PHA Board of Commissioners Meeting Agenda October 2019

PHA To Sell Part, Redevelop Rest of West Park Apartments Site

The agency has partnered with CBRE to take bids on 12 – acre University City Property

(PHILADELPHIA- October 8, 2019) – The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) is selling a portion of one of the agency’s older sites with plans to use the sales proceeds toward rebuilding the remaining part of the site. The West Park Apartments, built in 1964, sit on a nearly 12-acre, increasingly valuable parcel on the perimeter of University City. 

“Because we have open space on the site we will be able to replace every one of the outdated and deteriorating high-rise apartments with modern homes that we believe our residents will be proud of and that will enhance the entire neighborhood,” said PHA President and CEO Kelvin A. Jeremiah. “We think taking advantage of the property’s rising value to help meet our need for affordable housing is an ideal solution.”

There are currently three buildings on site with a total of 327 apartments. Making the necessary electrical, plumbing, HVAC, elevator, masonry and other repairs would cost upwards of $50 million. Those repairs would make the buildings serviceable but would not bring them up to modern standards. In addition, in keeping with older style public housing, the site is separated from the surrounding neighborhood, with only one vehicle entrance onto the property.

Under PHA’s redevelopment plan one high-rise will remain standing and be completely rehabilitated as senior housing. The other two towers will be sold and replaced on another section of the property by an equal number of townhomes and stacked apartments (flats). The land being sold – covering an area between 44th and 45th Streets just north of Market Street – covers the eastern third of the property.

Andrea Foster, who has been the site’s resident council president since 1987, said she and most residents support the plan. “The buildings are deteriorating and the money they would have to sink into these buildings could be used to build new homes,” she said. “There will be some inconvenience for families having to move and then return but it will be worth the trouble to come back to new homes.”

As PHA has done at other rebuilt sites, the agency would reconnect the site to the city’s street grid so that it would no longer be isolated.    

PHA has hired CBRE, a commercial real estate services and investment firm and CVA Commercial Group, to market the property. The company’s sales materials note that the site’s neighbors include the University of Pennsylvania and Drexel University, suggesting potential uses such as student housing, athletic dormitories, multi-family apartments and senior housing. 

“The explosive growth of University City to the east has been rapidly progressing in a western trajectory, steadily marching toward this property,” said Vincent J. Jolly, Jr., CVA’s founder and CEO. “To the west, the redevelopment of the adjacent Provident Mutual Insurance Building at 4601 Market further illustrates the exciting investment and momentum in the community. Add to that all the growth activity among Penn, Drexel and University City Science Center and you can see why West Park represents an ideal development opportunity. “

“It is excellent that PHA is tapping into the energy of the very hot University City and West Philadelphia real estate market for the benefit of West Park residents,” said City Councilwoman Jannie L. Blackwell, in whose district the property falls. “Congratulations to Kelvin Jeremiah and the PHA staff for devising an innovative plan to transform the property.”
 
The property is located in a Qualified Opportunity Zone, a designation that includes tax incentives to encourage long-term investments in low-income communities.

“You don’t often get a chance to design a deal that works so well for all concerned,” the PHA’s Jeremiah said. “We have found a way in this proposal to serve the needs of residents of public housing and the broader community at the same time.”

PHA Is Open for Business

Retail Space is Available at their Headquarters Building in North Philly

(PHILADELPHIA- September 24, 2019) – With its new headquarters building now anchoring the Sharswood neighborhood and hundreds of new homes under construction, the Philadelphia Housing Authority is taking the next step in shepherding the community’s resurgence. The agency has begun marketing storefront retail and office space at its 2013 Ridge Avenue site.

“Our message is we are open for business,” said PHA President and CEO Kelvin A. Jeremiah. “Families and seniors are moving back to Sharswood, and not just in PHA housing but in privately developed homes as well. We have a new high school, now in its second year and new streets and amenities, but the final component needed to complete the restoration of the neighborhood is business to serve all the new and existing residents.”

The gleaming five-story PHA headquarters building sits on a triangular site along Ridge Avenue between Jefferson and Master Streets and features a modern design with large glass windows. The ground level offers highly visible storefront retail space. There is also an Indigo bicycle sharing dock in front of the building, which is within walking distance of the Broad Street subway and other public transportation.

The first floor space features high ceilings with floor to ceiling windows and the opportunity to build out the space to suit a business’s specific needs. The site also has a built-in customer base with several hundred employees as well as clients and visitors coming to the building daily. The space is well-suited to a bank, café or retail.
 
About 4,000 square feet of carpeted office space with finished ceilings is also available.

Businesses interested in receiving more information about leasing are asked to contact the SVN, the Concordis Group at 347-330-0048.

PHA Board of Commissioners Meeting Agenda

PHA HCV Administrative Plan

Housing Choice Voucher Program Administrative Plan

CHAPTER 1: OVERVIEW OF THE PROGRAM & PLAN

1.1 Moving to Work Demonstration

The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) has been designated a Moving to Work Demonstration site, provided under Section 204(a) of the 1996 Appropriations Act. The Moving to Work Demonstration Agreement was effective April 1, 2001 and is expected to continue until the end of PHA’s 2018 Fiscal Year (FY), unless such term is otherwise extended by HUD.

PHA’s MTW Agreement provides that PHA shall have flexibility to design and test various approaches for providing and administering housing assistance that reduce cost and achieve greater cost effectiveness in federal expenditures; give incentives to households with children whose heads of household are either working, seeking work, or are participating in job training, educational, or other programs that assist in obtaining employment and becoming economically self-sufficient; and increase housing choices for low income households.

PHA is exempt from certain provisions of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 and its implementing regulations. This allows PHA to design and test innovative methods of providing housing and delivering services to lowincome households in an efficient and effective manner. PHA may adopt and implement policies for admission and occupancy, eligibility, selection and assignment, hardships, change in income, definition of elderly, recertifications, establishing rents, lease requirements, and other specific criteria. The policies PHA has implemented pursuant to MTW are included in this Administrative Plan, PHA’s MTW Agreement, and PHA’s Annual Plans.

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Summary of Proposed Changes PHA HCV Administrative Plan

Housing Choice Voucher Program Administrative Plan

CHAPTER 1: OVERVIEW OF THE PROGRAM & PLAN

1.1 Moving to Work Demonstration

The Philadelphia Housing Authority (PHA) has been designated a Moving to Work Demonstration site, provided under Section 204(a) of the 1996 Appropriations Act. The Moving to Work Demonstration Agreement was effective April 1, 2001 and is expected to continue until the end of PHA’s 2018 Fiscal Year (FY), unless such term is otherwise extended by HUD.

PHA’s MTW Agreement provides that PHA shall have flexibility to design and test various approaches for providing and administering housing assistance that reduce cost and achieve greater cost effectiveness in federal expenditures; give incentives to households with children whose heads of household are either working, seeking work, or are participating in job training, educational, or other programs that assist in obtaining employment and becoming economically self-sufficient; and increase housing choices for low income households.

PHA is exempt from certain provisions of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 and its implementing regulations. This allows PHA to design and test innovative methods of providing housing and delivering services to lowincome households in an efficient and effective manner. PHA may adopt and implement policies for admission and occupancy, eligibility, selection and assignment, hardships, change in income, definition of elderly, recertifications, establishing rents, lease requirements, and other specific criteria. The policies PHA has implemented pursuant to MTW are included in this Administrative Plan, PHA’s MTW Agreement, and PHA’s Annual Plans.

Read More

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