The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Housing project gets $2M in federal funds

Money will be used to build 20 homes at Browns Mill Village.

- By Matt Reynolds Matt.Reynolds@ajc.com

At anta Habitat for Humanity says it will receive $2 million in federal funding to build 20 homes at the Browns Mill Village mixed-income housing community.

an Ferguson, chief executive officer of the nonprofit, said Wednesday the organi- zation would use the funds as part of the second phase of constructi­on of 32 homes, originally slated for 2027.

He said the extra funding means the organizati­on could begin preliminar­y work on phase two as soon as next year. The first phase of con- struction of 134 homes is expected to be completed by the end of 2025.

“Without that funding, we would be trying to raise those funds from philan- thropy, and corporate and city partnershi­ps,” he said. “It allows us to accelerate the developmen­t of those homes so that we can open up opportunit­ies for fami- lies to enjoy the benefits of homeowners­hip.”

Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff spearheade­d the drive to secure the allocation, which came out of a $97.5 billion Transporta­tion, Housing and Urban Developmen­t appropriat­ions bill Congress passed in March. The alloca- tion came from $1.06 billion earmarked for local com- munity developmen­t and affordable housing projects, and Ossoff requested the $2 million as a Congressio­nally Directed Spending Project, according to his office.

“Georgia families urgently need more affordable hous- ing. That’s why I brought Republican­s and Demo- crats together to strengthen Atlanta Habitat’s efforts to build new housing units for families across Atlanta,” Ossoff said in prepared remarks.

Browns Mill Village is southeast of downtown Atlanta in the Orchard Knob neighborho­od. The first phase includes 75 sin- gle and two-story, two- and three-bedroom homes, according to Atlanta Habi- tat. Cityscape Housing and the Atlanta Developmen­t Partnershi­p will build an additional 59 townhomes at the 31-acre site.

Atlanta Habitat says it offers first-time home buy- ers a 30-year, interest-free mortgage with payments starting at $750 a month.

The community could providemuc­h-needed relief for some prospectiv­e homebuy- ers locked in the rental mar- ket. In 2022, 22.4 million households were cost-bur- dened, spending more than 30% of their income on rent, according to the “2024 America’s Rental Housing” report by the Harvard University Joint Center for Housing Studies.

“Among cost-burdened households, 12.1 million had housing costs that consumed more than half of their income, an all-time high for severe burdens,” according to the report.

Americans need to make $114,000 a year to buy the typical home, according to a March analysis by national real estate brokerage site Redfin, 35% more than the typical household income of $84,000.

Ferguson said Habitat is working with Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock’s office on a budget proposal for the fiscal year 2025. In the meanwhile, he said the federal funding would have an impact beyond just building new homes in the neighborho­od.

“Anytime we can make investment­s in our communitie­s, especially some of the areas that have receivedle­ss attention and less investment … that benefits everyone,” he said.

 ?? RENDERING COURTESY OF ATLANTA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY ?? The Browns Mill Village project broke ground in January 2022.
RENDERING COURTESY OF ATLANTA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY The Browns Mill Village project broke ground in January 2022.

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