83-unit apartment building for seniors in the works in Swansboro

Bainbridge View03

The 80,000-square-foot building will rise five stories at Bainbridge and 21st streets. (Images courtesy Project:Homes)

As it dips its toes into mobile home parks as an approach to improving housing supply in the region, local nonprofit Project:Homes is undertaking a new-construction development that’s likewise pushing it into new territory.

Known more for its construction, repairs and weatherization of single-family houses, Project:Homes is preparing to start work on an income-based apartment building for seniors at 2100 Bainbridge St., at the corner of Bainbridge and West 21st Street in Swansboro.

The 83-unit building will rise five stories and replace a century-old structure that once was used as a coal storage facility for trains. Project:Homes has secured a demolition permit to raze all of the existing structures on the site, save for one building fronting 21st Street that’s planned to be converted into a community space for residents.

Bainbridge Apts site

The century-old structure was once used as a coal storage facility for trains. (Jonathan Spiers photo)

Matt Morgan, Project:Homes’ director of neighborhood revitalization who’s heading up the development, said the property’s past use and location in Richmond’s Southside made it a viable site for the project.

Matt Morgan 2

Matt Morgan

“It’s a funky little site there on Bainbridge,” Morgan said. “There are still some old train tracks there and bays where they would open up and dump the coal and then the train would keep going. I think the nature of the coal use is what had it sitting on the market for a while.”

Project:Homes bought the property last year, paying $400,000 to previous owner Feldman G III Investments, an LLC tied to local real estate firm Atlantic Beacon Cos. The city assessed the 0.8-acre property this year at $252,000.

Morgan said Project:Homes had been working with the City of Richmond on a brownfields grant through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that funded environmental testing of the site, which he said cleared the way for the property closing.

“It made the risk a little lower for us,” he said.

Totaling 80,000 square feet, the modern-design, L-shaped building is planned to front the streets and enclose the existing community-room structure. The rest of the site is to be filled with 43 parking spaces with access off 21st Street.

BainbridgeAptsSitePlan

A site plan shows the buildings fronting Bainbridge and 21st streets with parking behind. (City documents)

The apartments will include 65 one-bedroom units and 18 two-bedrooms ranging in size from 560 to 860 square feet. Monthly rents haven’t been finalized but will be restricted to renters making 60 percent of the area median income: about $44,820 for a single renter.

Johannas Design Group is the architect on the project, and UrbanCore Construction is lined up as the general contractor. VHB is handling engineering work, and Nyfeler Associates provided a topographic survey. Baker Development Resources handled Project:Homes’ development plan applications to the city.

The $20 million project is planned to involve a 4 percent Low-Income Housing Tax Credit that Project:Homes is applying for from Virginia Housing. Morgan said the tax applications would be submitted in January, around the time demolition is scheduled to start. He said Ty’s Hauling & Paving is handling the demo.

The project also involves grant funds from the City of Richmond, and the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development, as well as a Virginia Housing grant that Morgan said is covering some of the demo cost. City Council approved a grant agreement for the project in November that provides grant payments based on incremental real estate tax revenues generated by the project.

Bainbridge View01

The development will preserve one existing building on the site that will serve as a community room.

Morgan described the apartments as a different look and type of project for Project:Homes, which traditionally focuses on single-family housing but has been branching out in a new direction with its investment in Bermuda Estates, a mobile home park in Chester that it’s been revitalizing and presenting as an overlooked housing supply option.

The nonprofit typically builds between 25 and 30 houses a year, and Morgan noted that it owns four senior apartment properties: the 100-plus-unit William Byrd building in Richmond, the 50-unit Omni Park Place Senior Apartments in Ashland, and the Parham Park Place I and II buildings in Henrico, totaling 137 units.

Like Bermuda Estates, Morgan said the Bainbridge apartments represent a new approach for Project:Homes in addressing housing availability and affordability in the region.

“This does represent a new path for us in developing multifamily new-construction,” he said. “It is new for us to be developing anew, but our goal isn’t just to develop what everyone else is doing and have it look the same. We want creative projects and neat-looking projects and to tackle infill with the highest and best use.”

Of the apartments’ design, Morgan added: “It’s pretty unique-looking. We wanted something that had a little more feeling to it.”

