Round 1 of the City's Harvey Multifamily Program includes $163 million of investment that will create 1,604 apartments

September 3rd, 2019 --

Round 1 of the City's Harvey Multifamily Program includes $163 million of investment that will create 1,604 apartments

Houston will soon have many more affordable, resilient apartments for renters.

The City of Houston's Housing and Community Development Department today announced four additional awards for its first round of funding for the Harvey Multifamily Program. This program finances the construction and renovation of rental homes lost or damaged during Hurricane Harvey. The program is funded through a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The four awards are for: a residence for low-income seniors at 2100 Memorial Dr.; a mixed-income development at St. Elizabeth's Place, the former hospital in 5th Ward; a New Hope Housing residence for people who have experienced homelessness; and the rehabilitation of the W. Leo Daniels senior housing complex.

Nearly a quarter of Houston's rental housing was affected by floodwaters during Hurricane Harvey, said Housing and Community Development Director Tom McCasland. Low-income renters often have an especially hard time recovering from a disaster like Harvey. Our commitment to an equitable recovery means that we're moving quickly to make investments in affordable apartments that are resilient to future disasters and close to good schools and transit.

The four developments bring the first round of funding under the Harvey Multifamily Program to a total of $163 million in 15 developments. 1,604 units will be developed with this funding. 1,348 units will be rented at affordable rates to income-qualified renters.

Summary of the four latest awards:

The Harvey Multifamily Program opened in February 2019. A total of 56 proposals were reviewed for funding and awards were announced in June, July, and August. The total budget for the Harvey Multifamily Program is $350 million. Two additional rounds of funding are expected to be announced in 2020 and 2021.

Prior to Harvey, a total of 12,800 units that received investment from the City's housing programs were subject to monitoring to ensure they were rented to income-qualified renters. The additional 1,348 guaranteed-affordable rental units from this first round of Harvey recovery funding represent an 11% increase in affordable rental homes funded by the Housing and Community Development Department.

To find apartments that must be rented at affordable rates, visit the Harris County Housing and Community Resource Center or Social Serve.

Assistant Director for Multifamily Ray Miller added, These developments are the first construction projects that will benefit from the Build Houston Better Workforce Protection Measures. Protecting workers and making sure they make a living wage is an example of equity in disaster recovery.

These standards apply to multifamily developments funded with $350 million in the Harvey housing recovery budget. Protections for workers include: an hourly base wage of $15, workers' compensation insurance, and safety certification training. The program also requires 10% of all project work hours to be done by workers registered in an apprenticeship program and another 10% to be completed by low-income residents through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Section 3 program.

Development Developer(s) Other Financing Total Units Guaranteed Affordable Units Council District HCD Priority Award Amount*
2100 Memorial Houston Housing Authority / Columbia Residential 4% HTCs 196 196 H Preservation of existing affordable multifamily housing $25,000,000
St. Elizabeth's Place Fifth Ward CRC / Cantwell Anderson Conventional 179 91 B Located within Community Reinvestment Area (TIRZ 18) $23,680,000
New Hope Housing New Hope Housing 4% HTCs 100 100 H Located within Second Ward Complete Community $12,500,000
W. Leo Daniels Towers I W. Leo Daniels Towers, Inc. 4% HTCs 100 100 H Preservation of existing affordable multifamily housing $10,000,000
Avenue on
34th
Avenue CDC 4% HTCs 70 56 C Areas experiencing high rental costs that cause displacement of LMI households $7,400,000
Change
Happens City
Living
Change Happens / NHP 4% HTCs 74 67 D Located within Third Ward Complete Community $12,518,766
Scott Street
Lofts
Mark-Dana Co/ Urban Partnership CDC 4% HTCs 123 98 I Transit Oriented Development $15,730,788
The Gale
Winds Apartments
Avenue CDC Conventional 18 10 H Preservation of existing affordable multifamily housing $1,226,750
The Briarwest Apartments Blazer Development 9% HTCs 120 100 G Area of low poverty concentration and high performing schools $2,500,000
900 Winston Magellen Housing TX / Royal American Development 9% HTCs 114 102 H Area of low poverty concentration $9,250,000
Bellfort Park
Apartments
KGC Development 9% HTCs 64 64 K Preservation of existing affordable multifamily housing $3,500,000
Gala at
MacGregor
Gardner Capital 9% HTCs 85 75 D Located within Community Reinvestment Area (TIRZ 7) $9,570,000
Edison Lofts DWR Development Group / Edison Arts Foundation 9% HTCs 126 107 K Located within Community Reinvestment Area (TIRZ 11) $8,000,000
McKee City
Living
Covenant Community Capital / Gulf Coast Housing Partners 9% HTCs 120 96 H Located within area of low poverty concentration $11,700,000
South Rice
Apartments
The Brownstone Group 9% HTCs 115 86 J Located within Gulfton Complete Community $10,000,000
Total 1,604 1,348 $162,576,304

Funds for Harvey Recovery Programs are provided by the City of Houston and the Texas General Land Office through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's Community Development Block Grant Program.