MassHousing closes on $45.7 million in financing to the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corp. for an affordable housing portfolio

December 14, 2018 - Financial Digest

 

Roxbury, MA MassHousing has closed on $45.7 million in financing to the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corp. (JPNDC) for the acquisition, preservation and renovation of a 201-unit scattered site affordable housing portfolio in Roxbury and Dorchester. JPNDC utilized MassHousing financing to purchase the portfolio of six affordable housing communities, located on 21 scattered sites in Boston, from the estate of Lorenzo Pitts. As part of the transaction, JPNDC will make extensive capital improvements across the 201-unit portfolio and extend housing affordability at the properties in perpetuity.

MassHousing provided JPNDC with a $26 million construction and permanent loan, an $18 million tax credit equity bridge loan, and a $1.7 million Section 13A preservation loan. The MassHousing financing generated $24.3 million in Low-Income Housing Tax Credit equity for the project.

The transaction also involved $5.7 million in equity from allocations of state and federal historic tax credits, $1.5 million from the city of Boston, a $25.1 million seller note, and a $5 million bridge loan provide by Santander Bank. JPNDC is providing a $500,000 sponsor cash loan and $1.2 million in rental income to the transaction.

The housing portfolio, formerly owned by the late Lorenzo Pitts, includes the 131-unit Lawrenceville Apartments, the 3-unit Infill I, the 3-unit Infill II, the 9-unit Crawford House, the 6-unit Thane St. Apartments, and the 49-unit Gardner Apartments, where the Section 13A affordability restrictions expired in March. The transaction will preserve the affordability of the former Section 13A units at the Gardner Apartments.

 The Commonwealth’s Section 13A program was created by the Massachusetts Legislature in the 1970s to provide low-interest mortgage financing to affordable housing communities. Today, 13A communities serve some of the lowest-income and most vulnerable populations in Mass., including many elderly residents. 

The mortgages on these 13A housing communities are nearing maturity, and no federal resources are available for their preservation. In response, MassHousing and DHCD have committed a total of $100 million in capital to help protect vulnerable residents and preserve affordable 13A units that otherwise could convert to market rates.

Of the 201 units in the Pitts portfolio, 175 apartments are affordable to households earning at or below 60 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI), with 165 of those units being supported by project-based rental subsidy. Twenty-six apartments are affordable to households earning at or below 80 percent of AMI. The AMI for Boston is $107,800 for a family of four.

Overall, there are there 38 one-bedroom apartments, 87 two-bedroom apartments, 53 three-bedroom apartments, 18 four-bedroom apartments, 2 five-bedroom apartments and 3 six-bedroom apartments.

Among the renovations planned for the properties are masonry repairs on all building facades, roof and window replacement at selected buildings, accessibility upgrades, kitchen and bathroom upgrades at selected units, and upgrades to life safety, mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems.

The general contractor will be Bilt-Rite Construction. The architect is The Architectural Team and the management agent is Peabody Properties.

MassHousing has financed or manages the rental subsidy for 257 rental housing communities in Boston involving 29,570 units and $1.7 billion in financing. The Agency has also provided $1.1 billion in home mortgage financing to 8,339 Boston homeowners.

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