Here - Korean Women`s Association
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Here - Korean Women`s Association
JULY/AUGUST 2010 VOL. 18, NO. 5 WWW.HOUSINGFINANCE.COM IN THIS ISSUE: HFA EXECUTIVE ROUNDTABLE TAX-EXEMPT BOND BLUES THE NATION’S BEST AHF SELECTS SIXTH ANNUAL L READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS Thh ffour are among th TThese the 33 finalists, li t but it’s up to you to pick the winners. A proud milestone. A lasting legacy. Enterprise Homes celebrates 25 years of building dreams. Enterprise founders Jim and Patty Rouse showed us how. And today, thousands of families across the Mid-Atlantic are living their dreams in an affordable home. Enterprise Homes at 25: 5,000 Homes and Counting www.enterprisecommunity.com CONTENTS July/August 2010 DEPARTMENTS Grapevine The Buzz 4 6 A new Department of Housing and Urban Development report shows the number of homeless families in emergency shelters and transitional housing programs rose for the second straight year. People Pop Quiz 6 8 Tom Gleason, executive director of MassHousing, takes this month’s Pop Quiz. Housing Policy 10 The House has passed a Federal Housing Administration reform bill that includes a boost in multifamily mortgage limits. Finance 18 AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE features 33 finalists in the competition for our sixth annual Readers’ Choice Awards for the Nation’s Best Affordable Housing Developments. Read about the finalists here and then go to www. housingfinance.com through Aug. 13 to select the winners in each of the nine categories as well as the best overall development. Family Green Historic Rehab Master-Planned/Mixed-Use Preservation Rural Seniors Special-Needs Urban 18 22 24 28 32 34 36 38 42 12 Five housing finance agency executives share their views on the low-income housing tax credit equity market, and they give us an inside look at what’s happening at HFAs around the country. Finance 14 The tax-exempt bond market continues to struggle with limited investor appetite and a tight private-placement market, while the impact of the government’s New Issue Bond Program remains to be seen. Marketplace 48 COMING NEXT MONTH Special Focus Five Years After Katrina A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 1 NEW DIRECTIONS NCSHA Speakers Cite Market Changes CHICAGO The low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) market is better than it was a year ago thanks to additional equity, according to many at the National Council of State Housing Agencies conference. The entrance of new equity has lifted the general mood of the industry, but LIHTC investors and others continue to take a cautious stand. “The economy is still in question,” said Patrick Nash, managing director of JPMorgan Capital Corp., adding that high unemployment rates and long-term debt sources remain a concern. As a result, underwriting continues to be one of the industry’s biggest topics. It’s important for housing finance agencies and others to factor in stability and structure deals for the long term, said Beth Stohr, president of U.S. Bancorp Community Development Corp. “The era of underwriting LIHTC projects at 1.15x debt coverage should be declared dead,” added Fred Copeman, a principal at the Reznick Group. “Since the economy is stifling NOI [net operating income] growth in many markets and given that one in every three LIHTC units was already generating negative cash flow, we are overdue to take off the rose-colored glasses.” Head of the firm’s Tax Credit Investor Services practice, Copeman noted a spike in equity demand and the entry of a number of new investors, including four companies with authority to invest as much as $3 billion. Other highlights from the June event include: › The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is rewriting its underwriting guidelines this summer, with plans to add a chapter on LIHTC transactions for the first time, according to Chris Tawa, senior adviser to the deputy assistant secretary of multifamily housing at HUD, who expects the new guidelines to be released by the end of the year. › About $2.1 billion in Tax Credit Assistance Program (TCAP) commitments has helped to fund 794 projects with 54,090 units, reported a HUD representative. HUD plans to reallocate some unused TCAP funds, so industry participants should watch for announcements. › The credit exchange program awards total was $5.47 billion as of June 18. About $1.05 billion, or 19 percent, of the total had been disbursed, according to a Treasury Department representative. ■ 2 Christine Serlin ■ Executive Editor ■ cserlin@hanleywood.com Donna Kimura ■ Deputy Editor ■ dkimura@hanleywood.com Jerry Ascierto ■ Senior Editor ■ jascierto@hanleywood.com Contributors: Bendix Anderson, Barry Jacobs John McManus ■ Editorial Director ■ jmcmanus@hanleywood.com Chester Hawkins ■ Art Director Spencer Markey ■ Associate Web Producer Chapella Leftwich ■ Production Manager Jeff Stockman ■ Circulation Manager Susan Piel ■ Conference Director Warren Nesbitt ■ Executive Director, Residential New Construction ■ wnesbitt@hanleywood.com Robert M. Britt ■ Publisher ■ rbritt@hanleywood.com Jeff Rule ■ Product Director, e-Media ■ (202) 729-3539 Advertising Sales Rich Davis ■ Regional Sales Manager ■ rdavis@hanleywood.com Michael DeAnzeris ■ Regional Sales Manager ■ mdeanzeris@hanleywood.com Stuart Smith ■ United Kingdom/Europe Regional Sales Manager ■ stuart.smith@ssm.co.uk Ed Kraft ■ e-Media Sales Manager ■ ekraft@hanleywood.com Affordable Housing Finance Editorial Advisory Board Board Chairman David Reznick, Reznick Group; Dana Bourland, Enterprise Community Partners; James Buckley, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Urban Studies and Planning; Laura Burns, The Eagle Point Cos.; Patrick E. Clancy, The Community Builders, Inc.; Conrad Egan, National Housing Conference; Jack Gardner, The John Stewart Co.; Robert Greer, Michaels Development Co.; R. Lee Harris, Cohen-Esrey Real Estate Services, LLC; Bart Harvey, Enterprise; J. David Heller, The NRP Group; Stanley Herskovitz, Paradigm Financial Consulting; Michelle Hoereth, IFF; Robert Hoskins, The NuRock Cos.; Bill Kelly, Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future; Cynthia Lacasse, John Hancock Realty Advisors, Inc.; John G. Markowski, Community Investment Corp.; Robert Moss, Boston Capital Corp.; Lillian Murphy, Mercy Housing; Patrick Nash, JPMorgan Capital Corp.; Stephen Norman, King County Housing Authority; Jeanne L. Peterson, Reznick Group; Paul Purcell, Beacon Development Group; Benson Roberts, Local Initiatives Support Corp.; Todd Sears, Herman & Kittle Properties, Inc.; Patrick N. Sheridan, Volunteers of America; Beth Stohr, U.S. Bancorp CDC; Monica Sussman, Nixon Peabody, LLP; Chris Tawa, Department of Housing and Urban Development; Ronne Thielen, Centerline Capital Group; Sean Thomas, Ohio Housing Finance Agency; Deborah VanAmerongen, Nixon Peabody, LLP; Sunia Zaterman, Council of Large Public Housing Authorities; John Zeiler, Hudson Housing Capital Hanley Wood Business Media Peter Goldstone ■ President/Hanley Wood ■ (202) 736-3304 Andy Reid ■ President/Market Intelligence/e-Media Rick McConnell ■ President/Exhibitions Ron Kraft ■ Director of Finance Nick Cavnar ■ Vice President/Circulation and Database Development Nick Elsener ■ Vice President/Production Sheila Harris ■ Vice President/Marketing Andreas Schmidt ■ Executive Director/e-Media Boyce Thompson ■ Editorial Director, Builder Group Published by Hanley Wood, LLC Frank Anton ■ Chief Executive Officer Matthew Flynn ■ Chief Financial Officer Paul Tourbaf ■ Senior Vice President/Corporate Sales Brad Lough ■ Vice President/Finance Mike Bender ■ Vice President/General Counsel Keith Rosenbloom ■ Controller Editorial and Advertising Offices: 33 New Montgomery St., Suite 290, San Francisco, CA 94105 Phone: (415) 315-1241; Fax: (415) 315-1248 Subscription Inquiries and back issue orders: Phone: (888) 269-8410; Fax: (847) 291-4816; Outside U.S.: (847) 291-5221 Privacy of mailing lists: Sometimes we share our subscriber mailing list with reputable companies we think you’ll find interesting. However, if you do not wish to be included, please call (888) 269-8410. Postmaster: Send address changes to Affordable Housing Finance, P.O. Box 3566, Northbrook, IL 60065-3566 Volume 18, Issue 5: AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE (ISSN 1080-2177; USPS 015-003) is published 8 times a year (January/ February, March, April/May, June, July/August, September, October, November/December) by Hanley Wood, LLC, One Thomas Circle NW, Suite 600, Washington DC 20005. Free subscriptions to qualified individuals; 119.00 per year for non-qualified individuals. Periodicals Postage Paid at Washington, DC, and at additional mailing offices. AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE will occasionally write about companies in which its parent organization, Hanley Wood, LLC, has an investment interest. When it does, the magazine will fully disclose that relationship. AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE is published by Hanley Wood, LLC. Copyright 2010. Reproduction of this publication in whole or part in any form without written permission from the publisher is prohibited by law. Opinions expressed are those of the authors or persons quoted and not necessarily those of AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE. For Mailing List Rentals, contact Statlistics at (203) 778-8700. For reprints, contact Wright’s Media at (877) 652-5295. A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 W E LCO M E TO mo re c h o ice. M or e Co n t rol . mo r e s peed. A ND mo re h D t h a n e v e r b efo r e. The Comcast XFINITY upgrade. The fastest Internet, triple the HD channels, TV on your PC and an On Demand library approaching 20,000 titles. Welcome to XFINITY TV, Internet and Voice. Only from Comcast. Find out more at xfinity.com. Potential residents demand more. Give it to them. With XFINITY. To reach a Multi-Family Account Specialist, please email us at Multifamily_Team@cable.comcast.com XFINITY service not available in all areas. ©2010 Comcast. All rights reserved. GRAPEVINE Finalists Exude Tenacity BY CHRISTINE SERLIN I spent the month of May judging the more than 140 entries for AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE’s Readers’ Choice Awards, even reading the nominations late at night and on the weekends not able to put them down. They were all inspiring to me, and within the words and photos, I was able to understand how much hard work and perseverance went into creating these affordable housing developments during the nation’s greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression. Whittling the entries down to 33 finalists was a hard task for the magazine’s editors because the developments were all so deserving and had such great stories to tell about the obstacles, the need for safe affordable housing, the revitalization of neighborhoods, the teamwork, and the residents. But I think we did a good job on our final picks of the finalists. We have three Gulf Coast projects this year. The images on CNN postKatrina are still vivid in my mind, so it’s great to see these fresh developments coming online. Emerald Pines in Gulfport, Miss., was in severe disrepair the months after Katrina, yet residents stayed without utilities because they weren’t sure where else to go. Now, the rebuilt Sec. 8 development is focusing on a sense of community. If you nominated a project that is scheduled to be completed in 2010 and didn’t make the finalist cut, please renominate next year. We do want to hear from you again. 4 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 The Terraces on Tulane in New Orleans replaces Forest Towers East, which closed after suffering heavy damage. Many of the former Forest Towers residents have reunited after recently moving into the new seniors community. And the mixed-income Crescent Club in New Orleans was cobbled together with layers of financing. Two of the preservation finalists— Ashland Village in Alameda County, Calif., and MonteVerde Apartments in Baltimore—faced and overcame some big obstacles. Ashland Village’s original lender went out of business, and a problem with the tax credit 10-year rule that postponed the acquisition had to be solved by an act of Congress. And Freddie Mac and Merrill Lynch were involved in the financing of MonteVerde, which was set to close Sept. 12, 2008, in the midst of the financial meltdown. Even though Freddie was placed under conservatorship and Merrill Lynch was purchased by Bank of America, the closing happened less than a week later. You can read more about these developments and the other finalists starting on page 18. I hope you are inspired by their stories as much as I was. The editors may have had the tough job of choosing the finalists, but it’s up to you—the readers—to vote on your favorite in each category as well as the best overall project of the bunch. Go to www.housingfinance.com by Aug. 13 to vote. The winning developments will be featured in the November/December issue and will be celebrated at a luncheon concluding AHF Live: The 2010 Affordable Housing Developers’ Summit on Nov. 5 at the Fairmont Millennium Park in Chicago. ■ THE BUZZ Family Homelessness Continues to Grow FOR THE SECOND straight year, the number of homeless families in emergency shelters and transitional housing programs rose while the number of sheltered homeless individuals fell, according to the 2009 Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR). When families are considered as households rather than as separate individuals in a household, slightly more than 170,000 families were sheltered homeless last year, about a 30 percent jump since 2007. On the positive side, the number of homeless individuals fell 5 percent. The estimated number of chronic homeless was down more than 10 percent. “Despite the worst recession this country has seen since the Depression, this report shows that, nationally, we were able to avoid massive increases in homelessness—at least through last fall. There’s little question that the hard work of communities implementing housingbased strategies played a key role,” says Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessness. “But the rise in family shelter use is a clear indication that the recession is having an effect on vulnerable households. We are deeply concerned that it foreshadows increases in homelessness in the future.” For the first time, the number of beds in permanent supportive housing surpassed the number of beds in emergency shelter or transitional housing. Permanent supportive housing increased by about 60,000 beds between 2006 and 2009. More than half the growth was in the past year, from 196,000 beds in 2008 to more than 219,000 in 2009. The Department of Housing and Urban Development report finds that an estimated 643,067 people were homeless on a given night in 2009. Roughly 1.56 million, or one in every 200 Americans, spent at least one night in a shelter during the year. ■ P E O P L E Mercy Names Northwest President Bill Rumpf has been named president of the Mercy Housing Northwest region. He joins the nonprofit developer after serving as deputy director of Seattle’s Department of Housing since 1999. In this role, he directed the work of four program managers in the areas of rental production and preservation, asset management, home repair and weatherization, and internal corporate operations. Rumpf also established initiatives to house homeless individuals in permanent supportive housing. He previously served as CEO of the California Housing Partnership Corp. Citi Adds to Community Capital Team Director Matthew Bissonette joins Citi Community Capital (CCC) as an originator in New York. He has an extensive background in affordable housing, including being involved in more than 250 multifamily housing bond financings throughout the country, totaling more than $2.5 billion. 6 M. Bissonette P. Bowen Prior to joining CCC, he was a director at RBC Capital Markets, working as an investment banker in affordable housing bond finance. Prior to that, he was a partner with Eichner & Norris, PLLC, a Washington, D.C.