flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Affordable treasures

Multifamily Housing

Affordable treasures

This year’s prestigious Gold Nugget Awards honor four projects that provide affordably priced housing for homeless families, seniors, and veterans.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | October 10, 2018
Anchor Place

Photo: Nahid Laciura

The Gold Nugget Awards, known as the “Academy Awards” of residential development, are open to builders, developers, designers, and land planners with projects in the U.S. and around the world. From among the 45 projects that were honored at the Pacific Coast Builders Conference in June, we picked four outstanding Grand Award winners in affordable multifamily housing.

 

Social priorities shape workforce housing

Five88

>100 units/acre

Five88Mariko Reed.

FIVE88 gives priority for affordable workforce housing to residents who work at public education and healthcare institutions and applicants who live or work in San Francisco.  Located in a rapidly developing neighborhood near the new UCSF Medical Center, it is the largest 100% affordable development in the city in the last 10 years.

FIVE88 steps down from four stories at the west side of the block to three stories toward the east. It provides 200 apartments—72 one-bedroom residences ($1,090 to $1,320/month) and 128 two-bedroom flats ($1,299 to $1,576/month)—plus 10,079 sf in a retail arcade.

The building wraps around a large communal open space. A second-level courtyard sits atop an embedded garage on the west side and a ground-level courtyard on the east.

FIVE88 earned a Gold GreenPoint rating. Sustainable strategies include domestic solar hot-water panels and drought-tolerant landscaping. As a coastal landfill site, the project required extensive settlement strategies: surface pavers, foundation piles, and tilting stairs at stoops. The project is located along the Fourth Street bicycle route, so the designers set aside 200 secure bicycle parking spaces plus visitor bicycle parking.

 

PROJECT TEAM | FIVE88

OWNER Related California  NONPROFIT DEVELOPER Chinatown Community Development Center ARCHITECT/INTERIOR ARCHITECT David Baker Architects ASSOCIATE ARCHITECT G7A | Architecture + Urban Structural Engineer DCI+SDE Engineers  Ce  Freyer & Laureta MECHANICAL ENGINEER Tommy Siu and Associates  ELECTRICAL ENGINEER  Alfa Tech GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEER Rockridge Geotechnical  SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT Bright Green Strategies  LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT GLS Landscape | Architecture  CM Construction Resource Management GC Nibbi Brothers General Contractors

 

It's family living with a scenic falir

Hoa Mai gardens

60-100 units/acre

Hoa Mai GardensPhoto: William Wright Photography.

Thanks to its L-shaped design, Hoa Mai Gardens offer its residents an impressive scenic lineup: Elliott Bay, the Cascade Mountains, and Mount Rainier. The 111-unit, family-oriented affordable housing complex is the third building in the redevelopment of Seattle’s Yesler Terrace. The property is sited on a steep slope with a risk of landslide, necessitating extensive site stabilization.

The 146,425-sf complex has 51 one-bedroom, 43 two-bedroom, 12 three-bedroom, and five four-bedroom units. The four-bedroom townhome units provide enough space for multigenerational families. All residences are subject to LIHTC rental limits; 70 receive project-based Section 8 subsidy. Average rent: $445/month.

The community has plenty of family-friendly features: a library, units with in-home daycare capability, on-site social and youth services, a 4,014-sf courtyard, outdoor playgrounds, a green roof deck, gardens, and sewing classes.

Hoa Mai Gardens meets the state’s Evergreen Sustainable Development Standard. Its building systems use no fossil fuels. Sustainability features include solar hot water preheat, rainwater harvesting (by Water Control Corp.), and graywater piping systems for toilet flushing. A pedestrian path on the west side connects the project to the Yesler Terrace neighborhood’s network of walking/bicycling paths.

 

PROJECT TEAM | HOA MAI GARDENS

DEVELOPER Seattle Housing Authority  ARCHITECT SMR Architects  SE/CE Coughlin Porter Lundeen  GEOTECHNICAL  GeoEngineers Inc. DEVELOPMENT ENGINEER MIG|SvR BUILDING ENVELOPE JRS Engineering  MECHANICAL DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACTOR Auburn Mechanical ELECTRICAL DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACTOR Valley Electric MEP DESIGN-ASSIST/ENERGY MODELING/COMMISSIONING Glumac SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT O’Brien & Co.  ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANT Soundearth Strategies  ACCESSIBILITY CONSULTANT Karen Braitmayer, FAIA  ACOUSTICS SSA Acoustics PERMITS Permit Consultants NW  LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT  Fazio Associates  GC Andersen Construction

 

Safe harbor for homeless veterans and families

Anchor Place

30-60 units/acre

Anchor PlacePhoto: Panic Studio LA.

