They saved to buy their own mobile homes. Then the land beneath them was sold to an investor.

First: Photos of Carolina Velarde’s family. Last: Carolina stands outside of the mobile home that she grew up in. She and her two sisters sold the home after a new landlord informed them that their lease would not be renewed and they had two months to leave.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Empty lots at Congress Mobile Home Park in South Austin on Aug. 16. New apartment buildings have been springing up around the mobile home park in recent years.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Sisters Maribel, Carolina and Edith Velarde carry boxes with their belongings to a temporary storage unit in South Austin on Aug. 19.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

First: Carolina Velarde reads instructions for moving into her new apartment on Aug. 16. Next: Carolina and her older sister, Maribel, load moving boxes into their father’s van outside their home. Last: Movers carry a mattress out of the Velarde home on Aug. 29.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Sofia Ramirez, 43, stands in her mobile home after it was moved to a new lot in Manchaca, south of Austin, on Sept. 15.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

“I have to start all over”

Tenants attend a meeting with a group called Building and Strengthening Tenant Action, or BASTA, at Congress Mobile Home Park on Aug. 23.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Members of BASTA outlined goals for the meeting, which included addressing next steps for possible legal action and options for financial aid for the tenants.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

First: A woman sheds a tear as people share memories of their neighbor, Greg Hopkins, during a vigil in his memory at Congress Mobile Home Park on Aug. 3. Last: A photo of Hopkins sits outside his trailer next to flowers brought by his neighbors. Neighbors said Hopkins died by suicide on July 23 after struggling to find a new place to live.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

The empty living room of Sofia Ramirez’s mobile home, which had been split in half to be moved. Residents were given short notice to leave the mobile home park after it was sold to a new owner.

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Jack Myers for The Texas Tribune

First: Sofia Ramirez looks out the front door of her mobile home at its new location in Manchaca on Sept. 15. Last: Some of the last remaining flowers in Ramirez’s garden at Congress Mobile Home Park. Most of her plants died or were uprooted when her home was moved to a new location.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Paola Valdez Lopez looks through messages from potential buyers for her home as her husband and children gather with her in the kitchen.

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Evan L’Roy for The Texas Tribune

Pushed out

Valdez Lopez took three of her four dogs — Canelo, Queen and Penny — to the Austin Animal Center and give them up for adoption when she realized it would be hard to find an apartment that would allow so many pets.

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Evan L’Roy for The Texas Tribune

A family leaves after touring the mobile home that Valdez Lopez and Orozco Aguilar had advertised for sale.

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Evan L’Roy for The Texas Tribune

Valdez Lopez and her husband give a tour of the mobile home on Aug. 4 to another family interested in buying it.

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Evan L’Roy for The Texas Tribune

Valdez Lopez and Orozco Aguilar hand out drinks to Valdez Lopez’s nephew and the workers moving their home at Congress Mobile Home Park on Aug. 29.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

First: Movers fix the tires under the family’s mobile home before they attempt to tow it out. Several tires were flat and needed to be replaced. Next: A sign that was inside the home sits on the ground under debris during the move. Last: Orozco Aguilar watches as movers tow the mobile home away. They sold it and moved in with another family member in Buda until they can find an apartment of their own.

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Evan L’Roy/The Texas Tribune

Valdez Lopez and Orozco Aguilar look at the debris left behind after their home was towed out of its lot at Congress Mobile Home Park.

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Evan L’Roy for The Texas Tribune