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What is HOPE VI?
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High Point Redevelopment Plan
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High Point, Seattle Housing’s
largest site, entered the initial stages of
redevelopment in 2004. All of the original 716 worn-out
public housing units built in the 1940s will
soon be replaced with mixed-income housing for
renters and home owners. |
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Mithun Architects, SvR Design, Nakano
Associates, Seattle Housing residents, West
Seattle community members, and Seattle Housing
staff
worked together to create High Point's
award-winning redevelopment plan. The plan
includes three major components: quality
design, a healthy environment and an
engaged community. |
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The plan incorporates ways to
implement community and environmental
sustainability of the area. It calls for creating a safe, high
quality and healthy residential environment with a range of
housing types each built to Built Green
standards that will be fully integrated with
the surrounding community. |
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New streets are being re-aligned
and reconnected with the West Seattle grid, new
neighborhood facilities will be operating at
more inviting
locations, and the mix of housing and resident
income levels are becoming more compatible with the
greater neighborhood.
The High Point plan has
received many awards honoring its
approach to the environment and community.
This image shows the
streetscape describing the various components.
Click on it to view an enlarged version
in a .pdf format. |
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Click here to learn
about some of these awards and recent news.
To maintain the green,
garden-like feel, the plan designated over 20
acres of land for parks, open spaces, and
playgrounds. To view the map of the open spaces
plan, click
here. A four-acre, beautiful, yet active
central park will be at the heart of the
community. Another park features a large pond and
a jogging trail, and several other community and
pocket parks are scattered throughout High Point.
The pond is a main component of High Point's
natural drainage system. It also features a
jogging trail and benches. |
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Even planting strips along streets will be
greener and wider than elsewhere in Seattle. The
plan triples the number of previously existing
trees. More than 100 mature trees will be retained
and about 2,600 new trees will be planted along
streets and parks.
By the end of the decade, High
Point will have 1,600 new affordable and
market-rate units across its 120 acres, making
it Seattle Housing's largest site.
These units will be offered to
people in the following categories.
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Units affordable to
people earning 80
percent or less of median income |
| 350 |
public
housing units for very low-income people at 30
percent of median income or below
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| 250 |
tax-credit
units for working families at up to 60 percent
of median income
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75 |
independent
and assisted-living housing units for
very-low-income seniors (0-30 percent)
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| 80 |
affordable
homeownership units
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| 755 |
total
units affordable to people earning 80 percent or
less of median income
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Estimated Market-rate housing |
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160 |
units
of market-rate independent and assisted senior
housing
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| 255 |
single
family market-rate, for-sale units
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389 |
other market-rate
housing - condominiums, townhomes and carriage
units,
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| 804 |
total
units of market-rate housing
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The Seattle Housing Authority has
made an unequivocal commitment to one-for-one
replacement of low-income rental apartments. As
part of the High Point plan, all 716 previously
existing units will be replaced with modern
apartments designated for low-income renters. Most
of the new replacement apartments will be at High
Point, while others will be located nearby and
elsewhere in Seattle.
Click here to
view the High Point replacement housing plan.
The redevelopment efforts are
occurring in two phases. Home construction in
Phase I, the northern half of High Point, is
currently underway. The beginning stages of
redevelopment activities in Phase II, the
southern half of the site, began this year.
Seattle Housing has worked to include
community members and residents in the redevelopment
planning. One way they have been involved is by
sharing their opinions on what the new housing
should look like. SHA asked West Seattle neighbors and residents of High Point
to participate in a design survey. The survey was mailed to neighbors of High Point and SHA conducted a hands-on workshop with residents.
More than 450 responses to a visual
survey have been compiled and the results can be accessed by
clicking on the links below.
Click on the following
links for more information about:
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