Ahwahnee Conference_Building Livable Communities
Transcription
Ahwahnee Conference_Building Livable Communities
Looking to the Future: Sustaining Communities with INFILL Local Government Commission Ahwahnee Conference 2012 March 17, 2012 Meea Kang Domus Development, LLC • Mixed-use • Affordable • Integrated services • Fit into communities & neighborhoods • Infill California Infill Builders Association • Non-profit trade group • Great projects and neighborhoods in existing towns/cities • Make it easier, faster to design, fund & build • State and local levels Lincoln Court BEFORE “Neighbors claim Hillcrest Motel is frequented by drug dealers and prostitutes.” Lincoln Court Oakland, California • 82 units of housing for extremely-low & very-low income seniors. • 30% set aside for seniors with disabilities. • Provision of onsite services makes it a model for supportive senior housing. • Infill development along transit rich corridor, near established neighborhood offering grocery, shopping, library, park etc). Lincoln Court Oakland, California • CEQA Class 32: Infill Exemption. • Received all entitlements and completed design review in 6 months. • City was not demanding and costly/time consuming mitigation measures were not required. • Infrastructure was already in place. • Bold & assertive leadership offered clearer path for entitlements. Lincoln Court Oakland, California Central courtyard for resident activities Lincoln Court • 82 senior apartments • 30% with disabilities • On-site senior center • Computer center • Life enrichment classes • Healthy lunch program Lincoln Court AFTER Neighborhood crime down 40% Spurred revitalization of entire Dimond district Siena Court Pittsburg, California • Located in downtown Pittsburg, in the heart of historic Old Town • The City of Pittsburg wants to see the revitalization of Old Town and provision of affordable housing options. City worked closely with developer and was supportive of developer & community needs • Opportunity for mixed-use senor housing and higher density • City redevelopment funds were leveraged with Infill Infrastructure Grant, 9% low income housing tax credits & Wells Fargo mortgage • Local Support by several groups: FOCUS, ABAG, etc. A FORECLOSED DEVELOPMENT: A Neighborhood Eyesore Siena Court • 110 units of high-quality affordable senior housing (30%-60% AMI) • 1 & 2 Bedroom Units • Green roof, landscaped courtyard, and plaza • Centrally located on-site parking in garage • 10,000 SF of neighborhood serving retail • 3,800 SF of common space on ground floor with senior services • Catalyst for Development Market rate development occurring next door Siena Court Completion Scheduled for Spring 2012 Garvey Court El Monte, California • 63 Senior Units • On-site health and wellness • First mixed-use building in city • Incredibly high demand • Catalyst for development Garvey Court: BEFORE Garvey Court Completion Scheduled for Summer 2012 La Valentina Station & North Sacramento, CA • Amenities ground floor retail and social services space • Bike storage and a public plaza • LEED Gold Designed • Clean-up and redevelopment of polluted site • The North site features solar panels and net-zero energy consumption • Affordable apartments ranging from studios to 3-bdrms La Valentina STATION Designed by David Baker + Partners Northwest Perspective South Elevation East (rear) Elevation La Valentina NORTH Designed by YHLA Architects La Valentina North- A NET-ZERO Building Under Construction, Completion Spring 2012 La Valentina Station- An Urban TRANSIT VILLAGE Under Construction, Completion Schedule for Summer 2012 Kings Beach, California • Tahoe is renowned for water clarity & losing clarity at a rate of 1 foot per year • Sensitive environment, governed by two agencies; Placer County and Tahoe Regional Planning Agency • Oldest urbanized area, established 1926 • Rural community of about 4,000 residents • Highly regulated land use • Poor infrastructure and lack of Best Management Practices (BMPs) Kings Beach, CA: BEFORE • Most residents can’t afford market rate homes • 75% of households with 5 people, live in a 1-BR or studio • Housing old & dilapidated • 80 miles to Reno and back 2009 Conditions Kings Beach HOUSING NOW • First new development in decades. • Redevelops 5 infill sites in existing town grid. • Demolished 32 units of substandard unsustainable dwellings • Creates 77 eco- friendly apartments; near jobs, transit, schools, parks, grocery stores and restaurants Kings Beach HOUSING NOW Chipmunk Site, Opening Summer 2012 Kings Beach HOUSING NOW Project Outcomes • Contributes to the long-term economic and environmental vitality of the region; workforce can afford to live close to jobs; 325 on waitlist • Promotes a healthier environment through: LEED buildings Storm water management “Smart growth” practices • Builds on transit nodes • Redevelops existing disturbed, blighted and underutilized properties within exiting “grid” protecting surrounding land Kings Beach, CA: AFTER • Housing. 77 affordable units • Jobs. About 400 during construction + additional permanent • Energy. Units are 66% more energy efficient “Best Housing Project in the Basin” - Tahoe Regional Planning Agency If You Build It, They Will Come. Key TAKEAWAYS • Infill is a powerful tool for greener, healthier neighborhoods • Huge benefits to communities • Major obstacles to overcome YOU can do it! • Incentives for developers • Streamlined entitlement process • Strong political leadership Thank You!