Pending financing approvals, Morgan said construction could start by late June, with completion anticipated in 18 to 24 months.

Project:Homes’ Madeline Petrie said the group has presented the project to City Councilmember Stephanie Lynch and plans to meet with neighborhood groups early next year.

The apartments site is around the block from another income-based project in the works in Swansboro. Across Hull Street, Canterbury Development Group is planning its 90-unit Swansboro Place apartment building for lower-income renters at 2008 Hull St.

Bainbridge View03

The 80,000-square-foot building will rise five stories at Bainbridge and 21st streets. (Images courtesy Project:Homes)

As it dips its toes into mobile home parks as an approach to improving housing supply in the region, local nonprofit Project:Homes is undertaking a new-construction development that’s likewise pushing it into new territory.

Known more for its construction, repairs and weatherization of single-family houses, Project:Homes is preparing to start work on an income-based apartment building for seniors at 2100 Bainbridge St., at the corner of Bainbridge and West 21st Street in Swansboro.

The 83-unit building will rise five stories and replace a century-old structure that once was used as a coal storage facility for trains. Project:Homes has secured a demolition permit to raze all of the existing structures on the site, save for one building fronting 21st Street that’s planned to be converted into a community space for residents.

Bainbridge Apts site

The century-old structure was once used as a coal storage facility for trains. (Jonathan Spiers photo)

Matt Morgan, Project:Homes’ director of neighborhood revitalization who’s heading up the development, said the property’s past use and location in Richmond’s Southside made it a viable site for the project.

Matt Morgan 2

Matt Morgan

“It’s a funky little site there on Bainbridge,” Morgan said. “There are still some old train tracks there and bays where they would open up and dump the coal and then the train would keep going. I think the nature of the coal use is what had it sitting on the market for a while.”

Project:Homes bought the property last year, paying $400,000 to previous owner Feldman G III Investments, an LLC tied to local real estate firm Atlantic Beacon Cos. The city assessed the 0.8-acre property this year at $252,000.

Morgan said Project:Homes had been working with the City of Richmond on a brownfields grant through the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency that funded environmental testing of the site, which he said cleared the way for the property closing.

“It made the risk a little lower for us,” he said.

Totaling 80,000 square feet, the modern-design, L-shaped building is planned to front the streets and enclose the existing community-room structure. The rest of the site is to be filled with 43 parking spaces with access off 21st Street.

BainbridgeAptsSitePlan

A site plan shows the buildings fronting Bainbridge and 21st streets with parking behind. (City documents)

The apartments will include 65 one-bedroom units and 18 two-bedrooms ranging in size from 560 to 860 square feet. Monthly rents haven’t been finalized but will be restricted to renters making 60 percent of the area median income: about $44,820 for a single renter.

Johannas Design Group is the architect on the project, and UrbanCore Construction is lined up as the general contractor. VHB is handling engineering work, and Nyfeler Associates provided a topographic survey. Baker Development Resources handled Project:Homes’ development plan applications to the city.

The $20 million project is planned to involve a 4 percent Low-Income Housing Tax Credit that Project:Homes is applying for from Virginia Housing. Morgan said the tax applications would be submitted in January, around the time demolition is scheduled to start. He said Ty’s Hauling & Paving is handling the demo.

The project also involves grant funds from the City of Richmond, and the Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development, as well as a Virginia Housing grant that Morgan said is covering some of the demo cost. City Council approved a grant agreement for the project in November that provides grant payments based on incremental real estate tax revenues generated by the project.

Bainbridge View01

The development will preserve one existing building on the site that will serve as a community room.

Morgan described the apartments as a different look and type of project for Project:Homes, which traditionally focuses on single-family housing but has been branching out in a new direction with its investment in Bermuda Estates, a mobile home park in Chester that it’s been revitalizing and presenting as an overlooked housing supply option.

The nonprofit typically builds between 25 and 30 houses a year, and Morgan noted that it owns four senior apartment properties: the 100-plus-unit William Byrd building in Richmond, the 50-unit Omni Park Place Senior Apartments in Ashland, and the Parham Park Place I and II buildings in Henrico, totaling 137 units.

