Pearl Gardens is one of two affordable family housing properties that the Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara recently completed.
SANTA BARBARA — As an early adopter of a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) program designed to keep affordable housing units from converting to market-rate housing, the Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara (HACSB) announces the completed renovation of its Pearl Gardens and Sycamore Gardens family housing properties.
This successful implementation is the latest example of why the Housing Authority has earned a national reputation for innovation and excellence in its approach to affordable housing and community services. Overall, this new model will preserve over 496 units of affordable housing for working families and low-income seniors and veterans in Santa Barbara.
Home to a total of 35 families, Pearl Gardens and Sycamore Gardens received new energy efficiency appliances, new windows, roofing, siding, flooring, cabinets, tankless water heaters and photovoltaic solar panels to reduce electric grid burden. The public-private rehabilitation project was made possible through the HUD Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD) program in combination with funding through the Federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Program. This marks HACSB’s first renovation completed under RAD, which was created in order to help preserve the nation’s affordable housing inventory.
“These projects have completely transformed Pearl and Sycamore Gardens to beautiful homes where our residents are proud to live,” said Rob Fredericks, Executive Director and CEO, Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara. “Without this major work, we may have been forced to give these units up to market rate housing, which would have further constrained the supply of local affordable housing and could have pushed these families out of the area or into substandard housing.”
Built in the ‘70s, Pearl Gardens and Sycamore Gardens were repositioned out of the Public Housing Program through the RAD program, which allowed HACSB to leverage the private capital market to make these much needed improvements. The RAD program began in 2013 and was created in order to give public housing authorities a powerful tool to preserve and improve public housing properties and address the $26 billion dollar nationwide backlog of deferred maintenance.
Pearl Gardens, located at 13-21 South Soledad Street, consists of 15 family units comprised of 12 three-bedroom and three four-bedroom units. The property is situated on a 1.17-acre site and includes on-site parking, private patios, open space and a play area for children. Sycamore Gardens, located at 211-221 Sycamore Lane, sits on a 1.68-acre site and consists of 20 three-bedroom townhouses. Amenities includes onsite parking, open space and laundry facilities.
“It’s our duty to bring programs to the community in order to create and sustain affordable housing,” said Fredericks. “We are thankful for a dedicated team of partners, and for HUD’s assistance, choosing to work together for the good of our community.”
Project partners, lenders and consultants include: SB Housing Partnership IV, L.P., whose General Partners are Garden Court Inc. (Managing GP) and 2nd Story Associates (Co-General Partner), both California 501c3 Corporations; MUFG Union Bank, N.A.; California Community Reinvestment Corp; Paul Thimmig of Quint & Thimmig; Adam Diskin and Russell Hirsch of DH&G; Mark Manion – Price, Postel & Parma.
About the Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara: The Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara is a local public agency created for the purpose of providing safe, decent, and quality affordable housing and supportive services to eligible persons with limited incomes, through a variety of federal, state, local and private resources. Since 1969, the Housing Authority of the City of Santa Barbara has developed and/or secured over 3,600 units (about 1,200 owned or managed and 2,400 of Section 8 subsidy) of affordable rental housing for Santa Barbara through a variety of federal, state, local and private funding sources. Please visit the website at www.hacsb.org.