SPECIAL FOCUS
READERS’ CHOICE AWARDS
BEST SPECIAL-NEEDS PROJECT: Chicago Development Changing Lives
BY DONNA KIMURA
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE • NOVEMBER 2007
CHICAGO—Anthony Sugel has a place
to call home. He moved
into his new apartment
March 1. “Since I’ve been
here, this has helped me
do more for myself than
any of the multiple places
that I had been in before,”
said Sugel, who had spent
the prior six years bouncing
around the shelters,
streets, and hospitals of
Chicago.
He is one of the residents
at The Margot and
Harold Schiff Residences,
previously known as the
Near North Apartments.
Developed by Mercy
Housing Lakefront, the
96-unit project has been
selected the best specialneeds
development by
AFFORDABLE HOUSING
FINANCE readers.
About half of the residents
are formerly homeless and/or disabled
individuals, while others are former
public housing residents whose
buildings have been torn down, said
Cindy Holler, president of Mercy
Housing Lakefront. Most residents have
incomes below 30 percent of the area
median income.
The development brings housing and
services together under one roof. On-site
case managers and services are on the
first floor, and the upper floors hold the
single-room occupancy units. Many of
the residents have struggled with physical
and mental illness, substance abuse, limited
education, and poor work history.
Sugel takes part in different support
and information groups. The staff has
helped him get medical care, and he volunteers
as the tenant editor of the community’s
newsletter.
The Schiff Residences is a sleek fivestory
building made out of glass, steel, and
concrete. It was designed by renowned
architect Helmut Jahn, whose involvement
called attention to the building and
raised the profile of affordable housing.
Built on a former brownfield site, the
$18 million development emphasizes sustainable
design. Near North is projected
to use up to 22 percent less energy than
traditional systems. That would yield
about $18,000 in annual savings, freeing
up money to help pay for a case worker or
for other purposes.
Sixteen roof-mounted wind turbines
produce an estimated 10 percent of the
building’s electricity. Solar panels produce
heat for the building’s hot water
supply. The development also boasts of
having Chicago’s first graywater system,
which reuses runoff water from the sinks
and showers to flush toilets.
The units feature large windows,
with picturesque views of the city. “Who
said only wealthy people get a great view
of Chicago?” Holler said, noting that the
development is breaking all the negative
notions about affordable housing.
Funding for the development included
low-income housing tax credits from
the Chicago Department of Housing,
which generated about $6.9
million in equity. The credits
were syndicated by the
National Equity Fund.
The Illinois Housing
Development Authority provided
$2.5 million in HOME
funds and $750,000 from
the Illinois Affordable
Housing Trust Fund. The
city provided $1 million in
tax increment financing
money. About $400,000
came from the Department
of Housing and Urban
Development’s Supportive
Housing Program.
The monthly contract
rent for all units is $560.
Residents pay 30 percent of
their incomes. The average
that a tenant pays is $149. More than 300
people are on a waiting list to live at the
development.
The Margot and
Harold Schiff
Residences
(formerly Near North)
Developer: Mercy Housing Lakefront
Architect: Helmut Jahn
Major Funders: Chicago Department of Housing
Department of Housing and Urban
Development
Illinois Housing Development Authority
National Equity Fund
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