-based law firm. CCC is planning to expand its workforce by one-third, bringing the employee count to nearly 200 in the next quarter. Riverstone Names Compliance Executive Pat Bowen has been named executive vice president of compliance services at Riverstone Residential Group. A 25-year industry veteran, she will oversee the low-income housing A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 tax credit compliance, bond, and other affordable housing programs. She will also manage Riverstone’s internal audit programs in the company’s Quality Assurance Group. Bowen was in property management with AIMCO for the past 14 years, most recently serving as vice president of compliance. Recap Announces Leadership Moves Recap Real Estate Advisors has announced that President Todd Trehubenko will become CEO, and current CEO David Smith will become chairman, effective July 31. Trehubenko will set the strategic direction for the expanding firm. He has been a central part of the management team since joining the company in 1992 and has been president since 2007. Smith founded Recap in 1989. As chairman, he will continue to support the firm’s business development efforts with an emphasis on national financial and policy initiatives. ■ THE BUZZ P O P Q U I Z TOM GLEASON has spent his career working in affordable housing lending and community development finance. For the past nine years, he has been executive director of MassHousing, an independent, quasi-public agency that provides financing for affordable housing across Massachusetts. The agency raises capital by selling bonds and lends the proceeds to developers and low- and moderate-income home buyers. In a new role, Gleason was recently selected to serve on Fannie Mae’s inaugural Affordable Housing Advisory Council. Q A How did you get started in the affordable housing business? When I was attending graduate school for public administration at the University of Massachusetts in the 1970s, I had a job in the community development department in Westfield, a solid, working-class city in western Massachusetts that, like many places, was trying to evolve from its industrial past. They had received a grant to inventory the housing stock, and I walked the streets of Westfield with a clipboard, looking at homes and recording information about their condition. That’s when I really started to see the importance of good housing in our communities. It led to a lifelong involvement in community development and housing. Q What has MassHousing recently done that other housing agencies can learn from? We launched a Web site exclusively for our rental housing business partners (www.masshousingrental.com), and we’re gradually moving toward doing more rental business online. This was part of an overall strategic realignment of our rental housing business lines. We did it to be more user-friendly to our customers—developers, owners, and managers of multifamily housing. We brought the local rental housing trade A 8 group in and let them help guide our efforts and react to our proposals. Q A What trends in affordable housing finance are you watching? Like everyone, we are watching the tax credit markets closely, and things do seem to be improving, although slowly. It’s great that a high-profile company like Google has entered the tax credit market. We’re also closely watching the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s new Transforming Rental Assistance initiative, as well as the various federal efforts to keep the housing market going, such as the Tax Credit Exchange Program. standards that are leaving legitimate borrowers out in the cold. My hope for the council is to carve out a role for affordable homeownership and rental lending based on concepts that are realistic and sustainable. Q A Besides the usual work papers, what’s in your office? More papers. Blackberry. Laptop. A large photo of one of my favorite MassHousing developments to remind me of what we do. Pictures of my wife, Brita, and our nearly 21-year-old twin sons, Alex and Steve, to remind me of why I do this. Did I mention the papers? Q A Who would you like to meet? Q You’ve been named to Fannie Mae’s Affordable Housing Advisory Council. What are your goals for the council? For many years, Fannie Mae has been a terrific partner with housing finance agencies, providing a lending platform that has not been available anywhere else. Having said that, there is no question that the shape of the secondary mortgage market is changing before our eyes. Almost everyone in this business changed their underwriting standards to chase business and market share in our recent past. Those changes went too far. Now, almost everyone is going too far in the other direction, with underwriting A A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Steve Jobs. His ability to create the “next big thing” year after year is pretty uncanny. I’d love to know what Apple’s creative and development processes are. In every line of work—and that includes the public sector—I think you’ve got to be creative and entrepreneurial because the needs of your customers are always changing. I’d like to get a little of that pixie dust from Apple and sprinkle it around the affordable housing business. ■ ••• For an expanded interview with Tom Gleason, visit www.housingfinance.com. hudson_af_v3.qxd 1/15/10 11:22 AM Page 1 Great team. Great results. In challenging economic times, a great team makes all the difference. At Hudson Housing Capital, we adhere to the principles of integrity, quality, transparency and stability. We continue to place a high volume of equity capital into high quality, low income housing tax credit developments around the country. At Hudson Housing Capital, we remain steadfast in helping keep the promise to low income housing beneficiaries. For more information, please call or e-mail us today. 630 FIFTH AVE., ROCKEFELLER CENTER, NY, NY 10111 • T: 212.218.4469 11601 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 500 LOS ANGELES, CA 90025 • T: 310.575.1852 7535 LITTLE RIVER TURNPIKE, SUITE 204, ANNANDALE, VA 22002 • T: 703.744.1443 100 CUMMINGS CENTER, SUITE 433A, BEVERLY, MA 01915 • T: 978.236.4252 2000 AUBURN DRIVE, BEACHWOOD, OH 44122 • T: 216.378.7615 251 RECINTO SUR, SECOND FLOOR, SAN JUAN, PR 00901 • 787.721.7929 WWW.HUDSONHOUSING.COM 1.14.10 • affordable housing • page 1 HOUSING POLICY WASHIN GTO N U PDAT E House Passes FHA Reform Bill BY BARRY G. JACOBS T he House has passed a Federal Housing Administration (FHA) reform bill (H.R. 4072) that includes an increase in multifamily mortgage limits for elevator structures and in areas with the highest construction costs. Current law sets specific per-unit dollar limits for non-elevator and elevator buildings, with the elevator limits a few thousand dollars higher. For the Sec. 221(d)(4) program, for example, the twobedroom limit for a non-elevator building is $61,567, while the elevator limit is $67,566. The House-passed bill, by contrast, would allow the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to set limits for elevator buildings that are up to 50 percent higher than the non-elevator limits, meaning the Sec. 221(d) (4) two-bedroom limit could be as high as $92,350. HUD plans demonstration program for small-area FMRs HUD is planning a demonstration program for fiscal 2011 that will establish fair market rents (FMRs) at the ZIP code level for the Sec. 8 housing choice voucher program in some metropolitan areas. The department says the small-area FMRs are expected to make it easier for voucher holders to find housing in areas with jobs, transportation, and educational opportunities while avoiding subsidies that are higher than necessary in areas with relatively low rents. Public housing authorities (PHAs) that want to take part in the demonstration program must administer at least 10 80 percent of the vouchers in their metropolitan area, and two or more PHAs in an area can submit a joint application to reach that threshold. Because HUD expects the demonstration program to be most useful in larger FMR areas, it may restrict the small-area program to FMR areas that meet the size and affordable housing concentration requirements for the use of 50th percentile rents to set FMRs. If HUD has to limit participation in the program because of the number of PHAs expressing interest, it will give improving the quality of life; building inclusive and sustainable communities free from discrimination; and transforming the way HUD does business. To provide affordable rental housing, HUD says it will support the production of millions of new units, maintaining quality, accessibility, and energy efficiency as well as affordability. “This strategic plan isn’t just a paper exercise to produce a set of marching orders, but a real attempt to express what we want our agency, our homes, and our neighborhoods to look like in the years “This strategic plan isn’t just a paper exercise to produce a set of marching orders, but a real attempt to express what we want our agency, our homes, and our neighborhoods to look like in the years to come.” —Shaun Donovan, HUD secretary priority to areas that are large enough for the small-area FMRs to provide a significant variation in rents, areas with the highest percentage of voucher tenants served by PHAs, and areas where PHAs have shown they will set payment standards at different levels when appropriate. The program will start Oct. 1, with additional areas to be added Jan. 1, 2011. HUD sets goals for 2010-2015 A new HUD strategic plan lays out five goals in promoting affordable housing and sustainable communities during the fiscal 2010-2015 period. The goals are strengthening the housing market to bolster the economy and protect consumers; meeting the need for quality affordable rental housing; utilizing housing as a platform for A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 to come,” said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan in a statement. “The plan sets out clear goals and defines success as we take HUD to its 50th anniversary in 2015.” ■ Barry G. Jacobs is editor of Housing and Development Reporter, the nation’s premier source for in-depth, factual coverage of all aspects of affordable housing and community development. The two-part publication includes informed reports and insightful analyses in “HDR Current Developments,” and an up-to-date compilation of essential documents in the “HDR Reference Files.” Jacobs is also the author of the annually updated HDR Handbook of Housing and Development Law. For more information, call (800) 723-8077. FINANCE TAX C RE DI T E Q U I T Y HFA Execs Assess Equity Scene BY DONNA KIMURA E xecutive directors from five state housing finance agencies (HFAs) share their insight on the equity market. Stephen Auger of Florida Housing, Tim Kenny of the Nebraska Investment Finance Authority, Doug Garver of the Ohio Housing Finance Agency, Susan Dewey of the Virginia Housing Development Authority, and Kim Herman of the Washington State Housing Finance Commission take part in the roundtable. Give us your assessment of the Tax Credit Assistance Program (TCAP) and the exchange program so far. Auger: The TCAP and exchange programs have helped to stimulate Florida’s economy by helping to generate viable financing to otherwise competitively strong developments that completely lost investor interest or did not provide adequate investor equity. Our primary concern about the programs is the removal of the HFAs’ ability to generate income to cover the administrative responsibilities that would otherwise be permitted. Kenny: We like the simplicity and clarity of the exchange program. It was easy to deploy. The TCAP model is a regulatory Gordian knot, so it has less programmatic utility. Garver: Both the exchange and TCAP have been great resources to help get critical affordable housing projects in Ohio moving. The overall flexibility of both programs was important. Our question about recapturing funds from either program remains a concern. Dewey: Regarding TCAP, HFAs are very willing to follow guidance; however, job-count guidance has not been clear, 12 and there is concern that reporting is not comparable across HFAs. The exchange program has been the easier of the two funding types to implement, both from HFA and developer perspectives, since it requires fewer deadlines and regulations. However, our overall concern is that the deadlines for expending funds may cause problems, as the housing industry had basically come to a halt in some states. Although the funds are welcome and will be put to good use, restarting the development process for affordable multifamily deals is not an easy or quick process. Herman: Both the TCAP and 1602 exchange programs delivered big time for affordable housing in Washington state. S. Auger T. Kenny Auger: We’ve seen improvements in the LIHTC investor market in terms of equity pricing and overall interest. Much of this improvement seems driven by Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) investment. However, there are still many areas of the state that still lack economically viable investor interest. Kenny: The market is about as we expected: strong in urban areas and weak in rural areas. There is not much appetite for “special needs” projects. Our disaster area credits, without the exchange eligibility, are harder to allocate effectively. Garver: The market seems to be improving but is not as strong as it needs to be to attract investors. The changes to the program the industry is proposing D. Garver S. Dewey K. Herman TO READ MORE Go to www.housingfinance.com for the expanded roundtable. Each HFA had to reconcile the challenge at hand with the opportunity presented by these American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) resources. For Washington, this meant understanding ARRA with respect to the timing of our allocation round, the status of other committed funding, policies and processes, politics, etc. Washington state fortunately has evolved a very collaborative, communicative, and transparent development and funding culture, and thus we can point to a number of ARRA successes in the face of extreme adversity. Is the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) market better or worse than expected this year? Why? A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 would help to make the market a stronger option for potential investors. Dewey: In Virginia, the market has remained constant and is perhaps a bit better in 2010 than 2009. Our state is fortunate in that we continue to be attractive to banks for CRA purposes, business activities may not have dipped quite as low economically as in other states, and we also have very active investors that are well-funded and remain committed to the tax credit program. Herman: Better, although only time will tell. Our 2010 round deals have thus far attracted solid investor interest. That said, concerns remain about investment appetite and opportunity in some rural deals. ■ The greatest rewards come from helping others. In the affordable housing industry, Reznick Group feels right at home. As a top 20 national CPA firm, we’ve been helping developers, lenders and investors in affordable housing achieve financial success for more than 30 years. By sharing our insights on low-income housing tax credits, FHA and HUD programs, and other financing opportunities, we help the affordable housing industry provide safe and decent housing for the communities that need it most. What could be more rewarding? To learn more about Reznick Group and our services for the affordable housing industry, visit: www.reznickgroup.com/affordablehousing FINANCE TAX-EXE MPT B O N DS TEB Blues Deals face diverse challenges despite federal efforts BY JERRY ASCIERTO T he NRP Group has employed tax-exempt bonds on many new developments throughout its 15-year history. But like a lot of developers, it has rethought that approach over the last few turbulent years. While the company has five taxexempt bond deals under construction—all of which needed property tax breaks to pencil out—the developer is not bullish regarding the swift return of the market. “Bond deals worked when tax credit pricing was in the 90s, private placements were not loaded up with enhancement fees, and rates were under 6 percent,” says Dan Markson, a senior vice president at the Clevelandbased developer. “But the median incomes are not rising enough to make up for all of that.” Indeed, the tax-exempt bond marketplace is in a strange place right now and continues to be overshadowed by the more powerful 9 percent tax credit. Since 9 percent deals have deeper rent skewing than 4 percent deals, they almost always get federal and state priority. For instance, while the tax credit exchange program has helped numerous 9 percent deals to break ground, the 4 percent world was left in the cold, unable to access the program. What’s more, the private-placement market remains severely limited. RBC has some appetite, as does 14 Walker & Dunlop recently converted a $16 million construction to permanent loan for Canterbury House Apartments, a post-Katrina New Orleans development that came online last year, using Fannie Mae’s bond forward commitment product. Citi Community Capital and Bank of America, but it’s a tepid market these days at best. Fannie Mae remains out of the variable-rate market, but suddenly that doesn’t seem like such a big deal. Freddie Mac’s variable rate with a swap program was a popular execution over the last couple of years due to the low rates offered, but that execution is now being priced about the same as fixedrate deals, at around 5.65 percent, according to Phil Melton, who runs the affordable housing debt platform for Grandbridge Real Estate Capital. “Fixed-rate bonds are slow to come back, but the rates seem to be holding,” says Sarah Garland, director of affordable housing for Washington, D.C.