Showing posts with label Habitat for Humanity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Habitat for Humanity. Show all posts

Monday, October 04, 2010

President Carter Digs Ivy City

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President Jimmy Carter is in town today, but far from his old residence, as he starts his latest project in the District's Ivy City neighborhood. With few developers choosing Ivy City for their next big apartment project, the District of Columbia took matters into its own hands in 2008 and awarded 4 non-profit developers the right to redevelop, with District help, a smattering of vacant properties in northeast DC. Mi Casa, Inc., Manna, Inc., MissionFirst, are all taking part, but none as visibly as DC Habitat for Humanity with its former president in the roster.

While Mi Casa began their project earlier this year, Habitat is renovating 8 duplexes along Providence Street, beginning today, with the hopes of building several dozen more over the next few years to serve families at less than 30% of the AMI. Habitat has sold 7 of the 12 homes - 6 new and 6 renovated - and future owners will begin working alongside the professional contractors to complete the requirement of "300 sweat equity hours" for each owner. Less ambitious homebuyers can enlist "friends and family" for 150 of those hours, so those with friends moving to Ivy City might want to avoid phone calls from those friends in the near future.

The District is subsidizing the various projects through DHCD’s Ivy City Special Demonstration Project, the District is subsidizing the acquisition price for each property, in a bid to help stabilize a neighborhood isolated from development money and new construction.

The octogenarian president is in town only for the day, moving on to Annapolis tomorrow to throw his own sweat equity into his next project.

Washington, DC Real Estate and Development News

Monday, September 13, 2010

Passive Solar House Coming to Deanwood

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Parsons and the Stevens Institute of Technology, in conjunction with the DC Department of Housing and Community Development and the DC Chapter of Habitat for Humanity, are taking their passive solar house design from the National Mall and bringing it to Deanwood in Ward 7. The design team for emPowerhouse also includes Milano The New School for Management and Urban Policy, coalescing expertise from the fields of design, management, and engineering, and operating under the guidelines of the Department of Energy's Solar Decathlon competition, in a unique effort to unite
competition-level design with sustainable and affordable development.

Sponsors held a "Site Warming" event in Deanwood yesterday, which celebrated the upcoming Spring 2011 groundbreaking on the residences. Laura Briggs of Parsons's School of Constructed Environment reported that over 100 students have been involved in the course of the project. "It takes that many people to do a job like this," she commented, noting that students from multiple disciplines, including architecture, engineering, planning, policy, management, communications, product, lighting, and even fashion design have been collaborating on the project. John Clinton, Associate Professor of Sustainability at Milano - The New School for Management and Urban Policy added "[w]e wanted to provide opportunities for the community to learn about sustainability and infuse it in the design process. We also wanted to go from the house to housing." In a public address at the event, Sylvia Brown, ANC- 7C04, called the occasion a "monumental step." She hopes that conventional developers will have to contend with a new standard of housing in Ward 7, once the project is finished in October of 2011.

The Parsons (officially Parsons - The New School for Design) design team was selected as a finalist for the biennial Solar Decathlon Competition, next held on the Mall in the fall of 2011. The team is working on design at all scales: neighborhood and building, and even on fixtures and appliances. Taking into consideration the sun's path during different months of the year and the layout of the street grid in Deanwood, the plan adjusts the orientation of the buildings on the site to maximize southern exposure and thermal retention. The houses are designed to reach their optimum energy efficiency when they are side by side as a duplex, so the ultimate goal is to erect them both in Deanwood, providing the community with an affordable model for an innovative energy-efficient home.

With input from the Stevens Institute of Technology, which brought engineers into the design process, the design team is planning for a cellulose-insulated building envelope with R-values in the 40s and 60s, a Zehnder energy recovery ventilator system to heat and cool the houses, as well as hybrid photovoltaic-thermal cells, which not only generate electrical energy from the sun, but collect thermal energy reserves to offset solar cell energy loss, which occurs when solar cells heat up and their thermal resistance increases. Sinks with built-in greywater filtration devices and on-site storm water management
through an underground collection cistern and rain gardens are also under consideration.

The transition to Deanwood came when Shana Mosher, a student with connections to both Parsons and DC local government contacted ANC rep Sylvia Brown and Dennis Chestnut, Founder of the Ward 7 Non-Profit Network, and matched the idea of a Decathlon-worthy home with DC neighborhood development. As part of the community-building, the team is producing monthly newsletters with background information about Deanwood, Habitat for Humanity's efforts to improve storm water runoff by installing rain gardens in the neighborhood, and analysis on how the layout of a neighborhood affects passive house design.

