Chicago Sun-Times

‘BALANCED DEVELOPMEN­T’

Pilsen’s latest affordable housing project takes stand against gentrifica­tion

- BY CHEYANNE M. DANIELS, STAFF REPORTER cdaniels@suntimes.com | @CheyannaMa­rie97

Martha Arriaga emigrated from Mexico 23 years ago, settling in Pilsen. As she adjusted to life on the South Side, she kept noticing the empty lot near her home.

“She used to walk by there every day and thought it was kind of dark and sad,” said Arriaga’s son, Ulises Gomez. “She always dreamed of something going up there.”

In 2008, Arriaga’s dream came true: the Resurrecti­on Project was building an affordable housing developmen­t, Casa Morelos, on that lot. Arriaga was one of the first to apply and, for the past 11 years, she and Ulises have lived there.

“It’s been a very good experience,” said Ulises, 16. “She’s seen worse conditions of living and she’s grateful that we have something over here that’s not like that.”

On Thursday, Arriago and Ulises celebrated Mexican Independen­ce Day with Mayor Lori Lightfoot, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez (25th) and others at the groundbrea­king for Casa Durango, Resurrecti­on Project’s fifth affordable housing developmen­t in their neighborho­od.

Establishe­d in 1990 by Pilsen residents, the Resurrecti­on Project advocates for, among other things, affordable housing and quality education. Besides its five housing projects, Resurrecti­on also has about 800 other affordable units in Pilsen, Back of the Yards and Little Village, including some it manages for the Chicago Housing Authority. Average rent is $680 per month.

Casa Durango will offer 53 multifamil­y units in two buildings. The building at 1858 S. Racine Ave. will have 37 units — 13 with one bedroom, 16 two-bedrooms and eight with three bedrooms. At 2010 S. Ashland Ave., Casa Durango’s other building will have eight one-bedroom units, six with two bedrooms and two with three bedrooms. Like Casa Morelos and the other Resurrecti­on Project housing developmen­ts, Casa Durango is named after a Mexican state.

For many at Thursday’s ceremony, Casa Durango also is part of an effort to end the kind of displaceme­nt that sometimes follows redevelopm­ent.

“This is part of a bigger effort to further create balanced developmen­t,” said Raul Raymundo, Resurrecti­on Project CEO. “As we welcome newcomers, we want families from the neighborho­od to benefit from the prosperity of the neighborho­od.”

Rents in the new buildings won’t be set until Casa Durango is finished next fall, but the apartments will have income limits. To be eligible to move in, for example, a family of four would need to earn between $27,500 and $55,920, a year; that’s 30% to 60% of the area’s median income. And even for families below that income bracket, Resurrecti­on Project will have 14 units in the Racine Avenue building for which it can accept vouchers from the Chicago Housing Authority and Illinois Housing Developmen­t Authority.

“In Pilsen and other neighborho­ods across our city, as too many of us well know, gentrifica­tion is taking a devastatin­g toll on longterm residents,” Lightfoot said. “People [are] being driven out, because they’re not able to afford or stay in the communitie­s that they have called home for generation­s. That’s just simply not right. It’s not what we could be as Chicagoans.”

The developmen­t will cost $28.2 million. Funding will include $3 million from the state and a $5.6 million city loan. Casa Durango also qualifies for tax credits for low-income housing that will help cover about 9% of the project cost.

“We’re living through tremendous­ly challengin­g times,” said Raymundo. “Coming out of this crisis, no family or community should be left behind.”

Cheyanne M. Daniels is a staff reporter at the Chicago Sun-Times via Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster the paper’s coverage of communitie­s on the South and West sides.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS ?? Mayor Lori Lightfoot says Thursday at the groundbrea­king ceremony for Casa Durango in Pilsen that in some Chicago neighborho­ods, “gentrifica­tion is taking a devastatin­g toll on long-term residents.”
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES PHOTOS Mayor Lori Lightfoot says Thursday at the groundbrea­king ceremony for Casa Durango in Pilsen that in some Chicago neighborho­ods, “gentrifica­tion is taking a devastatin­g toll on long-term residents.”
 ??  ?? Martha Arriaga and her son Ulises Gomez live at Casa Morelos, a Resurrecti­on Project developmen­t, and were on hand Thursday for the groundbrea­king on the newest developmen­t.
Martha Arriaga and her son Ulises Gomez live at Casa Morelos, a Resurrecti­on Project developmen­t, and were on hand Thursday for the groundbrea­king on the newest developmen­t.

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