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Newsletter - Building Community
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Seattle Housing Authority purchases buildings to preserve affordable housing
96 apartments in two neighborhoods will also
contribute to community revitalization.
SEATTLE—December 10, 2003—In recent months SHA has purchased
several properties in order to preserve affordable housing and to
improve the neighborhood surrounding recently SHA redevelopments.
The Ritz
Apartments, a 30-unit building at 13th and Yesler will be preserved
as affordable housing for
low-income households living and working in the Central Area.
SHA has also purchased the 42-unit Westwood Heights East
apartments and six four-plexes on the same block in West Seattle across
the street from the newly-refurbished Westwood Heights
senior-designated high-rise.
The Ritz Apartments
SHA purchased the Ritz Apartments (right) when approached to do
so by Beacon Development and the City's Office of Housing. The
property had been affordable housing for people with incomes below
80 percent of the area median. The owner was in bankruptcy
proceedings. The owner, Beacon Development and the City wanted to
complete the sale quickly before the property was foreclosed to make
sure that the housing would remain affordable.
Beacon Development, a firm that specializes in developing
affordable housing, will act on behalf of SHA to secure funds and
oversee the rehab of the building.
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The Ritz Apartments
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Westwood Heights East
With a $17 million HOPE VI grant, SHA
revitalized a small but severely distressed area on the southern
city limits. Before HOPE VI,
Roxbury House and Village consisted of a 150-unit high-rise for
elderly and disabled households completely surrounded by a
poorly-designed and -constructed 60-unit townhouse village for large
families. The HOPE VI grant allowed SHA to rehab Roxbury House, rename
it Westwood Heights and target it for elderly residents. The
Lutheran Alliance to Create Housing built and manages a new 45-unit,
mixed income family village, Longfellow and Westwood Courts, across
a new street from Westwood Heights.
About
a year and a half ago,
SHA and LATCH saw that illegal and anti-social activities in
privately-owned properties across 27th Avenue SW to the east of
Westwood Heights were interfering with neighborhood revitalization.
Drug trafficking and drive-by shootings across the street drove
potential tenants away. SHA joined with several City of Seattle departments and
neighborhood organizations in a concerted effort to stop the
illegal activity through surveillance, stepped up patrols, and
enforcement of Housing Choice Voucher payment contracts against the
less-than-diligent landlords of some of these properties. When
these efforts proved insufficient, SHA decided to buy the
properties, and to improve management and "curb appeal,"
thereby protecting the safety and quality of life of Westwood
Heights and Westwood and Longfellow Courts residents and the
taxpayers' multi-million dollar investment in the neighborhood
through HOPE VI.
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One of six 4-plexes on 27th Avenue
SW.
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It
took over a year, but by the end of November, 2003, SHA had
bought the 42-unit apartment building and the six four-plexes
facing Westwood Heights across 27th Avenue SW, where problem
tenants and absentee landlords allowed gang members to rule
the street. Now that SHA
owns the entire half-block facing Westwood Heights, the
criminal activity has died down, and improvements in curb
appeal will be made to aid revitalization of the
neighborhood.
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Twenty-one Westwood Heights East units
count toward HOPE VI replacement housing goals for Holly Park and
Rainier Vista. For more information on SHA's replacement housing program,
click
here.
For more information on the
revitalization of Westwood Heights, click
here. |

Westwood Heights East Apartments
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