The Deanwood neighborhood is no stranger to sustainable development practices. A participant in the the CarbonFree DC "Extreme Green Neighborhood Makeover," which retrofits existing homes with green features and, as of July 22nd, has gotten funding to retrofit 20 additional homes in the DC area, Deanwood residents have been given a hand in caulking drafty windows, weather-stripping doors and windows, converting to smart power strips that monitor idle vampire usage, exchanging incandescents for compact flourescents, and gardening.

"We anticipate a 10% cost increase, which will be paid back in seven years. With 90% increased efficiency, for a 30-year note, that is $60,000 in savings," estimated David Gano, the Habitat for Humanity construction manager on the site. Habitat, which acts as a guarantor for low and middle income families that decide to partner with the organization, is in the process of selecting residents for the much-anticipated pilot housing in Deanwood.

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Ivy City's Jimmy Fund

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News out of DC's (once?) blighted Ivy City neighborhood is sounding positive these days. It was a little over a year ago that the District announced it would team up with non-profit developers, Mi Casa, Inc., Manna, Inc., DC Habitat for Humanity and MissionFirst to rehab 37 vacant properties within a six-blocks radius in Northeast DC.

With nonprofit home builder Mi Casa already at work on their first units, DC Habitat for Humanity President Kent Adcock confirms that the Ivy City overhaul is on track to move into the second phase of development: 8 duplexes along Providence Street, NE. Adcock is not definitive about the completion time-line for the project, saying his organization will start with three duplexes but anticipates staying in Ivy city for three years, ultimately placing “30 to 35 families in these homes.”

Look for a star-studded ground breaking featuring 200 volunteers, an appearance by grinning former President Jimmy Carter and other yet-to-be -announced celebrities on October 4th of this year.

In the meantime, northeast residents can stay up-to-date on project developments by attending the DC Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) public hearing on May 6th at the Housing Resource Center on the first floor of 1800 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave. SE.

In addition to getting a sneak peak at what Habitat has planned for 1817 Providence Street, NE, DHCD Senior Public Information Officer Angelita Colรณn-Francia says that first-time homeowners can attend the meeting to learn about purchasing options.

As Adcock explains, the majority of “the families we’re serving are below 30% AMI - for a family of four, that’s $30-31,000 max.” The sale of the first homes will guarantee that “no one should have to pay more than 25% of their income at 0% interest” to own a home. By acting as their own bank, Habitat can sell their homes at cost to area families.

It also helps that, according to DHCD’s Ivy City Special Demonstration Project web site, the District is subsidizing the acquisition price for each property. "The request for proposals committed $3 million in gap financing to the developers through DHCD. There is limited profit gain for the developers involved; therefore, the District’s commitment to provide gap financing is essential for the developers to complete the project.”

According to Adcock, Habitat is in the midst of “negotiating on an additional 15 lots with the District and 5 rehabs” on top of their current 8 home projects. He says we could see as many as 30 Habitat buildings and “full gut rehab” jobs coming to Ivy City before Habitat’s ready to call their portion of the Ivy City Special Demonstration Project a wrap. These next phases will sell at up to 80% AMI to bring a mixed-income vibe to the neighborhood.

In typical Habitat fashion, future residents will be invited to help build their own homes. Habitat has been working with Trinity Baptist Church and local ANC Commissioners to reach these potential homeowners.

“I think this project is just a demonstration about how collaboration and partnership really works,” says Adcock proudly. “In and of ourselves, we’d have trouble getting into a part of the District like Ivy City, but because the District jumped into help, we’ll really be able to help rehab and turn a part of the city around.”

Washington, DC Real Estate and Development News

Monday, May 18, 2009

Newfound Humanity in Arlington

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Habitat for Humanity of Northern Virginia will soon convert a 50-year-old Arlington apartment complex into low income housing, pending county approval. Known to area residents as the Perry S. Hall Apartments, Habitat will update the aging facility at 2912 17th Street South and then, in a move not usually associated with non-profit developer, put all 12 units of housing in complex up for sale as affordable-rate condos.

But neighbors shouldn’t fret over more low-income housing going up next door, says the developer. Since purchasing the property from Wesley Housing in 2005, the building has remained entirely vacant and George Lane, Project Manager for Habitat NOVA, tells DCmud the revitalized Hall Apartments will contribute to, not detract from, thank you very much, the surrounding Nauck neighborhood.

“[It’ll be] a major improvement to the neighborhood. If you drive by what’s there, it’s a pretty raggedy looking old building. No one’s done anything to it in 25 or 30 years and what we’re doing will blend in with the neighborhood. It’s colonial-style and it’s going to look very nice. There will be brick used in it…and a lot of nice window features. The units will be updated with modern appliances and plumbing and all that,” said Lane. “We’re building the same sort of housing [middle-class buyers] expect to live in today. We’re just building it for people who don’t make as much money.”

