San Francisco seniors
development takes
top honors
BY DONNA KIMURA
SAN FRANCISCO 990 Polk
Street has taken the city’s
neediest seniors off the streets and given
them new apartments.
That alone is enough, but the 110-unit
development also serves as an example of a
project that is tapping new financing sources
and serving as a model for green building.
For these reasons, 990 Polk Street is
this year’s overall winner in AFFORDABLE
HOUSING FINANCE’s Readers’ Choice
Awards. It was also selected best seniors
project by readers.
Fifty of the apartments are for seniors
coming from the streets or homeless
shelters while the remaining apartments
are for low-income seniors.
Local nonprofits Tenderloin Neighborhood
Development Corp. (TNDC) and
Citizens Housing Corp. teamed to develop
990 Polk last year. “When organizations
can bring complementary strengths, then
we not only can develop better projects,
we can do it while sharing the risk,” says
Don Falk, executive director of TNDC.
Originally conceived to house all lowincome
seniors, the development added
formerly homeless seniors to the mix as part
of a city push to move chronically homeless
into permanent supportive housing.
The need for the project is evident by
the more than 3,500 applications that were
received. The formerly homeless residents
were referred by local agencies working
with the San Francisco Department of
Public Health (DPH).
The $35.1 million project utilizes
about a half-dozen different funding
sources, including $17.4 million in federal
low-income housing tax credits awarded
by the California Tax Credit Allocation
Committee. The credits were syndicated
by Enterprise Community Investment,
Inc., with Bank of America as the investor.
“What’s unique about 990 Polk is that
TNDC and Citizens combined a number of
solutions to critical needs in senior housing;
serving homeless seniors using the
city of San Francisco’s operating
support program,
building a beautiful infi
ll project meeting all of
our Green Communities
guidelines, and providing
deep services to the
residents who will not become
isolated as they age,”
says Rich Gross, vice president
and impact market
leader in San Francisco
for Enterprise.
The development also emphasizes
the connections between health and housing,
says Falk. 990 Polk was one of the first
new construction projects in the state to
receive funding from the state Mental
Health Services Act Housing Program
that provides capital and support to people
with mental health issues.
Local sources were also involved,
including the Mayor’s Office of Housing,
which provided capital funds and technical
assistance throughout the development
phase. To ensure the building remains fi-
nancially secure, DPH provides operating
subsidies to the direct referral units.
Few public health departments have
as active a housing program as the one in
San Francisco, says Marc Trotz, DPH’s director
of housing and urban health.
“We believe housing is health care,”
he says. DPH is helping to fund the rent
subsidies and supportive services, including
an on-site nurse.
Located on the edge of the Tenderloin
district, 990 Polk has helped to improve
the neighborhood, replacing a gritty parking
lot and an old laundry business.
The project is environmentally sustainable
and features Energy Star appliances
and a high-efficiency irrigation system,
notes Doug Shoemaker, director of
the Mayor’s Office of Housing. The project
was designed by Herman Coliver Locus
Architecture and Levy Design Partners.
The nine-story building takes advantage
of its corner location and brings in
natural light. On the eighth floor, residents
have outdoor space to garden and relax.
990 Polk is a fresh start for the residents
and the neighborhood.