into this challenge and bring their perspective on solutions to some of the problems people face when it comes to renting, buying or selling a home. These students showed us that our future is in great hands and we are proud to support them and the institutions that serve them.”

“Computer science departments at HBCUs specialize in developing technically competent students with a sense of mission and purpose that drives them to innovate,” Alfred R. Watkins,  Ph.D., academic program director for computer science at Morehouse College, said in a statement. “The success of the winning team from Morehouse is an indication the college is working hard to attract, nurture, support, educate and challenge young students to become the tech-savvy leaders this world needs today.”

The second place team, “Team SU,” included Rason Irvin, Nicholas Hardin and Dominique McCraney from Southern University and A&M College.

The team received $12,000 for its “ZPlan,” a program to provide Zillow users, especially those with limited financial literacy or knowledge about the homebuying process, customized assistance in becoming a homeowner, like tailored tips and providing them with listings based on housing data.

Third place team “Aht Aht” from Philander Smith College received $6,000 for its “ZInvest” project, an investment tool to help teach users about high housing costs and help make real estate investing more accessible through tokenization.

 

Christopher Charles spent 6 years in the mortgage industry before moving into the world of digital media. He's helped thousands of families buy and refinance real estate at banks and mortgage companies and now continues that mission through industry-leading content. Chris is known for his expertise in the mortgage & real estate industry and continues to produce content all over the web.

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