According to Lane, the development team – which also includes Creaser/O’Brien Architects – met with local Nauck residents last year to present designs and has stated the intention to ensure that locals already living in the area with be given “an equal, if not preferred opportunity” to purchase condo units. At present, they are scheduled to be available to those making between 20% and 60% AMI. Though Habitat famously relies on a stable of volunteers to construct their homes, the developer stresses the quality of the colonial-style apartment building will be on par with that of any professionally built project.

"Habitat uses a lot of volunteers for finishes. They’ll hang the drywall, they’ll install the insulation, they’ll do the carpentry and they’ll paint…All electrical, mechanical plumbing and things of that nature…are all done by professional contractors,” said Lane. “We sub-contract that out to other companies.”

Surprising to most will be the fact that this is not Habitat of Northern Virginia’s first foray into world of condominium development. They’re currently under construction on another, 9-unit development, entitled the Maple Ridge Condominiums, at 4150 Stevenson Street in Fairfax. Another Fairfax condo project, the 12-unit Westbrook Forest, was completed in 2007. And, following an upcoming Planning Board hearing, Habitat hopes to have the Perry S. Hall condos join them in short order.
“If all goes well [at the May 19th hearing]…then we’ll settle our building permit. Hopefully, the County will turn those plans around in a month or two and we’ll be able to start in mid to late summer,” said Lane. The project is scheduled to wrap up by the spring of 2010.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

DC Commits to (Modest) Ivy City Redevelopment

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The District government today announced that it is aiming to "transform" one of the city's most beleaguered neighborhoods by overseeing the redevelopment of 37 vacant properties within a six-blocks radius in Northeast's Ivy City enclave. Best known, if at all, for its ramshackle homes, illegal dumping sites and high crime rate, Ivy City will now host new construction and renovation projects awarded to four non-profit developers: Mi Casa, Inc., Manna, Inc., DC Habitat for Humanity and MissionFirst. It’s a move calculated to increase homeownership in a neighborhood weighed down by a glut of vacancies and a foreclosure rate twice that of the rest of Washington, DC.

"Just 12% of Ivy City’s residents own their homes," said Mayor Adrian Fenty, who referred to Ivy City's abandoned properties as "places to deal drugs and dump trash." Fenty noted "That’s one of the lowest homeownership rates in the city, but when these projects are finished, we can double that – which would be a fantastic statement about this city’s commitment to homeownership and neighborhood stabilization.”

Despite the uplifting mood of the press conference, expectations were not set high for the neighborhood that is isolated by Mt. Olivet Cemetery, New York Avenue, and the railyard, yet nowhere near a Metro station, and where many single family homes still list under $200,000 - without much interest.

Mi Casa will be moving ahead first with renovations of three buildings at 1302 and 1304 Gallaudet Street, NE and 1917 Capitol Avenue, NE. During Phase I, the developer plans to revamp 6 condos in the first property, with the intent of offering them to “seniors and extended families.” Four will available to those making less than 30% of the Area Median Income (AMI), while all have been reserved for area residents making less than 50% of the AMI. The second property, 1917 Capitol, will feature 2 affordable two-bedroom condos for those at less than 50% of the AMI. Mi Casa will be giving preference current eligible residents who have pre-qualified for a mortgage and “are committed to living in the neighborhood long-term.”

The remainder is expected to follow suit shortly after the completion of the first phase, with Manna planning 20 units, 15 for MissionFirst, and 8 for Habitat for Humatity. Together, that amounts to 58 new units for Ivy City – only 6 of which will be priced at market-rate. The projects will be combine renovations and new, from-scratch developments on vacant lots.

The Ivy City project is being partly funded by combining the $1 million value of District-owned parcels with $3 million from the federal Neighborhood Stabilization Program. The total cost is projected to be roughly $15 million and the neighborhood is still scheduled to begin receiving upwards of $3 million in infrastructural improvements beginning in May of next year.

The last time the District took a stake in Ivy City was when the DC City Council voted to relocate several Navy Yard strip clubs to the dilapidated neighborhood in order to make way for Nationals Park. William Shelton, chair of the ANC 5B was quick to credit the citizens of Ivy City with leading the charge to get District officials to take a second look at the state of their neighborhood.

"The tenants there, led by the Ivy City Citizens Association, have been at the forefront of this…It’s a very positive experience to see them determine their own destiny in terms of what the community ought to become,” said Shelton. “And, for our part, we’re enthusiastic to see that part of the city have an opportunity to have some those abandoned houses… renovated and restored." And for the fine folks of Ivy City, the modest announcement may not be a new stadium, but its a start.

 

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