-based Fannie Mae. “A fixed-rate bond is actually inside of a Freddie swap, for instance. So we expect that as that market comes back, people will go to the fixed-rate bond market as op- A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 posed to the swap.” New construction bond deals are having a very hard time finding a letter of credit provider, and most borrowers don’t want to wait for the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) to get their deal done. A bigger problem is that there’s very little interest rate difference between doing a tax-exempt and taxable deal these days. All-in rates on tax-exempt credit enhancements through the FHA’s 221(d)(4) program are around 5.5 percent, while taxable deals were pricing at 5.4 percent as of early June. The same dynamic applies at the governmentsponsored enterprises (GSEs), though their rates are slightly above the FHA. But lenders are seeing more activity on the preservation side as the second quarter came to a close. “We are starting to see some more bond deals for acq-rehab, in-place rehabs potentially not needing the letter of credit Renewing a time-honored institution Empowering young lives YWCA Urban Job Corps Campus With its Job Corps’ Urban Campus under construction in downtown Los Angeles, the YWCA Greater Los Angeles can help empower even more young lives with a new facility for developing professional skills. Bank of America Merrill Lynch is proud to work with an important institution that has served the Los Angeles area since 1894. To learn how we can help you achieve your community development goals, visit bankofamerica.com/community $20 million New Markets Tax Credit debt and equity $14 million End-to-End Permanent loan $4 million Bridge loan $2.5 million Direct construction loan The new construction of this seven-story, mixed-use building will house the Los Angeles Job Corps program as well as the YWCA’s administrative offices. “Bank of America Merrill Lynch” is the marketing name for the global banking and global markets businesses of Bank of America Corporation. Lending, derivatives, and other commercial banking activities are performed globally by banking affiliates of Bank of America Corporation, including Bank of America, N.A., member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender . Securities, strategic advisory, and other investment banking activities are performed globally by investment banking affiliates of Bank of America Corporation (“Investment Banking Affiliates”), including, in the United States, Banc of America Securities LLC and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, which are both registered broker-dealers and members of FINRA and SIPC, and, in other jurisdictions, locally registered entities. Investment products offered by Investment Banking Affiliates: Are Not FDIC Insured * May Lose Value * Are Not Bank Guaranteed. © 2010 Bank of America Corporation. FINANCE but going straight to an enhancement with some reserve fundings,” says Melton. “That works best if you’ve got a HAP contract or something else associated with it where you’re maintaining the revenue stream.” Fannie Mae has noticed that uptick as well and says it will target rehab deals in the second half of the year. “We want to be a little more aggressive in pursuing fixed-rate bond transactions, especially those that are mod-rehab and in-place deals, which is really our sweet spot in terms of execution,” says Bob Simpson, vice president of multifamily affordable lending within Fannie Mae’s Housing and Community Development (HCD) division. New Issue Bond Program The federal government has stepped in to help the tax-exempt bond market, but the success of its New Issue Bond Program—a collaboration between the Treasury Department, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the GSEs—remains to be seen. The program gave both state and local housing finance agencies (HFAs) the ability to provide low-rate debt on bond deals. “The program used the 10-year Treasury as a rate for the program bonds,” says Carl Riedy, vice president of the public finance channel within Fannie Mae’s HCD division. “The states could lock in a 10-year Treasury rate from the middle of November through the end of December last year.” In general, the rates emanating from the program in the early stages are in the 3.75 to 4.5 percent range once factoring in the spread and fees charged by each individual HFA. To date, about $2.9 billion has been issued on the multifamily side, divided among 31 state and local housing finance agencies. Nearly half of that amount went to state and local agencies in New York and California. In terms of actual credit enhancements, there’s only been about $40 million done through the program, divided between Fannie, Freddie, and the FHA. The program kicked into gear in the fourth quarter of last year, but it came together quickly, maybe a little too quickly. HFAs had about two months to determine how much volume they’d need. And it’s a “use it or lose it” scenario—HFAs have until the end of this year to use that volume, or it will be eliminated. Trade organizations like the National Council of State Housing Agencies are lobbying the Treasury Department to extend the deadline by six months and increase the amount of volume. While the low rates are certainly welcomed by the affordable housing community, many feel that the program only got it half right. Though it addressed debt, it did nothing to make the 4 percent tax credits attractive. ■ Expertise you remember. Experience you need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¿GXFLDU\UHVSRQVLELOLW\ &RQWDFWRXUWHDPWRGD\DQGOHWXVSXWRXUH[SHUWLVHWRZRUNIRU\RX !/,+7&(TXLW\,QYHVWPHQWV !$VVHWDQG3RUWIROLR0DQDJHPHQW %RVWRQ)LQDQFLDO,QYHVWPHQW0DQDJHPHQW_%RVWRQ_6DQ)UDQFLVFR__ZZZE¿PFRP ,19(6725&217$&7*5(*-8'*(_'(9(/23(5&217$&7*5(*92<(17=,( SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS The Nation’s Best AHF selects sixth annual Readers’ Choice finalists H ere they are—the finalists for AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE’s sixth annual Readers’ Choice Awards. AFFORDABLEHOUSINGFINANCE received more than 140 nominations this year, and with the help of the magazine’s editors, we carefully selected 33 finalists in nine categories. This year’s diverse group of finalists, representing 17 states plus the District of Columbia, really shine and stand out as models for other developers across the nation. Most of the finalists had to be creative, overcoming obstacles related to the nation’s economic crisis and the low-income housing tax credit market upheaval. Three developments are part of the rebuilding efforts in the Gulf Coast after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina— Emerald Pines in Gulfport, Miss.; The Terraces on Tulane in New Orleans; and the Crescent Club in New Orleans. Tomaganuk in Hooper Bay, Alaska, has created muchneeded affordable housing for this small rural village after a fire destroyed more than 30 structures in 2006. And Sandywoods Farm in Tiverton, R.I., combines affordable and market-rate housing with a working farm and artists’ space. The developments were chosen on our assessment of several key characteristics, including: ■ Impact on the community by adding substantially to the affordable housing stock or improving the immediate social or economic fabric; and ■ Employs cost-effective or innovative design and/or construction, including energy efficiency and sustainable development. Developments had to be completed in 2009 or scheduled for completion in 2010. Now, it’s up to you to choose the most deserving in each category and which development should be the overall winner. Go to www.housingfinance.com through Aug. 13 to vote. You must be an AHF subscriber to vote. The winners will be highlighted in the November/December issue and will be honored at a luncheon at the conclusion of AHF Live: The 2010 Affordable Housing Developers’ Summit on Nov. 5 at the Fairmont Millennium Park in Chicago. ■ The developer completed exteGULFPORT, MISS. rior and interior modernization of dgewood Manor, a 120-unit, the units and buildings, and added 15-building Sec. 8 develophurricane resistant windows, adment, became a symbol of ditional structural bracing, and people being left behind during the private entries to all units. months after Hurricane Katrina hit A new 1,700-square-foot comthe Gulf Coast. Without roofs, winmunity center with laundry, a comdows, and utilities, many residents puter center, a fitness center, and refused to leave because they a community room also was added couldn’t find other housing. as were walkways, a picnic pavilOvercoming many obstacles, FAMILY FINALIST ion, and a playground and splash Gorman & Co. stepped in to reEMERALD PINES area. build the property, transforming it Developer and Architect: Gorman & Co. “We had to amenitize and build into a revitalized community called Major Funders: Mississippi Home Corp.; Centerline Capital Group; a setting that would allow a comEmerald Pines. JPMorgan Chase; Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Insurance Proceeds munity to be born,” Capp says, Prior to the start of construcadding that some of the former tion in September 2008, it was determined that many of the walls were not as The other financing for the $14.3 million de- residents have returned. Emerald Pines is comprised of 10 one-bedstructurally sound as had been anticipated after velopment included tax-exempt bonds and Hurricane Gustav barreled through Gulfport, 4 percent tax credits, insurance proceeds, room, 30 two-bedroom, 50 three-bedroom, adding construction costs. And in October and Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago and 30 four-bedroom units and will operate under a 20-year housing assistance payment 2008, the project lost some of its financing, re- Affordable Housing Program funding. “We were confident that everyone would contract with the units restricted to housesulting in a $2 million shortfall. But in the end, Gorman & Co. received step up to the table because this development holds earning 60 percent or less of the area Tax Credit Assistance Program funds from was so inspirational and so important to get median income. ■ —Christine Serlin the Mississippi Housing Corp. to fill the gap. done,” says Tom Capp, COO of Gorman & Co. E 18 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 FAMILY FINALIST PETALUMA AVENUE HOMES Developer: Affordable Housing Associates Architect: McCamant & Durrett Architects Major Funders: Hudson Housing Capital; Silicon Valley Bank; City of Sebastopol; Sonoma County; Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco; Enterprise Green Communities; California Tax Credit Allocation Committee SEBASTOPOL, CALIF. etaluma Avenue Homes has two big missions: provide an affordable place for people to live and foster a sense of community. The first goal is achieved through 45 apartments aimed at low-income residents of Sonoma County in Northern California. The second is accomplished by embracing the ideals of co-housing. “Petaluma Avenue Homes is one of the few examples in the United States of affordable rental co-housing, an innovative approach which combines the autonomy of private homes with the advantages and support of community living,” says developer Susan Friedland, executive director of Affordable Housing Associates (AHA). “It is so exciting to visit the property Photo: Treve Johnson P and see residents participating in a thriving community garden, regular baby-sitting swaps, and twice monthly community meals in the common house.” The $16.5 million development is designed for social interaction. All the parking is pulled out to the perimeter, leaving the interior of the property for children to play and residents to garden. The project also features large porches to encourage socializing and a community house for events. The development is loaded with green features, including solar panels to help power the common areas. The one-, two-, and three-bedroom apartments serve residents earning between 30 percent and 60 percent of the area median income, with the average below 50 percent, says Friedland. FAMILY FINALIST FORT WORTH, TEXAS he NuRock Cos. has transformed a 30-acre junkyard into the Residences at Eastland, a family development that is helping to turn around a neighborhood. Bringing the project to fruition took a lot of perseverance on the part of the developer. It was on the cusp of receiving low-income housing tax credits for two consecutive years and then was successful on the third attempt. “We worked hard for three years to get the local support lined up and to [demonstrate] that we were bringing in a quality project,” says Bradford T RESIDENCES AT EASTLAND Developer: The NuRock Cos. Architect: Morton M. Gruber, AIA, Architect Major Funders: Boston Capital; Wells Fargo; Freddie Mac; City of Forth Worth; Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs Bell, development manager at NuRock. NuRock Managing Principal Rob Hoskins says the development, which is in a Neighborhood Empowerment Zone, is meeting the city’s goals of creating affordable housing, increasing economic development, and increasing public safety. AHA used $10.9 million in low-income housing tax credit equity from Hudson Housing Capital. Silicon Valley Bank provided an $11 million construction loan and a $1.6 million permanent loan. The Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco also provided a $270,000 Affordable Housing Program grant through Silicon Valley Bank. The Sebastopol Community Development Agency provided $2.8 million, and the Sonoma County Community Development Commission provided $495,000 in Community Development Block Grant and HOME funds. ■ —Donna Kimura The developer also just closed on a neighboring 92-unit project-based Sec. 8 property and intends to do a gut rehab. “We believe this with the Residences at Eastland will fully secure the neighborhood,” Hoskins says, adding that the surrounding area is starting to see single-family housing revitalization and discussion regarding new retail development. The Residences at Eastland has a special emphasis on helping children “break out” of cycles of negative influences as well as academics through NuRock’s BreakOut program, which is a supervised after-school and summer camp program. Children receive a snack, get homework help, participate in activities, and can play and learn in the kids’ computer lab. “We believe that by providing support services for our residents’ children makes it a better community,” Hoskins says. The $16.7 million development features 146 two-, three-, and four-bedroom townhomes