Housing ahead of schedule
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Barbara Diamond
Somewhere, the late Alice Graves is smiling.
Housing for low-income renters, for which Graves relentlessly
lobbied while chair of the city’s Human Affairs and Affordable
Housing Committee, may be available sooner than expected.
The affordable housing project on Glenneyre Street is well ahead
of the April 2004 completion date projected when the City Council
approved it in February.
“Now we think it may be ready by January or February,” said
William Witte, principal in the development firm of Related Companies
of California and a Laguna Beach resident.
No glitches in the project have been reported, city building
official John Gustafson said, which may account for the speedy
construction. Builders have not had to go back and redo anything, to
date.
“I don’t want to put words in his mouth, but Building Inspector
Chuck Hooten told me the contractor is doing a great job,” Gustafson
said.
When completed, the project will have 26 affordable housing units,
one manager’s apartment and 49 parking spaces, 22 of them earmarked
for the public. The developer will manage and maintain the property,
which was designed to reflect the city’s Craftsman-style
architecture.
More units per square foot of property and fewer private parking
spaces than the city norm were approved under special circumstances
permitted as incentives for the construction of low-cost housing.
The project is on the site of the old Ahimsa Building, formerly a
nursing home and more recently a haven for cats displaced when the
Bluebell Foundation was damaged.
It was purchased by the city about six years ago, mostly with
contributions from the developers of Treasure Island to the
Affordable Housing In-lieu Fund. Developers pay into the fund in
place of including affordable housing in their projects.
Related Companies of California, developer of numerous affordable
housing projects, was chosen by the council from bids submitted to
the city.
Residency will be restricted to renters with incomes designated as
“low” by the county, about $21,000 to $22,000 this year. Rents will
be based on the county’s income standards: figured in February to be
$529 a month for 23 of the units and $480 a month for the remaining
six units.
Affordable housing is mandated by the state. However, the cost of
building in coastal zone makes affordable housing projects a rarity,
City Manager Ken Frank said.
Witte said that if he wasn’t a Laguna Beach resident, his company
probably would have passed on the project.
“It is a small project, without a lot of profit for the owner,”
Witte said.
The developer will pay the city $1 per year for 55 years.
Funding for the Laguna Beach project has come from the city, the
county and the state.
The city will invest $665,163 in the project, which includes a
$192,163 loan from the county, but not the $675,000 the city paid for
the property or the $815,000 the city will pay for its parking
spaces.
All told, that comes to $2,155,163.
The city will make up the cost among the parking fund, which will
pay for the 22 public parking spaces, considered to be separate
project form the affordable housing; the Housing In-lieu, which will
loan the project $348,000 toward construction costs; the county’s
$192,163 pass-through; and the city insurance fund, which will pay
$125,000 for a policy premium to cap the costs of hazardous materials
insurance.
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