Like Bermuda Estates, Morgan said the Bainbridge apartments represent a new approach for Project:Homes in addressing housing availability and affordability in the region.

“This does represent a new path for us in developing multifamily new-construction,” he said. “It is new for us to be developing anew, but our goal isn’t just to develop what everyone else is doing and have it look the same. We want creative projects and neat-looking projects and to tackle infill with the highest and best use.”

Of the apartments’ design, Morgan added: “It’s pretty unique-looking. We wanted something that had a little more feeling to it.”

Pending financing approvals, Morgan said construction could start by late June, with completion anticipated in 18 to 24 months.

Project:Homes’ Madeline Petrie said the group has presented the project to City Councilmember Stephanie Lynch and plans to meet with neighborhood groups early next year.

The apartments site is around the block from another income-based project in the works in Swansboro. Across Hull Street, Canterbury Development Group is planning its 90-unit Swansboro Place apartment building for lower-income renters at 2008 Hull St.

This story is for our paid subscribers only. Please become one of the thousands of BizSense Pro readers today!

Your subscription has expired. Renew now by choosing a subscription below!

For more informaiton, head over to your profile.

Profile


SUBSCRIBE NOW

 — 

 — 

 — 

TERMS OF SERVICE:

ALL MEMBERSHIPS RENEW AUTOMATICALLY. YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR A 1 YEAR MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL AT THE RATE IN EFFECT AT THAT TIME UNLESS YOU CANCEL YOUR MEMBERSHIP BY LOGGING IN OR BY CONTACTING [email protected].

ALL CHARGES FOR MONTHLY OR ANNUAL MEMBERSHIPS ARE NONREFUNDABLE.

EACH MEMBERSHIP WILL ONLY FUNCTION ON UP TO 3 MACHINES. ACCOUNTS ABUSING THAT LIMIT WILL BE DISCONTINUED.

FOR ASSISTANCE WITH YOUR MEMBERSHIP PLEASE EMAIL [email protected]




Return to Homepage

POSTED IN Residential Real Estate

Editor's Picks

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

9 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
David Humphrey
David Humphrey
11 months ago

Thank you for showing how the use of basic materials does not have to equal an uninspired box of a building.

Sueann Dodson
Sueann Dodson
11 months ago

What a fun project – great time and effort for all involved!

Bruce Slough
Bruce Slough
11 months ago

just five blocks to the east of Saint Francis Manchester

John Lindner
John Lindner
11 months ago

It’s refreshing to see something that isn’t a box and is still affordable. This development looks stunning.

Kudos to Project:Homes, Matt and Johanas Design Group. When people pour their hearts into a project, it shows!

William Bagby
William Bagby
11 months ago

Now see this, THIS, is what the f I’m talking about. That design is everything! Much better than these glorified milk crates that’s been popping up lately.

Peter James
Peter James
11 months ago

I love this project!! A sweet looking building. Would love to see more designs like this one – very creative and definitely thinking outside the – ahem – “box” – so to speak.

To the architects of this fine project I say – well done, folks!

Last edited 11 months ago by Peter James
Randal Fisher
Randal Fisher
11 months ago

Another interesting and thoughtful development from project:Homes; good job Lee and team. I know you will be mindful of the demographic you seek to serve here. Accessibility is paramount, even more so as the tenant group continues to age. Trust the individual floorplans will reflect this and with a percentage of the ground floor apartments designed for folks with adaptive needs. #Allwelcome!!

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
11 months ago

Interesting seeing all the design kudos even though all they seem to have done is broken up the profiles more — kinda like a BUNCH of what they would call “boring” bldgs, which sorta IS what cites like Richmond (or worse, Newark) tend to do. We’re not yet DC or Nashville.

I should note I have no objections here, but where are my Gentrification Bros? Why aren’t they saying that $40-45k/year is upper middle class and these need to be affordable to the homeless? That this will destroy the fabric of this vital neighborhood?

Ashley Pinney
Ashley Pinney
11 months ago

I just moved to Swansboro and live 5 blocks from this new build. VERY excited for this and more cool projects like this to come to the area. Being so close to the river I have wondered by developers aren’t jumping in on Swansboro more. A grocery store on the site right behind this new development (20th St) would be wonderful as Swansboro is a food desert. Keep up the great reporting!