and flats, with 10 percent of the units targeted for families earning 30 percent of the area median income (AMI), 86 percent of the units at 60 percent of AMI, and the remainder at market rate. ■ —Christine Serlin A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 19 SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS Alberghini says. The $36.5 million projTHE ST. AIDAN ect is structured as three Developer: The Planning Office for Urban Affairs, Inc. secondary condominiArchitect: The Architectural Team ums—for the church buildMajor Funders: Bank of America; Wainwright Bank; ing, the two buildings on Town of Brookline; Massachusetts Department of Crowninshield Road, and Housing and Community Development; MassHousing; the Pleasant Street buildFederal Home Loan Bank of Boston; Housing ing—under one master Partnership Network condominium that governs the common areas. high-end luxury condos. The Pleasant Street building is comprised For POUA, it was important to provide a mix of housing for differ- of 20 low-income housing tax credit rental units ent incomes. “If we don’t create and 16 condos for first-time home buyers. The truly mixed-income communities, Crowninshield Road buildings feature 14 townthen this world becomes about home units, and the historic church has been people who serve others and cannot afford to converted into nine high-end luxury condos, live with them,” says President Lisa B. Alberghini. which provided a significant internal cross subsidy “Brookline was becoming a community of people to help support the affordable units. Ten percent of the units are set aside for residents at or below who serve those in town but couldn’t live there.” It took 10 years from the idea of the project to 30 percent of the area median income (AMI), 10 completion, with the developer battling a NIMBY percent for those at or below 50 percent of AMI, lawsuit, going through a lengthy permitting pro- 14 percent for those at or below 60 percent of cess, and working through the cost increases AMI, 27 percent for those at or below 80 percent because of delays. “It required an extraordinary of AMI, and the remainder at market rate. ■ —Christine Serlin level of patience, perseverance, and tenacity,” FAMILY FINALIST O THE DIRECT INVESTOR one of the best decisions you’ll ever make. OAKWOOD SHORES Various addresses Chicago, IL $13,426,279 Equity Investment 75 Family Units 73% Affordable 27% Market Linda Hill Vice President 415-983-5443 Anne Simpson Director 415-983-5451 linda.hill@aegonusa.com anne.simpson@aegonusa.com Investors contact: Brian Herman Managing Director 502-650-2167 bherman@aegonusa.com 39089Oak4C_2 610 Photo: Greig Cranna BROOKLINE, MASS. nce the site of the historic St. Aidan Church, where John F. Kennedy was baptized and which served as the Kennedy family parish for decades, is now a 59-unit mixedincome development in this affluent community outside of Boston. Developed by the Planning Office of Urban Affairs (POUA), a nonprofit developer affiliated with the Archdiocese of Boston, The St. Aidan runs the gamut from affordable rental units to Unsteady Climate. With a challenging economy and tight lending constraints, finding access to capital is harder than ever – particularly for affordable housing properties. By partnering with Citi Community Capital, you get access to more than just capital. You gain a partner with the resources, talent and nationwide platform needed to support your goals, start to finish. At Citi, we aim to be the foundation of your success. Contact Citi Community Capital today at askciticommunitycapital@citi.com or call 303.308.7400 © 2010 Citigroup Global Markets Inc. Member SIPC. All rights reserved. Citi and Arc Design are trademarks and service marks of Citigroup Inc. or its affiliates and are used and registered throughout the world. Solid Solutions. SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS GREEN FINALIST CASA FELIZ STUDIOS Developers: First Community Housing and The John Stewart Co. Architect: Rob Quigley Architects, FAIA Major Funders: U.S. Bank; Enterprise Community Investment; California Department of Housing and Community Development; City of San Jose; Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco One of the main green features is the living roofs, a first in San Jose. According to First Community Housing Executive Director Jeff Oberdorfer, the city requested an upgrade to the insufficient storm drain system, but for the same costs, the developers were able to add the living roofs, which retain storm water, provide habitat for wildlife, increase roof insulation, provide a longer roof life, and reduce ambient heat reflected from the roof to increase the efficiency of the photovoltaic system that helps to power the common areas. Casa Feliz also features natural lighting and ventilation, toxic-free building materials, low-flow plumbing fixtures, energy-efficient appliances, and more than 90 percent con- struction waste recycling. Oberdorfer adds that the overall lack of toxic materials on the interior has had a tremendous impact on the health of the special-needs residents. First Community Housing also provides free annual transit passes to the residents and a green resident manual. The $16.1 million project included tax-exempt bond financing from U.S. Bank, 4 percent tax credit equity from Enterprise Community Investment, and additional financing from the California Department of Housing and Community Development Multifamily Housing Program and the city of San Jose. ■ —Christine Serlin Photo: Rob Quigley says much of Klamath Falls is served by geothermal wells, and Iris Glen Townhomes won’t be an exception. “The opportunity to provide heat and hot water for these units without charges was pretty exciting to us,” she says. GREEN FINALIST The development will utilize three existing geoIRIS GLEN TOWNHOMES Developer: Luckenbill-Drayton & Associates, LLC thermal wells located on Architect: Carleton Hart Architecture the property. The system Major Funders: Homestead Capital; Wells Fargo Bank; Oregon uses heat exchange from Housing and Community Services; Network for Affordable Housing the wells to domestic hot water tanks, which feed water-source radiant heating KLAMATH FALLS, ORE. loops in the concrete floor slabs on the ground hen residents start moving into the Iris Glen Townhomes in September, floors and in-wall heaters on the upper floors of they’re possibly going to see savings the units. The domestic hot water tanks can also between $75 and $120 per month on their burn natural gas as a backup fuel source in case of temporary failure or system overload. utility bills, depending on the unit size. Other sustainable elements include light-colDee Luckenbill, managing member of developer Luckenbill-Drayton & Associates, LLC, ored roofing, low-flow water fixtures, Energy Star appliances and lighting, high-performance windows, proper cross-ventilation, drought-tolerant landscaping, and the use of low or no-VOC paints. To encourage biking and public transportation, the developer will provide bicycles on demand for use by the residents and their children at no cost as well as transportation subsidies or scholarships for residents who need financial help getting to and from jobs or employment training. The development is comprised of 12 one-bedroom, 20 two-bedroom, and four three-bedroom units, with 41 percent of the units set aside for residents earning less than 50 percent of the area median income (AMI) and 59 percent for residents earning less than 60 percent of AMI. Multiple funding sources were used for the $7.1 million development, including housing trust funds, low-income weatherization funds, and general housing account funds through Oregon Housing and Community Services; low-income housing tax credit equity provided by Homestead Capital; a permanent loan from the Network for Affordable Housing; and a construction loan from Wells Fargo Bank. ■ —Christine Serlin Photo: Ben Vallejo SAN JOSE, CALIF. nce the site of a sorority house near San Jose State University and then an aging residential hotel, Casa Feliz Studios has been reborn as a contemporary and sustainable development serving extremely low-income residents. The 59 studios serve residents with income levels ranging from 20 percent to 35 percent of the area median income, with 21 units set aside for residents with developmental disabilities. The project’s strong green focus was recognized with a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design New Construction 2.2 gold rating, the third New Construction gold designation for nonprofit First Community Housing, which co-developed the project with The John Stewart Co. O Iris Glen Townhomes was still under construction at press time. W 22 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Housing Specialist Esmeralda LAMONT, CALIF. Santos says one resident comn this unincorporated farmmented that he’s saving $50 in worker community in Kern utilities a month from his previous County in the San Joaquin home. Valley, Self-Help Enterprises’ Completed in July 2009, Rancho Lindo development is Rancho Lindo has a strong focus helping to meet the dire need for on services for families, includquality low-income housing while GREEN FINALIST ing an after-school program that demonstrating that green buildRANCHO LINDO is offered two hours a day for the ing can be done in the most rural Developer: Self-Help Enterprises children and free employment locations. Architect: Mogavero & Notestine Associates and educational services once a “The demand far exceeds what Major Funders: Union Bank; U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural month for the adults. we can provide,” says Doug Pingel, Development; Kern County The $12.9 million development multifamily housing program direcwas financed with HOME funds tor for the Visalia, Calif.-based nonRancho Lindo, which exceeded California from Kern County, U.S. Department of Agriculture profit. “This project helps that need somewhat, Title 24 energy standards by 37 percent and Rural Development Sec. 514 loan and Sec. 521 but it’s overwhelming.” Not only did Self-Help Enterprises create a achieved a GreenPoint Rated certification rental assistance, and low-income housing tax development that provides 43 two-, three-, and through Build It Green, features cool tile roofs credit equity from Union Bank. “Our goal is to do more than just provide housfour-bedroom units for residents earning between to minimize solar heat gain, low-e windows, 35 percent and 55 percent of the area median in- tankless hot water heaters, Energy Star air-con- ing,” Pingel says, adding that the nonprofit aims come, but it invested in energy-efficient features ditioning units and appliances, ultra low-flow to help residents stabilize at affordable rents, get to provide utility savings for the residents and to water fixtures, and native landscaping. A pho- established, save some money, and then move allow for long-term savings on the owner side to tovoltaic system powers the community center up the housing scale. ■ —Christine Serlin and communal on-site lighting. help keep rents affordable. I Innovative thinking. Done deals. Tax Exempt Bonds Jim Gillespie 212-297-1800 Multifamily financing solutions HUD/FHA Lending Steve Wessler 303-221-2160 Tax Credit Equity Eric McClelland 216-820-4750 RedStone is a national multifamily real estate finance company providing innovative financial products to the affordable housing industry. 212-297-1800 | www.redstoneco.com RedStone has recently closed the following transactions: $10,076,000 $5,826,380 $7,940,000 $9,515,000 $22,500,000 $13,500,000 $13,000,000 9% LIHTC Equity Family New Construction Santa Barbara, CA 9% LIHTC Equity Family New Construction Denver, CO 9% LIHTC Equity Family New Construction Phoenix, AZ 4% LIHTC Equity Senior Rehabilitation Chicago, IL Direct Bond Purchase 80/20 Acquisition Reston, VA Direct Bond Purchase 4% LIHTC Family Houston, TX HUD 221(d)4 Market Rate New Construction Denham Springs, LA SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS HISTORIC REHAB FINALIST CHICAGO s the financial markets slid into chaos, the last piece of a complex financing puzzle fell into place for Britton Budd Apartments. The 172 crumbling seniors apartments needed extensive work—from a new heating system to repairs to the plaster. In September 2008, the project found a buyer willing to pay $0.95 on the dollar for its 4 percent low-income housing tax credits. Work started that month on a $39 million renovation. Britton Budd found tax credit investors willing to pay top dollar despite, or perhaps because of, its unique nature. First, it’s public housing, which meant investors were unable to buy the land under Britton Budd. Instead they took out a ground lease on the site. Britton Budd is also set in a historic hotel, with all the restrictions on redevelopment that come with landmark status. But uniqueness is also Britton Budd’s strength. Landmark status gave it access to $5.9 million in equity from the sale of federal historic rehabilitation tax credits. Also, as public housing, Britton Budd came with an experienced, well-capitalized developer that has successfully redeveloped thousands of seniors apartments: the Chicago Housing Authority (CHA). Britton Budd received soft loans to the tune of $15.7 million in CHA public housing capital improvement funds and $6.3 million in seller financing from the authority. The CHA also sweetened the deal by delaying the moment when tax credit investors had to pay until after the renovation was completed in September 2009. Finally, Britton Budd was desirable simply because of its place in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood. “I was blown away by just the location,” says Bryan Kilbane, vice president of Red Stone Partners, LLC. ■ —Bendix Anderson Cogswell’s many supportive-housing services. The redevelopment benefited from a combination of good luck, hard work, and patience. Developers Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization and Cogswell Hall, Inc., applied twice for a reservation of lowincome housing tax credits, then handed out by lottery. In 2007, Ohio began to award tax credits based on merit, and Cogswell received the highest score in its category. Tax credit syndicator Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing (OCCH) paid more than $4.4 million, more than $0.90 on the dollar, for the tax credits. OCCH also bought Cogswell’s state and historic tax credits, closing the deal in 2008, just months before the financial crisis. To pay for the rest of the $7.8 million redevelopment, Cogswell won grants from foundations that required the entire building, new and old, to win both a silver certification in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design and a certification from Enterprise Green Communities. Cogswell handled the entire renovation without displacing residents. ■ —Bendix Anderson BRITTON BUDD APARTMENTS Developer: Chicago Housing Authority Architect: AECOM Major Funders: JPMorgan Chase; Red Stone Partners, LLC; Bank of America; Chicago Housing Authority A HISTORIC REHAB FINALIST COGSWELL HALL REDEVELOPMENT AND EXPANSION Developer: Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization and Cogswell Hall, Inc. Architect: Dale Serne Architects Major Funders: Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing; Ohio Housing Finance Agency; City of Cleveland Housing Trust Fund; Federal Home Loan Bank of Cincinnati; Cleveland Foundation; Enterprise Green Communities CLEVELAND ogswell Hall first opened its doors in 1914 to needy children as a “Home for Friendless Girls.” In the 1930s and 1940s, young women lived in the 30 tiny, 100-square-foot rooms. More recently, this single-room occupancy building has been home to seniors living alone. Last December, Cogswell Hall welcomed its newest residents after a gut renovation doubled its size, making room for 40 small studio apartments. A mix of male and female, low- and very low-income people now take advantage of C 24 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 STRENGTHENING COMMUNITIES mATTERs. CHASE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BANKING As a leader in community development finance, Chase proudly invests in