Anchor Place provides affordable housing for homeless veterans and families. Built as the second phase of the Century Villages at Cabrillo, a 27-acre campus on the site of the decommissioned Long Beach (Calif.) Naval Station, the 120-unit community has 75 apartments set aside for homeless vets and 18 units for homeless families and individuals earning 30-60% of AMI. Rents range from $507 to $845/month for the 95 one-bedroom units; $608 to $1,216 for the 20 two-bedroom units; and $703 to $1,406 for the five three-bedroom residences.

The community has social services offices, a fitness room, laundry rooms, a bike center, a yoga/dance studio, a two-story community room, and a game room. Outdoors, there’s a community garden and three courtyards: one for kids, one for solitude, one for  socializing.

In total, the project offers 10,000 sf of community space. It achieved LEED for Homes Platinum status.

 

PROJECT TEAM | ANCHOR PLACE

OWNER Century Affordable Development, Inc. ARCHITECT The Architects Collective INTERIOR DESIGNER Collaborative House SE David Choy & Associates CE KPFF Consulting Engineers MECHANICAL/ELECTRICAl engineer S.Y. Lee Associates SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTANT Global Green LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT RELM CM Primus GC Walton Construction Services

 

Multigenerational living 'reimagines' vacant church site

Wesley village

<30 units/acre

Wesley VillagePhoto: Juan Tallo.

Wesley Village, a mixed-use community in Orange County, Calif., features multigenerational housing for families and seniors. The community was built in partnership with the 141-year-old Garden Grove United Methodist Church, the city of Garden Grove, and nonprofit developer Jamboree on the site of a vacant parking lot and unused church land. Wesley Village provides affordable housing for 47 families and seniors, along with 10,000 sf of active open space.

The complex, part of the city’s Re:Imagine Garden Grove program, is formed by two three-story residential buildings—one for seniors (16 units), one for working families (31 units)—and a third building that houses a Head Start learning center, a Boys and Girls Club, an Alzheimer’s care service, the Lestonnac Free Clinic, Project Hope Alliance, and other free educational, health, and wellness services.

A community recreation center has offices, a health clinic, a computer center, a library, and multipurpose rooms. The complex has 20 one-bedroom (813 sf), 11 two-bedroom (885-932 sf), and 15 three-bedroom units (1,126 sf). Wesley Village achieved Gold certification under LEED for Homes. 

 

PROJECT TEAM | WESLEY VILLAGE

DEVELOPER Jamboree ARCHITECT/LAND PLANNER  Newman Garrison + Partners  INTERIOR DESIGN Collaborative House Structural engineer Wright Engineers  MECHANICAL/PLUMBING ENGINEER TAD  ELECTRICAL Candela  LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT Site Design Studio  GC Quality Development and Construction

Related Stories

| Dec 2, 2014

First existing multifamily buildings to earn Energy Star certification unveiled

River City in Chicago is one of 17 existing multifamily properties to earn Energy Star certification, which became available to this sector on Sept. 16 via a scoring system for multifamily properties that Energy Star and Fannie Mae had been developing for three years.

| Dec 2, 2014

SPARK designs urban farming housing for Singapore’s elderly population

The proposal blends affordable retirement housing with urban farming by integrating vertical aquaponic farming and rooftop soil planting into multi-unit housing for seniors.

| Nov 24, 2014

Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill-designed crystalline tower breaks ground in southwestern China

Fitted with an LED façade, the 468-meter Greenland Tower Chengdu will act as a light sculpture for the city of Chengdu.

| Nov 24, 2014

Must see: Plans released for underwater city that could house 5,000 people

The design centers around a floating, 500-meter-wide sphere linked to a resource center on the ocean floor via a 15-kilometer, helix-shaped path. 

| Nov 21, 2014

Rental apartment construction soars to 27-year high: WSJ report

The multifamily sector is now outpacing the peak construction rate in the previous housing cycle, in 2006, according to the WSJ. 

| Nov 18, 2014

New tool helps developers, contractors identify geographic risk for construction

The new interactive tool from Aon Risk Solutions provides real-time updates pertaining to the risk climate of municipalities across the U.S.

| Nov 14, 2014

What college students want in their living spaces

In a recent workshop with 62 college students, architects from Little explored the changing habits and preferences of today's students, and how those changes affect their living spaces.

| Nov 11, 2014

Renzo Piano's third building at London Bridge Quarter approved, will be built adjacent to the Shard

Renzo Piano Building Workshop has been granted planning approval for its residential building at London Bridge Quarter—a 26-story apartment tower dubbed Feilden House.

| Nov 7, 2014

Arts college uses creative financing to build 493-bed student housing

Many states have cut back funding for higher education in recent years, and securing money for new housing has been tougher than ever for many colleges and universities. A recent residence hall project in Boston involving three colleges provides an inspiring example of how necessity can spawn invention in financing strategies.

| Nov 7, 2014

Prefab helps Valparaiso student residence project meet an ambitious deadline

Few colleges or universities have embraced prefabrication more wholeheartedly than Valparaiso (Ind.) University. The Lutheran-based institution completed a $27 million residence hall this past summer in which the structural elements were all precast.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021