The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Developer, Atlanta Housing finalize $26M deal, ending dispute

The deal allows Integral Group to move ahead on housing.

- By Matt Reynolds matt.reynolds@ajc.com

A developer said that it has finalized a $26 million deal, freeing up land stuck in limbo because of a years-long legal dispute with the city of Atlanta’s housing authority.

Officials with The Integral Group said it has closed real estate transactio­ns stemming from a settlement agreement first announced in February 2022. The agreement was reached after then-incoming Mayor Andre Dickens urged the parties to negotiate and avoid a drawn-out court trial.

The Integral Group will now move forward with its partners to revive plans for four developmen­ts combining market-rate, workforce and affordable housing units, retail and commercial space. The projects are planned on gentrifyin­g land of four former public housing projects — Carver, Capitol, Grady and Harris Homes.

According to Integral Group, the settlement was approved by Atlanta Housing and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, and resolves a dispute over 88 acres that was part of a 220-acre project.

“This settlement agreement will finally allow the developmen­t of these important properties,” Atlanta Housing president and CEO Terri Lee said in an emailed statement. “In partnershi­p with The Integral Group, we will be able to produce safe, quality and affordable homes to many future residents.”

Integral Group officials said four private partnershi­ps, including Urban Realty Partners and H.J. Russell & Co., involved in the land deal agreed to give up developmen­t rights to 34 of the acres. It said Atlanta Housing would retain title to that land while the private partnershi­ps would have title to the remaining 54 acres.

The private partnershi­ps paid Atlanta Housing $26 million, not including “all credits and settlement-related costs,” the developer said in a statement. It says it now intends to move forward with the planning and design phases of the developmen­ts.

Integral Group’s president of real estate, Vicki Lundy Wilbon, noted the project was dormant since 2016 when the private partnershi­ps announced they planned to commence with the next phase of developmen­t. That was because the housing authority under Mayor Kasim Reed’s administra­tion objected to a deal the developer had struck with former Atlanta Housing CEO Renee L. Glover.

That led to a very public feud between Reed and Integral founder and chairman Egbert L.J. Perry, with claims and countercla­ims.

In 2017, the city’s housing authority went to Fulton Superior Court to block Integral’s plans because it claimed not enough land was being used for affordable housing and it was not getting a fair price.

The wrangle ultimately meant that the project was tied up in knots for years.

“I’m happy to bring this chapter to a successful close,” Wilbon said in a statement. “Our longstandi­ng partnershi­ps with Atlanta Housing are rooted in more than this transactio­n. Our ongoing collaborat­ion represents a mutual dedication to forging a promising future for Atlanta.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Integral Group founder and chairman Egbert L.J. Perry speaks at a news conference in 2022 during which Mayor Andre Dickens announced the settlement agreement. The Integral Group will now move forward with developmen­t plans.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Integral Group founder and chairman Egbert L.J. Perry speaks at a news conference in 2022 during which Mayor Andre Dickens announced the settlement agreement. The Integral Group will now move forward with developmen­t plans.

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