neighborhoods nationwide. Our lending revitalizes communities by creating affordable housing and new commercial development. In 2009 alone, we provided $541 million in community development financing which helped to create 5,557 housing units. To learn more, visit chase.com/cdb. © 2010 JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. Member FDIC. “Chase” is a marketing name for certain businesses of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and its subsidiaries (collectively, “JPMC”). Products and services may be provided by commercial banking affiliates or other entities. SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS HOTEL NORTH BEND Developer: Umpqua Community Development Corp. Architect: Dallas Horn Major Funders: National Equity Fund, Inc.; Oregon Housing and Community Services; NeighborWorks America; Enterprise Green Communities NORTH BEND, ORE. ntil 2008, the half-empty Hotel North Bend loomed over the main intersection of this rural Pacific Coast downtown, dropping chunks of concrete on the sidewalk below. Built in 1921, this historic landmark is now energy efficient and strong enough to survive an earthquake, with retail space on the first floor and 32 apartments affordable to low- and very low-income people above. Umpqua Community Development Corp. worked since 2004 to redevelop the old hotel. By 2008, Umpqua had gathered $6 million from 10 different sources. But it took a special resilience to survive the earthquake of the financial crisis. U HISTORIC REHAB FINALIST National Equity Fund, Inc. (NEF), had agreed to buy Hotel North Bend’s 9 percent low-income housing tax credits for $0.94 on the dollar. NEF kept its promise, though the price dropped to $0.90—a $160,000 difference to the project’s budget. Creating better communities one project at a time Experts in Affordable Housing ICON Builders sets the standard for renovation of occupied affordable housing apartment units. We also excel in senior and multi-family new construction. We are the company with a passion for quality and detail on every project. i 8 0 nfo@ 0 - icon 7 8 buil 7 - ders 9 0 .com 90 Serving California, Arizona, and the west for over 60 years. iconbuilders .com www. “The market as a whole dropped $0.15 to $0.20,” says Betty Tamm, executive director of Umpqua. “We were lucky.” But NEF also reviewed the underwriting for Hotel North Bend and asked for $1.6 million in additional seismic engineering to protect the building from earthquakes. Engineers wove seven miles of steel tie wire and more than 40,000 pounds of steel rebar between a massive interior wall and the historic hotel’s reinforced concrete Tudor Revival façade. Umpqua also added insulation, energy-efficient windows, and an efficient, central forced-air, heat recapturing, heating, ventilation, and cooling system—improvements that helped Hotel North Bend win funds to close its budget gap. By the time it was finished last December, the $8 million project met the high standards of the Enterprise Green Communities. ■ —Bendix Anderson Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco > Silicon Valley Bank and Resources for Community Development Fox Courts, Oakland, CA Urban Finalist >> > Silicon Valley Bank and Affordable Housing Associates Petaluma Avenue Homes, Sebastopol, CA Family Finalist > > Congratulations Readers’ Choice finalists... Silicon Valley Bank and Citizens Housing & TNDC Mosaica, San Francisco, CA Master-Planned/Mixed-Use Finalist Mississippi Valley Life Insurance Co. and First Community Housing Corporation Casa Feliz Studios, San Jose, CA Green Finalist California Bank & Trust and Mercy Housing California 10th & Mission Family Housing, San Francisco, CA Urban Finalist …and thanks to the readers of Affordable Housing Finance for recognizing the vision and imagination that our member financial institutions and their community partners bring to creating environments where families and individuals can thrive. FHLBank San Francisco delivers low-cost funding that helps our members make home mortgages to people of all income levels and extend credit to support and strengthen neighborhoods. Through our Affordable Housing Program, we are proud to foster collaborations that will have a lasting impact on the diverse communities served by our members. fhlbsf.com SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS and place at-risk youth in restaurant industry jobs). THE CRESCENT CLUB The mixed-income, mixed-use Developer: The Domain Cos. Architect: Humphreys & Partners vision for Crescent Club introduces Architects urban residential to a neighborhood Major Funders: Centerline Capital; Bank whose character—especially postof America/Freddie Mac; Louisiana Office Katrina—had been commercial of Community Development; Louisiana and industrial blight. The promise is Housing Finance Agency; City of New an emerging bio-tech and medical Orleans Road Repair Funds; Capital One; juggernaut symbolized by the $2.2 New Orleans Redevelopment Authority billion Louisiana State University Veterans Affairs hospital as well as a new Criminal Justice Center. Twelve apartments rent at no Facing stiff headwinds, Domain toiled among more than 30 percent of the area median income (AMI), 38 state, city, local community, and investment inat 40 percent of AMI, and 42 units at no more terests to cobble a layering of financial structures than 60 percent AMI. Market-rate rents are to assemble and build out nearly three square about 25 percent lower than comparable rents blocks, including 12 owners in five states and in New Orleans’ Central Business District and two non-U.S. countries. “It’s played out as we hoped,” says Matthew the French Quarter, say developers. Further, the project brings 3,000 square Schwartz, co-founder and principal of The Domain feet of retail to the corridor, including a Capital Cos. “We’ve got Class A product near the central One bank branch, a dry cleaner, a nail salon, business district, amid the emerging medical disa Subway, a gourmet pizza store, a wine bar trict, and a new economic center in the city. And and tapas restaurant, and a coffee shop run by we’re still at it.” ■ —John McManus Liberty’s Kitchen (a nonprofit that works to train Photo: Jackson Hill Photography Lead developer Citizens Housing naviSAN FRANCISCO gated an odyssey of community, finanosaica, true to its name, offers cial, and construction balances to realize the Mission District 151 new the project. It started with a decrepit truck living units and commercial rental site that needed a costly environspaces whose distinct parts add up to a mental remediation. Citizens teamed with complexly balanced blend of affordable Tenderloin Neighborhood Development rental and ownership housing, as well as Corp.—which has taken on ownership— needed local business uses on site. evolving the project into a next-generation Encompassing a city block bordered real-world model of live-work diversity, by 18th, 19th, Florida, and Alabama MASTER-PLANNED/MIXED-USE FINALIST sustainability, and practicality, with the streets, the $75 million project went MOSAICA San Francisco Planning Department’s live in April 2009, featuring both ownerDevelopers: Citizens Housing Corp. and Tenderloin production, distribution, and repair imship condos and affordable rental units. Neighborhood Development Corp. peratives built into the DNA of an affordAmong 117 affordable rental apartArchitect: Solomon E.T.C. able neighborhood. ments, 93 are for families who earn no Major Funders: Wells Fargo Bank; City of San Francisco; “Each stand-alone part involved more than 50 percent of the area mediFederal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco; California complexity on the financing and commuan income (AMI), and 24 are for seniors Department of Housing and Community Development; nity outreach side,” says Noreen Beiro, who earn from 15 percent to 35 percent California Water Resources Control Board Underground Storage Tank Cleanup Program; National Equity Fund, Inc. who formerly was interim president of of AMI. Lutheran Social Services proCitizens Housing and now works consulvides 20 of the family apartments and tatively with Citizens. “The multiple array 11 of the seniors units with an array of to 120 percent of AMI. Its transit-oriented lo- of products and services and the complicated supportive services. Of Mosaica’s 34 for-sale units, 13 are mar- cation, on-site solar photovoltaics, and Energy stream of overarching agreements make this ket-rate condos, and 21 are priced for afford- Star-rated appliances and windows make it a project a truly impressive mosaic.” ■ —John McManus ability among households earning 80 percent green project, to boot. Photo: Tim Griffith MASTER-PLANNED/MIXED-USE FINALIST NEW ORLEANS he Domain Cos.’ $53 million Crescent Club community on Tulane Avenue in downtown New Orleans raises the bar of mixed-use development to urban economic and cultural viability where once there was none. Part of Domain’s $125 million—to-date— multi-phase revitalization along New Orleans’ Tulane Avenue Corridor, the Crescent Club opened in September 2009 with 228 units, 40 percent of them for lower-income families. T M 28 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Investing in the future of affordable housing Making an affordable housing project a reality requires a lot of pieces to come together. We specialize in bringing together debt, equity, construction solutions and more, all under one roof. $51,140,473* Resource Access Center Resource Access Center - Portland, Oregon Rendering: Holst Architecture Contact us today. wellsfargo.com/affordablehousing © 2010 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved. *includes permanent and construction/interim funding SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS MASTER-PLANNED/MIXED-USE FINALIST SANDYWOODS FARM Developer: Church Community Housing Corp. Architect: Donald Powers Architects Major Funders: Rhode Island Housing; Building Homes Rhode Island; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston; Town of Tiverton; Rhode Island Foundation; Citizens Bank; Rhode Island Department of Energy T and galleries for art exhibitions, while 111 acres of the tract are now and forever in the hands of the Tiverton Land Trust. Eighty percent of the 50 rental cottages will be affordable to households earning less than 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), and 20 percent will rent between 60 percent and 80 percent of AMI. Two of the project’s 24 single-family homes will go to first-time home buyers, while the others sell for market rate. With a nod to picturesque New England architecture, the buildings will incorporate structural insulated panels, low-e windows, cellulose insulation, Energy Star appliances, and high-efficiency heating and ventilation systems, 70 percent of whose power will come from an on-site wind turbine. If this model of genuine rural new urbanism seems like a bundle of contradictions in terms, it is. “The sheer complexity of the multiple, potentially competing goals of this project was a challenge to cobble together,” says Ann Berman, assistant director of development for Rhode Island Housing, the project’s primary state lending source. “It took a couple of tries before they were successful getting funding because of the complications. But it’s the right thing to do with the land, and we’re proud to be involved with the CCHC team.” ■ —John McManus Photo: Donald Powers Architects, Inc. TIVERTON, R.I. he charter residents of Tiverton’s Sandywoods Farm art and agricultural affordable housing community will move in as this issue goes to press this summer. Eventually, 50 households will be renting cottages and 24 families will be in for-sale single-family homes. Developed by Newport, R.I.-based Church Community Housing Corp. (CCHC), Sandywoods Farm organizes rural housing around a perimeter of a larger agricultural preserve, 29 acres of which will be farmed by the residents along with a resident farmer. The project combines farming with housing for working families, as well as commercial space to sell farm products Multifamily Rental Housing Financing with Tax-Exempt Bonds Orrick is one of the premier housing bond firms in the United States. Since 1985, we have served as bond counsel or underwriter’s counsel for over 2,000 housing finance transactions aggregating nearly $52 billion. For more information about our Housing Finance Practice or for a free copy of our publication Multifamily Rental Housing: Financing with Tax-Exempt Bonds, please contact publicfinance@orrick.com. los angeles new york orange county portland sacramento san francisco seattle silicon valley washington dc Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP | 51 West 52nd Street | New York, NY 10019-6142 | tel 212-506-5000 Attorney advertising. As required by New York law, we hereby advise you that prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. ROWING REQUIRES HIGH LEVELS OF TECHNICAL SKILL, MENTAL DISCIPLINE, STAMINA AND FOCUS. AFFORDABLE HOUSING LENDING REQUIRES SPECIAL TRAINING, TOO. Highly specialized jobs require highly specialized experts. Prudential Mortgage Capital Company’s Affordable Group has the know-how and experience to structure loans successfully. Plus, we have the strong contacts to deliver multiple financing sources, including Freddie Mac Delegated Targeted affordable loans and Fannie Mae DUS loans. When you need the rare talent it takes to provide unique Affordable financing solutions, talk to Prudential Mortgage Capital. Contact Prudential Mortgage Capital for more information 1-888-783-8660 www.prudential.com/affordablehousing SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS PRESERVATION FINALIST Developer: Eden Housing, Inc. Architect: Weir/Andrewson Associates, Inc. Major Funders: Bank of America; Merritt Community Capital; California Department of Housing and Community Development; Alameda County; Department of Housing and Urban Development SAN LEANDRO, CALIF. he acquisition and rehab of Ashland Village started out as a no-brainer for Eden Housing, Inc., says Executive Director Linda Mandolini. T The owner of the Sec. 8 property in the unincorporated area of Ashland in Alameda County had passed away, and its Sec. 8 contract was up for expiration March 31, 2009. The owner’s sons did not want to keep the project but wanted it to remain as affordable housing. However, in the 12 months before closing, the project’s original lender went out of business; California froze state bond sales, including the Proposition 1C Multifamily Housing Program bond financing that was providing a $7.7 million PRESERVATION FINALIST CHANCELLOR MANOR Developer: Community Housing Development Corp. Architect: Cermak Rhoades Architects Major Funders: U.S. Bank Community Development Corp.; Dakota County Community Development Agency; Minnesota Housing; Dakota County; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Family Housing Fund BURNSVILLE, MINN. hancellor Manor, built in 1972 and the largest project-based Sec. 8 development in Dakota County, has been undergoing an extreme makeover during the past year. The project had been plagued over the years with security problems and a high volume of police calls. In a third-ring suburb, it would have made a good location for market-rate conversion, but nonprofit Community Housing Development Corp. (CHDC) stepped up to the plate by acquiring the project in July 2009, preserving 200 Sec. 8 units primarily for families, and committing to C 32 improve the property as well as the property’s public image. Chancellor Manor’s 14 buildings received new roofs, windows, fiber cement siding, and entry porches as well as increased security and lighting, and hallway improvements. Many detached garages on the interior of the property were removed to provide better site lines and to address safety concerns. Landscaping improvements also have been made, including two new tot lots and new formal paths between buildings. Dick Brustad, vice president of CHDC, also emphasizes the project’s services. CHDC has A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 partnered with local nonprofit 360 Communities to provide services such as English as a Second Language classes for adults and homework help for students. He