ULI Housing Awards Honor Two Cities and Two Projects

The ULI Terwilliger Center for Housing has announced the winners of this year’s housing awards, a program that celebrates and promotes the exemplary efforts of real estate and public policy leaders from across the country who are working to expand affordable and workforce housing opportunities.

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Emerald Vista in Dublin, California, is one of two projects to win this year’s Jack Kemp Excellence in Affordable & Workforce Housing Award.

The ULI Terwilliger Center for Housing has announced the winners of this year’s housing awards, a program that celebrates and promotes the exemplary efforts of real estate and public policy leaders from across the country who are working to expand affordable and workforce housing opportunities. Winners for both the Jack Kemp Excellence in Affordable and Workforce Housing Award and the Robert C. Larson Housing Policy Leadership Award, selected by the ULI Terwilliger Center’s national advisory board, were recognized today during the general session at the ULI Fall Meeting in New York City.

Emerald Vista in Dublin, California, and the Box District in Chelsea, Massachusetts, were both honored as recipients of the Jack Kemp Award. The city of Austin, Texas, and the city of Pasadena, California, were recognized as winners of the Larson Award.

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The housing awards program honors model developments and programs that provide affordable, well-designed, and accessible housing choices for residents with a mix of incomes, including families earning up to 120 percent of the area median income. This year, the awards criteria were expanded to include mixed-income projects and policies that serve residents both above and below 60 percent of the median income. The Jack Kemp Award honors outstanding developments while the Larson Award recognizes exceptional public policy.

“The private and public sectors both seek innovative approaches to workforce housing that involve partnerships in putting projects together and feature walkable neighborhoods that reduce commute times and environmental impacts,” said MassDevelopment president and chief executive officer Marty Jones, who also serves on the Terwilliger Center’s national advisory board. “This year’s winners and finalists showcase creative, comprehensive mixed-income developments that both work well in their own contexts and should have wide appeal to similar efforts throughout the nation.”

The 2014 Jack Kemp Excellence in Affordable and Workforce Housing Award winners are:


  • Emerald Vista, Dublin, California: Replacing a low-density public housing development with nearly 400 new units, Emerald Vista provides substantial amenities to residents of all ages and incomes. The project—developed by Eden Housing, in partnership with KB Home, the city of Dublin, the Alameda County Housing Authority, and Wells Fargo—serves as an innovative model for intergenerational and sustainable development.
  • The Box District, Chelsea, Massachusetts: The Box District is 248-unit mixed-income redevelopment of a former blighted industrial site in Chelsea, Massachusetts, that uses a mix of new construction, adaptive use of old factories, and modular building methods. Transformation of the Box District, now a smart growth district that will soon be home to a new Silver Line transit stop, is a result of long-term collaboration between Neighborhood Developers, Mitchell Properties, and the city of Chelsea.

Three projects were recognized as finalists in the Jack Kemp Awards competition. The Terwilliger national advisory board selected 30 Haven, a transit-oriented, mixed-use, mixed-income, intergenerational community built on a former neighborhood grocery site in Reading, Massachusetts, as a finalist. The advisory board also recognized Old Town Commons, a mixed-income community in Alexandria, Virginia, that was transformed from an underperforming public housing site into a vibrant development with a bike-sharing facility available on the property. The third finalist cited by the advisory board honored is Paseo Verde, an energy-efficient and mixed-income community in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which is also the first Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design–New Development (LEED ND) Platinum community in the country.

“The Jack Kemp Award recipients serve as models for developers seeking ideas on how to bring both private capital and expertise together with public resources to improve communities and increase housing opportunities,” said Michelle Winters, senior visiting fellow for the ULI Terwilliger Center for Housing. “Not only do they integrate a variety of household and family types seamlessly, but they also demonstrate how to create successful inclusive housing developments in a range of environments from central cities to suburbs.”

The 2014 Robert C. Larson Housing Policy Leadership Award winners are:


  • City of Austin, Austin, Texas: Designated by the U.S. Census Bureau as the “nation’s capital for population growth,” the city of Austin is tackling its affordable housing shortage through a variety of mechanisms. In addition to the housing trust fund and general obligation bond funding, the city implemented planning and development policies and programs that encourage the production of affordable housing—securing affordability for more than 18,000 units since focusing on this crucial issue. Currently working on packages of programs to increase affordable housing near transit and to produce more multifamily housing, the city of Austin is showing impressive leadership to meet future affordable housing needs.
  • City of Pasadena, Pasadena, California: Since 2000, Pasadena’s housing policy and programs have resulted in the development of more than 5,000 housing units in transit-oriented areas, including 1,370 units of affordable and workforce housing. Pasadena’s commitment to its housing vision, community engagement, and informed dialogue has produced a highly integrated and effective mix of goals, policies, and programs for its 2014–2021 housing element plan. Implementing a comprehensive set of policies, the city of Pasadena was aptly placed at the top of California’s Department of Housing and Community Development “Housing Elements Best Practices” list.

In addition to the two Larson Award winners, the Terwilliger national advisory board recognized two finalists: The North Dakota Housing Finance Agency for the Housing Incentive Fund, which has led to the creation of 1,523 new housing units in 25 communities across the state of North Dakota since its authorization in 2011; and the Vermont Housing and Conservation Board’s Shared Equity Homeownership Program, which represents the largest portfolio of shared-equity homes in the country.

According to Ali Solis, Terwilliger Center national advisory board member and senior vice president of public policy and corporate affairs at Enterprise Community Partners, this year’s Larson Award winners show innovative approaches to how the public sector is addressing the growing affordable housing crises in cities. “Like many ULI Larson Housing Policy Award winners, these leading cities used a range of creative tools to provide more opportunity to low- and moderate-income residents, including incentive programs and bond financing that increase affordable housing near transit. These efforts support Enterprise’s goal of ending housing insecurity in the U.S. within a generation,” she said.

ROBERT KRUEGER is a former ULI senior director of social media and public relations.
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