MassHousing Announces $12.6 Million in CommonWealth Builder Funding for 40 New Affordable Homes

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BOSTON – MassHousing announced that it has closed on a total of $12.6 million in financing through the Agency’s CommonWealth Builder Program with the non-profit Home City Development, Inc. for the development of 40 new affordable homes for moderate-income, first-time homebuyers in Springfield.

The new homes will be built on a parcel of land on Morris Street that has been vacant since 2011.

“MassHousing is pleased to partner with Home City and the City of Springfield to create 40 brand new homeownership opportunities,” said MassHousing CEO Chrystal Kornegay. “These new homes will allow first-time homebuyers to enjoy all the benefits of owning a home, including the ability to start building wealth for themselves and future generations. We commend our project partners for their substantial work making the Gemini Townhomes a reality.”

“Home City is eager to start building,” said Home City Development Executive Director Tom Kegelman. “We look forward to next year, when these homes will be filled with many folks who work in our city – folks who, otherwise, are denied the opportunity to live in a beautiful new home, while accumulating equity in their home.”

The CommonWealth Builder Program is a landmark initiative to address the racial homeownership gap in Massachusetts by creating new homeownership and wealth-building opportunities in communities of color. It is the largest state-level program of its kind in the nation and provides market-based subsidies to support the construction of new, moderately priced, single-family homes and condominiums in the City of Boston, the state’s 26 Gateway Cities, Framingham and Randolph. The program subsidizes the production of homes restricted to homebuyers with incomes set anywhere between 70 percent to 120 percent of their AMI.

In addition to MassHousing’s CommonWealth Builder funding, financing sources include $4.3 million in construction financing from New Valley Bank and Trust, $1 million in ARPA funds from the City of Springfield, $210,000 in Springfield Community Preservation Act funding, $400,000 from the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation (CEDAC), and a $200,000 grant from the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.

The Morris Street parcel had been a host to several uses dating back to the early 1900s, including a steam laundry facility, warehouse and office building, and most recently an auto repair facility. A fire severely damaged the building on the site, which was razed, and the site has been vacant since 2011. The new homes will be adjacent to three Pioneer Valley Transit Authority bus routes and approximately one mile away from the downtown Union Bus and Train Station. Residents will also have easy access to ample green spaces, including the Connecticut River Walk and Bikeway.

The 40 new condominiums will be constructed in 10, two-story townhouse-style buildings, and each unit will have a garage with two parking spaces, as well as access to an open-air community pavilion. The townhomes will be constructed with a highly efficient building envelope system, feature Energy Star appliances, and have all electric heating and cooling systems, eliminating the use of fossil fuels.

There will be 24 two-bedroom units and 16 three-bedroom units, of which two will be reserved for homebuyers with mobility, vision, or hearing impairments. Eight of the homes will be sold to households earning up to 80 percent of AMI and 32 homes will be sold to homebuyers earning up to 100 percent of AMI. Home sales prices are expected to range from $169,500 to $225,000.

The general contractor is Henry General Contractors, Inc. and the architect is Architecture Environment Life, Inc.

MassHousing has financed 14 rental housing communities in Springfield totaling 2,757 units with an overall original loan amount of $183.3 million. The Agency has also provided home mortgage loans to 5,270 homebuyers and homeowners in Springfield with an original purchase principal balance of $426.2 million.

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