adds that the school district and police department have also been very involved in helping to transform Chancellor Manor. “This development has a whole new life,” Brustad says. All units are targeted to residents earning less than 60 percent of the area median income. The Department of Housing and Urban Development provides project-based rental assistance for 196 units, and 10 units have been designated for longterm homeless. The $29.2 million project was financed with a Minnesota Housing Preservation Affordable Rental Investment Fund loan, a Dakota County Housing Opportunities Enhancement Program loan, low-income housing tax credits allocated by the Dakota County Community Development Agency (CDA) and purchased by U.S. Bank Community Development Corp., and a first mortgage underwritten by the Dakota County CDA. ■ —Christine Serlin Photo: Chandra Smith for Weir/Andrewson Associates, Inc. ASHLAND VILLAGE permanent loan for the project; and a technical violation of the tax credit’s 10-year rule due to the inheritance structure created another snag. But the stars aligned for Eden. The lending team at Bank of America stepped in to fill the void. Bank of America agreed to underwrite the loans without the Prop. 1C program’s deeper income targeting, and Alameda County agreed to increase its permanent loan by $5 million to bridge the potential gap during construction. And Reps. Barbara Lee and Pete Stark (D-Calif.) rallied to keep legislation regarding the reform of the 10year rule in the Housing and Economic Reform Act of 2008. Eden closed on the project in March 2009, with its 4 percent low-income housing tax credit investor holding its pricing at $0.98 for more than a year. Renovations of the $34 million project include unit and exterior upgrades as well as a new community room. The project-based Sec. 8 contract was renewed; 53 percent of the 142 units are for residents earning 35 percent of the area median income (AMI), 40 percent at 50 percent of AMI, and 7 percent at 60 percent of AMI. ■ —Christine Serlin income people for the next 20 years. CHICAGO Mercy Housing Lakefront received any encouraged Mercy Long-Term Operating Support Subsidy Housing Lakefront to sell its and a Low-Income Housing Trust Fund Malden Arms Apartments, grant from the city of Chicago to cover which is located in the Uptown neighall but 10 units so that residents pay no borhood that has rapidly gentrified more than 30 percent of their income over the last several years. Median on rent. For the $6.4 million project, condo prices jumped 60 percent from the nonprofit closed on tax credit re2000 to 2005, taking away many lowsyndication with the Illinois Housing income efficiencies and forcing many Development Authority and tax credit individuals onto the streets and into investor National Equity Fund, Inc. And shelters. PRESERVATION FINALIST the in-place rehab featured numerous “The mission is our business, and cost-saving and green elements, of our business is the mission,” says MALDEN ARMS APARTMENTS Developer: Mercy Housing Lakefront which Holler says she would like to see Cindy Holler, president of Mercy Architect: Weese Langley Weese a 25 percent annual savings. Housing Lakefront. “A business withMajor Funders: National Equity Fund, Inc.; Illinois Housing As part of a pilot project for the out the mission would have sold the Development Authority; Chicago Department of Community Clinton Climate Initiative and the city of building or turned it into market-rate Development; Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago; Harris Chicago’s Multi-Family Energy Retrofit condos. Our mission is to preserve afBank; City of Chicago Program, Malden Arms now features fordable housing.” new Energy Star appliances, energy-efThe property, originally built in the 1920s, had first been transformed into sup- was losing $100,000 per year because of rent ficient lighting, low-flow water fixtures, energyportive housing by Mercy Housing Lakefront’s caps, limited rental subsidies, and high operat- efficient air conditioning, high-efficiency water predecessor, Lakefront Supportive Housing, ing costs. The nonprofit decided to resyndicate, heaters and boilers, and a reflective membrane in 1991. The low-income housing tax credits recapitalize, and rehab the 83-unit project in on the roof to reduce its heat island effect. ■ —Christine Serlin originally used expired in 2006, and the project 2008 to ensure that it could serve very low- M PRESERVATION FINALIST MONTEVERDE APARTMENTS Developer: Greater Baltimore AHC, Inc. Architect: Hord Coplan Macht Major Funders: Freddie Mac; Merrill Lynch; SunTrust Bank; Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development; Department of Housing and Urban Development BALTIMORE reater Baltimore AHC, Inc. (GBAHC), suffered its share of blows acquiring and rehabbing MonteVerde Apartments during the worst recession since the Great Depression. Formerly known as Greenhill Housing, the 301 units for low-income seniors were in danger of being lost when the owner had agreed to sell to an investor who planned to convert the apartments to market-rate condos. But the deal fell through, and GBAHC won the bid. After HOME funds from the city of Baltimore fell through, GBAHC raced to restructure the financing, negotiating an 18-year variable-rate bond issue with a construction letter of credit G from SunTrust Bank and a forward commitment for the credit enhancement from Freddie Mac for the permanent financing on the $29 million project. GBAHC also lobbied Baltimore for a PILOT to reduce the property’s annual tax bill by $200,000 per year for 40 years. The closing date had been set for Sept. 12, 2008, but was rescheduled after Freddie had been placed in conservatorship. Merrill Lynch, which was the remarketing agent for the bonds, was then purchased by Bank of America on Sept. 14. Despite the upheaval of the finan- cial world, GBAHC was able to close after 18 months of negotiations less than one week after the original closing date. The property was in need of major recapitalization, with 100 units off-line at the time of the acquisition. GBAHC worked with the residents to keep them in place while it transformed the two stark buildings into a more homey environment. The rehab included the creation of lounges to give residents a sense of place, updated kitchens and bathrooms, and new carpeting. New HVAC systems, energy-efficient windows, and Energy Star lighting fixtures also were installed. Since MonteVerde is a project-based Sec. 8 property, residents pay no more than 30 percent of their income for rent. “It’s been a long struggle with a great ending,” says GBAHC Director Andrew Vincent. “Pride has returned to the residents, and they want other people to see where they live.” ■ —Christine Serlin A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 33 SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS RURAL FINALIST I-SAH’-DIN’-DII Developer: Mescalero Apache Housing Authority Architect: Atkin Olshin Schade Architects Major Funders: Mescalero Apache Housing Authority; New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority; Raymond James Tax Credit Funds, Inc.; KeyBank; New Mexico Housing Trust Fund MESCALERO, N.M. he name I-Sah’-din’-dii means “drumbeat” in Apache. It’s a fitting name for a development nestled in a New Mexico mountain range where, for generations, members of the Mescalero Apache tribe have gathered to play music, dance, and sing. Demand was so high for the 30 single-family rental units—the first new development on the reservation in more than 12 years—that more than 265 families were on the waiting list before construction even began. Almost 77 percent of the families on the reservation earn less than 50 percent of the area median income, and 66 percent live in substandard or overcrowded housing, according to developer Mescalero Apache Housing Authority. T The development reflects the community at large. Not only were tribal members trained in construction skills during development, but the community room and most of the units have an east entry, the traditional Mescalero home orientation. And Environmental Protection Agency-approved energy-efficient woodstoves, a traditional heating source, were installed in every unit. Services include job training and homeownership education programs, financial literacy classes, a computer lab, on-site health care, and access to the Tribal Day Care Centers. The $8.8 million development was funded through more than $5.7 million in low-income housing tax credit equity syndicated by Raymond James Tax Credit Funds, Inc., and purchased by KeyBank; more than $1.3 million in Native American Housing Assistance funds from the Mescalero Apache Housing Authority; more than $750,000 in a construction loan from the Housing Trust Fund of the New Mexico Mortgage Finance Authority, which also kicked in $315,000 in a HOME construction/permanent loan; and an $843,460 deferred developer fee. ■ —Jerry Ascierto challenges in constructing the 19-unit development, including a five-month building season and a lack of local skilled labor. So, prefabricated modular construction was employed. Making sure the modules arrived by barge in time was difficult enough. But then the modular plant went bankrupt with only twothirds of the modules completed. The general contractor worked directly with the plant to get the final modules built on time. The housing had to be built on steel pilings to accommodate the tundra’s permafrost and a high water table. And design played a big role. Since the local lifestyle favored intergenerational housing, the project features two-, three-, four-, and even five-bedroom units. Securing an equity investor in such a remote location, especially during 2008 and 2009, was impossible. So, the $12.3 million project scored $7 million in equity through the Tax Credit Exchange Program; tapped $843,500 in federal and state HOME funds; received a $300,000 Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Rural Housing and Economic Development grant; found nearly $2.5 million through Alaska Housing Finance Corp.’s Supplemental Grant Program; and got nearly $1.7 million in Native American Housing Assistance funds contributed from the Association of Village Council Presidents through HUD. ■ —Jerry Ascierto RURAL FINALIST TOWNHOMES AT TOMAGANUK, HOOPER BAY Developers: Cook Inlet Housing Authority and Association of Village Council Presidents Regional Housing Authority Architect: WHPacific Major Funders: Alaska Housing Finance Corp.; Association of Village Council Presidents; Department of Housing and Urban Development HOOPER BAY, ALASKA ou can’t drive to Hooper Bay. The traditional Eskimo community on the West Coast of Alaska is only accessible by plane year-round, though you can take a boat there from June to October. The rural community was already struggling with a housing shortage when a fire gutted the heart of the town in August 2006, leaving 70 people homeless. The local housing authorities faced immense Y 34 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 RURAL FINALIST VILLA SAN JUAN BAUTISTA Developer: Catholic Housing Services Architect: Environmental Works Major Funders: Washington State Housing Finance Commission; State of Washington Department of Commerce; Catholic Housing Services of Western Washington CENTRALIA, WASH. ach year, the population of Centralia swells with the seasons. A farmworker community located in the poorest county of Washington, Centralia’s lack of affordable housing becomes apparent with the annual influx of migrant workers. And in 2007, a flood destroyed many homes, compounding the problem. The shortage forced many workers into substandard or overcrowded housing, or to camp illegally. About 15 percent of the region’s migrant workers live outdoors or in a shed or a car, while another 36 percent are in overcrowded units, according to a 2009 Washington State Farmworkers Trust survey. The 50-unit Villa San Juan Bautista, built by E Catholic Housing Services (CHS), had about 30 applications in mid-April—though the project won’t come online until August. NIMBY concerns from a neighboring housing development delayed the project for about a year. And then there were the archeological digs. The site, situated on a river, was considered a perfect spot for a Native American village, and CHS had to work closely with the Chehalis Tribe and Department of Archeology and Historic Preservation on extensive tests, reports, and permits. The development will feature a community garden, a computer lab, playgrounds, and services such as health care, mental health, and chemical dependency services. Activities like English classes and homeownership training are also planned. And the development will feature a “mud room,” with designated places for shoe and outerware removal, for the migrant workers. The $8.9 million development was funded with more than $6.9 million from the Tax Credit Exchange Program; $1.8 million through the State of Washington Department of Commerce; and a deferred developer fee of $157,632. ■ —Jerry Ascierto KNOW-H W Building Affordable Housing requires sound financial advice and counsel. With over 85 years of experience, Friedman LLP assists you in the complicated accounting procedures and regulations that affect your success. So when your development needs know-how, build a relationship with Friedman. Financial Audit & Tax Preparation | Cost Certifications | Tax Credits | Bond Deals | Deal Structuring | Application Assistance | Carryover Allocations | HUD REAC Filings | Program Compliance | Tax Credit Exchange Program/TCAP FRIEDMAN – THE NAME YOU SHOULD KNOW. ™ NEW YORK | NEW JERSEY | LONG ISLAND © 2010 Friedman LLP. All rights reserved. An Independent Member Firm of DFK with Offices Worldwide SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS a vibrant development with affordPALO ALTO, CALIF. able apartments and market-rate lta Torre provides 55 units of affordtownhomes—all in close collaboable seniors housing while compleration and integration with the admenting the adjacent Taube Koret jacent Taube Koret Campus for Campus for Jewish Life. Jewish Life.” These developments along with new BUILD (BRIDGE Urban Infill market-rate housing are the cornerstones of Land Development) is an initiaa new pedestrian-oriented, mixed-use neightive with the California Public borhood. Employees’ Retirement System to Developed by nonprofit BRIDGE Housing, SENIORS FINALIST build in key urban infill locations. Alta Torre has deep income-targeting, serving Alta Torre is designed to work residents earning between 25 percent and 40 ALTA TORRE Developer: BRIDGE Housing with the adjacent campus, which percent of the area median income. Twenty Architect: Steinberg Architects is anchored by the Oshman Family units are reserved as supportive housing for Major Funders: Union Bank; Silicon Valley Bank; Opportunity Jewish Community Center. BRIDGE frail elderly individuals who could be placed Fund; Sobrato Affordable Housing Fund; Housing Trust of is providing a one-year membership in a nursing facility but want to remain indeSanta Clara County; City of Palo Alto; Santa Clara County to the center to all initial residents, pendent as long as possible. Affordable Housing Fund/Stanford Affordable Housing giving them access to cultural proArea service providers will deliver or conFund; California Department of Housing and Community grams and recreational facilities, innect residents with vital services, including Development; California Tax Credit Allocation Committee; cluding indoor and outdoor pools. case management, in-home services, and California Debt Limit Allocation Committee; BUILD Financing includes 4 percent nearby adult day care. low-income housing tax credit equiDesigned with several green features, including a solar hot water heater, the $18 million Cynthia A. Parker, president and CEO of BRIDGE ty from Union Bank and loans from the California Housing. “Our BUILD affiliate led the community Department of Housing and Community development will open this summer. “We’re proud to bring affordable homes for outreach and entitlement process to redevelop Development and Silicon Valley Bank. ■ —Donna Kimura seniors into this dynamic new community,” says the former Sun