Miami Herald

Miami gets new affordable housing in Opportunit­y Zones

- BY RENE RODRIGUEZ rrodriguez@miamiheral­d.com

Dignitarie­s on Thursday break ground at the site of Three Round Towers, a new affordable housing project being built by The Related Group in Allapattah. The $100 million project will rehab two existing apartment towers and build a brand-new one. When completed, the project will offer 400 state-of-the-art affordable units for families and seniors.

housing affordabil­ity crisis got a promise of relief Thursday with the groundbrea­king of two projects that will bring hundreds of units to the city.

The pair of developmen­ts — one in Allapattah, the other near the Omni — are the first in the county to leverage tax breaks and other incentives offered by Opportunit­y Zones, created as part of the federal 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to spur developmen­t in economical­ly deprived areas. The program designated 8,764 such zones nationwide; Miami-Dade has 67 and Broward has 30.

“A lot of people are not familiar with the tools that are available in order to use Opportunit­y Zones successful­ly,” said Secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t Ben Carson, who attended both groundbrea­king ceremonies and spoke with the Herald.

“Like any new program, people will start to use them more once they see what other people are doMiami’s ing,” Carson said.

In Allapattah, Related Urban Developmen­t Group launched the eight-story Brisas del Este, which will add 120 new affordable and workforce housing units to the existing Three Round Towers site at 29202940 NW 18th Ave.

Two of the three towers, which were built in 1970, are part of the $106 million project and will undergo complete rehabilita­tion, bringing the total of new affordable units to 383.

One of the towers was extensivel­y renovated in 2018 and currently houses senior citizens.

“This is the largest project of its kind in the country,” said Michael Liu, director of the Miami-Dade Public Housing and Community Developmen­t Department, which helped fund the project. “It shows that affordable housing can indeed work inside Opportunit­y Zones.”

Just a couple of miles away, plans were unveiled for the UNI Tower, a mixed-use developmen­t featuring 252 affordable housing units, along with office and retail space, at 1640 NE First Ave. inside the Omni district.

The $75 million building, to be developed by Nir Shoshani and Ron Gottesmann of NR Investment­s, is expected to begin constructi­on in November and generate 250 jobs.

A COMPLEX EQUATION

In an interview with the Herald, Carson acknowledg­ed the complexiti­es of Opportunit­y Zones. Developers, he said, “know very broadly that there’s some tax relief associated with them. They don’t know there are special preference­s for the types of grants people get, how much easier we make it to use the different programs by amalgamati­ng the purposes for different agencies. Few of them know you can use Opportunit­y Zone funds to purchase lowincome tax credits.”

Each of the two new projects were assembled using different tools and resources. The Allapattah project uses a combinatio­n of Low Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC), available for affordable housing developers; federal Rental Assistance Demonstrat­ion (RAD) subsidies, which grant local public housing agencies funding to rehab existing stock; and a Purchase Money Mortgage (PMM) of $18 million from Miami-Dade County.

The Omni project uses $8.5 million in property-tax rebates and a $6.5 million grant from the city of Miami’s Omni Community Redevelopm­ent Agency, along with the Opportunit­y Zone capital gain tax deferments. In exchange, the developer commits to limiting rents on a portion of the apartments to levels affordable to people with low incomes, defined as 60 to 140 percent of the City of Miami’s median income of $49,930.

“Without the involvemen­t of HUD and the CRA, this would not have been a mixed-income project,” Mayor Francis Suarez said. “It would have become another market-rate project. The City of Miami currently needs 50,000 affordable housing units to meet demand, and this will be 252 units in that direction.

“But what’s also important is this is a downtown project that would have normally been luxury condos or rentals because of its location,” Suarez said. “Teachers and police officers and firefighte­rs would have never been able to afford living here. Now we have income restrictio­ns and they’re voluntaril­y imposed by the developer because the financing worked. You mix the Opportunit­y Zone with a HUD-guaranteed loan and a CRA grant and you create a capital stack that works for the project and serves as a model for the rest of the country.”

Constructi­on on both projects is scheduled to be completed in 2022.

 ?? JOSE A IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ??
JOSE A IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States