Microsystems headquarters into A SENIORS FINALIST THE BIRCHES AT ESOPUS Developer: Birchez Associates, LLC Architect: Kurzon Architects Major Funders: New York State Housing Finance Agency; First Sterling; New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal; State of New York Mortgage Agency; Federal Home Loan Bank of New York; the Town of Esopus T 36 Eight units are handicapped accessible, and all units are handicapped ready with roll-in showers installed. All units have emergency pull cords so seniors can call for help. The development encourages an active lifestyle, with ample outdoor and community space. An exercise studio is staffed with a fitness coach. Understanding that isolation is a common issue for seniors, Birchez Associates also funds a senior advocate to lend a sympathetic ear and guide residents on services. To assist in the residents’ heath-care needs, the firm has teamed with nonprofit Elant, Inc., A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Photo: John Halpern ULSTER PARK, N.Y. he Birches at Esopus is the first affordable housing community in the town of Esopus, an area encompassing 40 square miles with about 9,500 residents. Overlooking the Hudson River, the new development provides 80 one- and two-bedroom apartments for seniors earning no more than 50 percent and 60 percent of the area median income. Birchez Associates, LLC, an experienced Hudson Valley affordable housing developer, built an amenity-rich development where residents can age in place, says Steven Aaron, managing member. on the “Nurse Is In” program, which brings a nurse to the property for regular office hours. The development is also notable for its green design. It has been recognized by the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority for achieving more than 30 percent savings over the state energy codes. Solar panels provide about 70 percent of the domestic hot water for the building and 40 percent of the heat. The $18 million development was funded largely by bonds from the New York State Housing Finance Agency, enhanced by the State of New York Mortgage Agency and low-income housing tax credits syndicated by First Sterling. Additional financing partners include the New York State Housing Trust Fund through the Division of Housing and Community Renewal and the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York. The town of Esopus and Birchez also contributed to the deal. ■ —Donna Kimura “This makes it possible for seniors to live a higher-quality life without complete dependence on a car for mobility and survival,” says Peter Ansara, executive director of the Korean Women’s Association (KWA), the nonprofit developer. “Smart connections to the neighborhood and beyond make this project a national model.” Besides being transit oriented, Senior City sup- ports environmental sustainability. Green features include a unique mini-heat pump system that will reduce energy use by about 40 percent. The development used a new $250,000 Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The $17 million development is home to the KWA Community Facility, which will provide a suite of social services to residents and more than 7,200 clients in the region. To develop the 62-unit community, KWA combined a federal Sec. 202 capital advance with 4 percent low-income housing tax credits syndicated by Enterprise Community Investment and tax-exempt bond financing provided by JPMorgan Chase. Bond financing will be used during construction. There is no permanent debt. Common Ground was the development consultant. As a Sec. 202 property, it has a Department of Housing and Urban Development project rental assistance contract rent of $442 per month per unit. While residents earning up to 50 percent of the area median income are eligible, the rental subsidies are providing opportunities for extremely low-income seniors earning much less. ■ —Donna Kimura hurricane, including the popular Forest Towers East. Not only that, the project’s neighborhood was virtually abandoned, leaving no services for its elderly residents. The nonprofit decided to rebuild at a different site. VOA secured a parcel in Jefferson Parish, but neighborhood opposition forced the team to look for yet another location. That meant the team would likely miss the deadline to begin construction and claim GO Zone depreciation. In response, VOA and others worked to change federal law to extend the start date for GO Zone projects. Other moves were also necessary to re- place Forest Towers East, an older Sec. 202 project that had a housing assistance payment contract. In order to make the new development viable, VOA needed some sort of operating subsidy to keep rents low. Working with the Department of Housing and Urban Development, VOA utilized a littleknown Sec. 318 transfer program to transfer the operating subsidy to the new project. As a result, residents pay no more than 30 percent of their income toward rent. When The Terraces on Tulane opened this year, 46 of the initial residents were from Forest Towers East. Many reunited for the first time since the hurricane. The $41 million project was funded with about $31 million in tax credit equity from JPMorgan Capital Corp. and the National Affordable Housing Trust. JPMorgan also provided a permanent loan, and the Major League Baseball Players Trust contributed $250,000. ■ —Donna Kimura SENIORS FINALIST SENIOR CITY APARTMENTS Photo: Peter Ansara Developer: Korean Women’s Association Architect: Environmental Works Major Funders: Enterprise Community Investment; JPMorgan Chase; Department of Housing and Urban Development; State of Washington Housing Trust Fund; King County; City of Federal Way; Department of Energy; Enterprise Green Communities; Washington State Housing Finance Commission; Sound Transit FEDERAL WAY, WASH. enior City Apartments addresses the housing and transportation needs of its elderly residents. A prime example of a transitoriented development, the community is built on surplus land left from the creation of the adjacent Federal Way Transit Center, a 24-hour hub for the regional transit system. S SENIORS FINALIST THE TERRACES ON TULANE Photo: Courtesy of Volunteers of America Developer: Volunteers of America Architect: Sizeler Thompson Brown Architects Major Funders: JPMorgan Capital Corp.; National Affordable Housing Trust; Major League Baseball Players Trust; Louisiana Housing Finance Agency; Department of Housing and Urban Development; the City of New Orleans NEW ORLEANS, LA. eniors displaced by Hurricane Katrina have found a home at The Terraces on Tulane. Built by Volunteers of America (VOA), the 200-unit development is one of a small number of affordable housing communities funded by Gulf Opportunity (GO) Zone housing tax credits that has finished construction and opened its doors. “The whole theme of coming home is what this is about,” says Patrick Sheridan, senior vice president of housing development. VOA has had a large presence in New Orleans, and many of its properties were damaged in the S A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 37 SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS PORTLAND, MAINE lorence House is a haven for homeless women. In simple terms, the project provides a roof over people’s heads. But it is much more complex, delivering three types of housing in a single building—25 efficiency apartments, 15 “safe haven” units, and room for up to 25 emergency shelter beds. “Florence House has dramatically changed the conversation around homelessness in Portland and in Maine,” says Dana Totman, president of nonprofit Avesta Housing. “Portland understands that emergency shelters are not the answer. This is a viable small city model to end chronic homelessness.” The second and third floors contain the 25 low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) apartments for chronically homeless and disabled individuals who are able to be more independent. The first floor houses the safe haven units, semi-private clusters of personal areas with a bed and a wardrobe. These are intended as permanent living space for chronically homeless women who are not ready for their own apartments. Some residents have paranoia or claustrophobia, so the clusters are designed to provide privacy SPECIAL-NEEDS FINALIST F FLORENCE HOUSE Developer: Avesta Housing Architect: Gawron Turgeon Architects Major Funders: Northern New England Housing Investment Fund; MaineHousing; NeighborWorks America; Genesis Fund; TD Bank; Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Maine Health and Human Services; Portland Housing Authority; the City of Portland without feeling constrained. While the apartments and safe haven units go a long way to ending homelessness among women in the area, developers included the shelter to respond to episodic homelessness. Florence House embraces the Housing First model of getting the homeless into their own homes as quickly as possible. It also is the first affordable housing development in the state to use geothermal heating and cooling systems. Avesta has partnered with Preble Street, the state’s main provider of homeless services, to offer a range of programs at Florence House. Financing for the $7.7 million development included about $4 million in LIHTC equity from the Northern New England Housing Investment Fund and subsidies from MaineHousing, the city of Portland, Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston, TD Bank, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. ■ —Donna Kimura SPECIAL-NEEDS FINALIST A 38 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Photo: Sally Painter PORTLAND, ORE. tired 45-year-old Ramada Inn has been transformed into an innovative affordable housing development for the city’s neediest residents. The 176-unit Madrona Studios provides permanent supportive housing, alcohol- and drugfree units, and workforce apartments for program graduates and other low-income residents. Madrona Studios also includes a 70-bed drug and alcohol recovery center. All have rents restricted at 40 percent of the area median income. By creatively reusing the five-story hotel, de- an upgraded solar water heating system, improved insulation with heat reflective MADRONA STUDIOS roofing, and a bike room for 130 biDeveloper: Central City Concern cycles. Architect: William Wilson Architects Madrona Studios, which uses 23 Major Funders: U.S. Bank; Wells Fargo Bank; funding sources, required a complex fiCity of Portland; Multnomah County; Oregon Housing and Community Services; Network nancing structure. for Oregon Affordable Housing; Federal Home To make the $25 million project Loan Bank of Seattle; Homestreet Bank; work, the ownership of the building was Enterprise Green Communities; Energy Trust separated into two legal entities, with of Oregon; Providence Mother Joseph Fund; 132 units—96 workforce and 36 supAlbina Community Bank portive housing—on the top three floors funded largely through $7.1 million in velopers were able to deliver the units at about low-income housing tax credit equity from U.S. half the cost of new construction, according to Bank and $5.2 million in tax increment financing the local nonprofits behind the project, developer from the Portland Development Commission. In Central City Concern (CCC), which has a history the second entity, 44 drug- and alcohol-free supof serving the hardest to house, and consultant portive-housing units on the second floor and the first-floor detox center are funded with the help Housing Development Center. “Our theme is changing lives and building of $2.8 million in New Markets Tax Credit equity communities,” says Ed Blackburn, CCC executive from Wells Fargo Bank and $3.7 million in bond financing from the Portland Housing Bureau. director. “This project fits so well into that.” The city of Portland, Multnomah County, and The reuse of the structure is just one of the ways that Madrona Studios is a green develop- Oregon Housing and Community Services are ment. A transit-oriented project that’s helping key financing partners. ■ —Donna Kimura revitalize the neighborhood, the building features LOCKPORT, N.Y. lind and other disabled residents have a safe and affordable home at the Nelson Hopkins Apartments. The 24-unit community is designed to provide easy mobility and increased safety for its special population, which often suffers falls and injuries related to an unsafe home environment. Developed by nonprofit Olmsted Center for Sight, the building is loaded with state-of-the art features, including an emergency call system in each apartment, adjustable cabinets and countertops, a talking elevator, and special lighting. All the apartments, which were set to open at the end of June, will have at least one independent individual who is blind, visually impaired, or has another disability. The development also answers the issue of affordability, with the units targeted to those earning no more than 50 percent of the area median income. Rents are about 40 percent below market rents. By providing safe and affordable homes, residents can remain independent and live without barriers, says Milissa Acquard, COO at the Photo: George Lama Photography B SPECIAL-NEEDS FINALIST NELSON HOPKINS APARTMENTS of finding a national low-income housing tax credit investor by turning to local banking relationships. The $4.9 million development was financed with $2.1 million in tax credit equity from syndicator RBC Capital Markets and investor M&T Bank. The New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal provided the tax credit award and $2.4 million through the recently created Tax Credit Assistance Program. The Dormitory Authority of the State of New York provided $400,000. ■ —Donna Kimura Developer: Olmsted Center for Sight Architect: Silvestri Architects Major Funders: RBC Capital Markets; M&T Bank; New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal; Dormitory Authority of the State of New York; First Niagara Bank Olmsted Center. One of the unique features at Nelson Hopkins is that residents are linked to the National Statler Center for Careers in Hospitality Service, a program of Olmsted Center that provides training and job placement in the customer-service field. Located in the town of Lockport, a suburb of Buffalo, Nelson Hopkins overcame the challenge Opening more doors… for the affordable housing industry. For more than 20 years, RubinBrown’s Real Estate Services Group has built an admired reputation nationally as a premier accounting firm in the real estate market, focused almost entirely on affordable housing and tax credits. Our specialized experts can help with the complexities related to audit, tax, and consulting, including complex deal structuring for LIHTC, historic tax credits, NMTC, renewable energy tax credits, HUD, state housing finance agencies, and much more. Contact Bryan Keller, CPA Partner-In-Charge, RubinBrown Real Estate Services Group bryan.keller@rubinbrown.com 314.290.3300 CPAs and advisors specializing in the affordable housing industry www.rubinbrown.com SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS SPECIAL-NEEDS FINALIST NEW CARVER APARTMENTS Developer: Skid Row Housing Trust Architect: Michael Maltzan Architects Major Funders: Citi Community Capital; Los Angeles Housing Department; California Department of Housing and Community Development; California Tax Credit Allocation Committee; Enterprise Community Investment; Century Housing; California Community Foundation T and other programs. Developers used several new financing programs to fund the $33 million development, including the city’s Permanent Supportive Housing Program, which links Sec. 8 project-based vouchers with the Los Angeles Housing Department’s housing capital application so developers can make a single application for both. It was also one of the first to utilize funds from Proposition 1C, a statewide voter-approved housing bond that is providing capital to affordable housing. And, New Carver is also using the Tax Credit Exchange Program, which was created under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to help low-income housing tax credit projects during the economic downturn. ■ —Donna Kimura help them to make changes in their BATTLE CREEK, MICH. lives.” omeless veterans filled The location benefits the men Silver Star Apartments in and women who live at Silver a short 39 days, a strong Star by placing them close to the show of demand for the 75 permaprograms at the VA campus. The nent supportive-housing units. majority of residents have been Built on the grounds of the referred by the medical center. Battle Creek Veterans Affairs In addition, Family Home Health Medical Center, the development Services provides case manageis the first low-income housing tax ment and other services. credit (LIHTC) community of its The one-bedroom apartments kind in the state. come furnished and have their own The special location required SPECIAL-NEEDS FINALIST patio or balcony. Marvin Veltkamp and his team at SILVER STAR APARTMENTS Much of the financing for the Trilogy Development to negotiate a Developer: Trilogy Development $8.9 million development came tricky enhanced-use lease to build Architect: Economides Architects from $4.7 million in LIHTC equity on federal land. After lengthy negoMajor Funders: Great Lakes Capital Fund; Michigan State from Great Lakes Capital Fund. tiations with Veterans Affairs (VA) Housing Development Authority; Department of Housing and The Michigan State Housing and the help of Michigan’s U.S. Urban Development Development Authority (MSHDA) senators, the developer was able to is providing project-based housing obtain a 75-year lease. Veltkamp is also CEO of Medallion work miracles, but they can set the stage in choice vouchers for all the units, which bring Management, the leaseholder and managing which miracles occur,” he says. “We have been in rental subsidies to keep rents low. MSHDA able to reach the hearts of these homeless also provided key loans to the project. ■ agent. —Donna Kimura “Flowers, clay, art, and sunlit spaces don’t veterans. We are able to touch their lives and H 40 A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 Photo: Iwan Baan LOS ANGELES he New Carver Apartments achieves both high purpose and high style. Built by the Skid Row Housing Trust (SRHT), the 97-unit development provides permanent supportive-housing units for formerly homeless men and women. At the same time, it makes a bold statement that design matters even when serving the homeless. New Carver illustrates the importance of design in facilitating recovery from homelessness by “making the on-site services functional in the way they are laid out in the building and by creat- ing spaces that promote positive social interaction,” says Mike Alvidrez, SRHT executive director. Designed by acclaimed architect Michael Maltzan, the dramatic six-story spiral with faceted walls has attracted public and media attention for a group that’s often ignored. The building’s unique shape came about as a way to mitigate noise from the nearby freeway. Sound moves around the building’s curves, lessening the impact. Inside, a central courtyard and airy decks aim to uplift residents and encourage them to be part of the community. Services are also key at New Carver, with residents having access to crisis services, health care, benefits advocacy, SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS URBAN FINALIST 10TH AND MISSION FAMILY HOUSING Developer: Mercy Housing California Architect: Kaplan McLaughlin Diaz Major Funders: RBC Capital Markets; Union Bank; San Francisco Redevelopment Agency; San Francisco Mayor’s Office of Housing; California Department of Housing and Community Development; California Tax Credit Allocation Committee; California Debt Limit Allocation Committee; Department of Housing and Urban Development; Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco; Cal Bank and Trust; Enterprise Green Communities; Home Depot Foundation M A 42 AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE home model, future homeowners and volunteers picked up hammers to build the development. The organization piloted a new mortgage program with the State of New York Mortgage Agency, which featured a 2 percent fixed-interest rate loan over 30 years, with buyers putting in 300 hours of sweat equity and a 1 percent downpayment. Built on a long-vacant, trash-filled lot, the $11.6 million development was built with numer- ous green features, earning a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design gold designation. Financing included a $3.3 million construction loan from Citi Community Capital, $1.6 million from the New York State Affordable Housing Corp., $1.1 million from the New York City Housing Trust Fund, $400,000 from the Brooklyn Borough President’s Office, $820,000 from the Brooklyn Community Foundation, and $308,000 in HOME funds from the state Division of Housing and Community Renewal. ■ —Donna Kimura URBAN FINALIST ATLANTIC AVENUE RESIDENCES Developer: Habitat for Humanity New York City, Inc. Architect: Dattner Architects Major Funders: Citi Community Capital; New York State Affordable Housing Corp.; New York City Housing Trust Fund; Brooklyn Borough President’s Office; Brooklyn Community Foundation; New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal; New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development Photo: Ari Burling BROOKLYN, N.Y. tlantic Avenue Residences is the largest and greenest multifamily development built in the nation by a Habitat for Humanity affiliate. Located in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, one of the lowest-income areas in New York City, Atlantic Avenue provides 41 affordable for-sale homes by adapting Habitat’s familiar single-family home model to a multifamily urban development. “When we get a piece of land, we can put a few townhomes or single-family homes on it, but there is such a need we try to be creative to serve as many families as we can,” says Executive Director Josh Lockwood. Habitat for Humanity New York City, Inc., received nearly 10,000 requests for applications for the property. The condos target families earning between 45 percent and 80 percent of the area median income. Homeowners paid between $75,000 and $200,000 for their homes based on their incomes. The costs were calculated so families pay no more than 33 percent of their incomes on their monthly housing expenses. Just like in the organization’s single-family the way for other projects, with three more highdensity developments planned nearby. The $69 million project, which includes the youth center and commercial space, received more than $25 million from the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency. The project uses 4 percent low-income housing tax credit equity from RBC Capital Markets and a tax-exempt bond-backed loan from Union Bank. The Department of Housing and Urban Development helped fund the youth center through its Economic Development Initiative. More than 3,000 applications were submitted by prospective residents. ■ —Donna Kimura Photo: ©2009 Michael O’Callahan SAN FRANCISCO ercy Housing California has broken new ground, building the first affordable housing high-rise in the city in about 20 years. Standing 12 stories, 10th and Mission Family Housing provides 135 affordable apartments while dispelling the notion that highrises are not an appropriate building model for low-income families. In creating the development, Mercy Housing provided generous open space on site and units to support larger families. The development is home to 91 families earning no more than 50 per- cent of the area median income and 44 formerly homeless families. A city-funded initiative called the Local Operating Support Program allows the formerly homeless households to pay just 30 percent of their incomes for rent. The development is distinguished by a 5,000-square-foot youth center, where Catholic Charities Catholic Youth Organization provides after-school care and educational programs. Replacing a diner and parking lot, the project is also important to the larger community, serving as a linchpin in the revitalization of the neighborhood. A local coffeehouse leases retail space in the buildings. In addition, 10th and Mission leads We’ve built the perfect partner to your favorite magazine. multifamilyexecutive.com MFE Web site + MULTIFAMILY EXECUTIVE magazine Working together to keep you informed. Create a powerful statement for your product, service or company thru professionally designed Marketing Materials utilizing editorial content. Contact Wright’s Reprints to discuss how we can customize these materials to enhance your current Marketing campaign. U.S. copyright laws protect against unauthorized use of published content. REPRINTS • EPRINTS • POSTERS • PLAQUES Reprints can be used as: • Trade Show Handouts • Point-of-Purchase Displays • Media Kits • Direct-Mail Campaigns Call today 877- 652-5295 and allow our reprint coordinator to assist you with some proven marketing ideas. SPECIAL FOCUS ❯❯ READERS’ CHOICE FINALISTS bedroom apartments and are home to OAKLAND, CALIF. many families, including 125 children. ox Courts is the affordable housFox Courts provides residents ing element in the city’s Uptown with an array of services including redevelopment plan. computer, employment search, and It almost didn’t happen after the resume building classes for adults original proposals omitted any signifiand a homework club for the youths. cant affordable housing. A coalition of In addition, the development advocates fought for years to include solves the transportation challenga diverse range of housing in the rees for many low-income workers by development efforts that included being just a block away from a re700 new market-rate homes and the URBAN FINALIST gional light-rail station. Fox Courts renovation of a historic theater. FOX COURTS has a number of other green feaAfter the city agreed to the idea, Developer: Resources for Community Development tures, including photovoltaic panels nonprofit Resources for Community Architect: Pyatok Architects to power the common areas. Every Development (RCD) was selected Major Funders: Alliant Capital; Union Bank; California Tax Credit apartment also uses efficient hyto turn a parking lot into affordable Allocation Committee; California Debt Limit Allocation Committee; dronic heat radiators. housing. California Department of Housing and Community Development; City of Oakland; Alameda County; Oakland Housing Authority; The development was financed RCD has built a $33.7 million Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco; Silicon Valley Bank; with nearly $14 million in 4 percent mixed-use, transit-oriented, artsStopWaste.org; Enterprise Green Communities low-income housing tax credits alenriched complex with 80 affordable located by the California Tax Credit apartments for residents earning between 30 percent and 60 percent of the area ating a significant amount of affordable housing Allocation Committee and syndicated by Alliant median income. Six of the homes are reserved for when larger developments or larger revitaliza- Capital. Tax-exempt bonds were allocated by the people with HIV/AIDS, and four are for residents tions are happening in cities,” says RCD Executive California Debt Limit Allocation Committee, and Union Bank was a key lender. ■ Director Dan Sawislak. with mental illnesses. —Donna Kimura The units range from studios and lofts to four“Fox Courts points out the importance of cre- F ST. MARTIN’S APARTMENTS Developer: Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington Architect: Grimm + Parker Major Funders: Archdiocese of Washington; D.C. Department of Housing and Community Development; D.C. Housing Authority; D.C. Housing Finance Agency; Enterprise Community Investment; Fannie Mae; William S. Abell Foundation; Union Bank WASHINGTON, D.C. t. Martin’s Apartments has been dubbed a miracle. Developing the 178-unit community required moving a historic convent and calling on some unique funding sources. Scheduled to open in September, the development will include 128 units affordable to families earning no more than 60 percent of the area median income, including 10 that are fully accessible to disabled individuals and 50 public S 44 housing units. The complex is on land donated by the Archdiocese of Washington, leading to a new partnership between the faith community and the District of Columbia Housing Authority. Located in the Eckington neighborhood, St. Martin’s marks the first new affordable housing built in the northeast section of the district in a generation, according to project sponsors. The hilly site presented a challenge to developer Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington. It moved a historic brick convent and excavated the hill before replacing it back on the site to integrate it into the new building. Financing the $42.6 million project also A F F O R D A B L E H O U S I N G F I N A N C E • J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 0 required some deft moves. Developers used Replacement Housing Factor Funds to subsidize the construction of the public housing units. Various restrictions on these federal funds have limited their use overall, according to officials, who used the funds along with low-income housing tax credits and tax-exempt bonds. The project closed a funding gap by linking with a downtown commercial project. In return for a multi-million dollar injection of cash into St. Martin’s, the commercial project was able to reduce its on-site residential requirement. Enterprise Community Investment, Union Bank, and several local agencies provided key financing, and NorthStar Development and Consulting assisted in the development. ■ —Donna Kimura Photo: Domin Photography URBAN FINALIST SESSIONS NOW AVAILABLE! VIR TUAL MULTIFAMILY EXECUTIVE CONFERENCE TECH TRENDS, 2010 AND BEYOND Hear from the industry’s leading tech professionals, executives, and consultants on the existing and emerging LIVE KEYNOTE PRESENTATION: All Revved Up: What Apartment Owners Can Learn From the Auto Industry about Web-Savvy Consumers technologies that are shaping the apartment industry now and in the years to come—all from the comfort of your home or office, at a time that is most convenient for you. ON-DEMAND SESSIONS: Cloud Computing: What You Need to Achieve a Cloud Computing Strategy Our keynote presenter, John McElroy, a 30-year veteran of the auto industry and host of the Emmy Award-winning TV show Autoline Detroit, draws on his extensive career as a journalist covering the automotive industry for a lively and enlightening presentation. 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Nuts and Bolts of Deal Structuring ◾ BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! Tax Credit and Tax-Exempt Bond Boot Camp 12:15 – 1:30 pm 1:45 – 3:15 pm Buffet Lunch in Exhibit Hall Concurrent Sessions: ◾ Choosing the Best Debt Financing Strategy in an Unpredictable Market: Part II ◾ Deploying Stimulus Funds ◾ BONUS SESSION! Preservation of Older LIHTC Deals 1:00 – 3:30 pm (with a 15-minute intermission) AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE Editorial Advisory Board Roundtable 3:30 – 4:00 pm Coffee Break 3:15 – 4:00 pm Coffee Break in Exhibit Hall 4:00 – 5:30 pm Concurrent Sessions: 4:00 – 5:30 pm Concurrent Sessions: ◾ Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Allocations: What’s Ahead for the Industry ◾ When All Roads Lead to HUD 5:30 – 7:00 pm ◾ Tapping into Bond Financing ◾ Filling the Financing Gap ◾ BONUS SESSION! Proactive Asset Management Welcome Reception in Exhibit Hall FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4 7:30 – 8:30 am Breakfast and Roundtable Discussions — Various Discussions on Green Building in Affordable Housing 8:30 – 10:00 am NEW FORMAT! Tax Credit Equity Outlook Roundtable Coffee Break in Exhibit Hall 10:00 – 10:30 am Coffee Break in Exhibit Hall Concurrent Sessions: 10:30 am – 12:00 pm Concurrent Sessions: 7:30 – 8:30 am Breakfast and Roundtable Discussions — Special-Needs, Rural, and Seniors Housing, and Mid-Term Elections’ Impact on Housing 8:30 – 10:00 am Opening Plenary Session 10:00 – 10:45 am 10:45 am – 12:15 pm ◾ Choosing the Best Debt Financing Strategy in an Unpredictable Market: Part I ◾ BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! News from the Capitol Continued... ◾ NEW! Strategies for Using the Other Tax Credits ◾ NEW! 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