Central Roosevelt Station Site Negotiations
The Board of Directors directed staff to begin the process of negotiating agreements with non-profit developers Bellwether Housing and Mercy Housing Northwest to develop affordable housing on the central Roosevelt Station site. The site is intended to be mixed-used in nature, but residential will be the predominate use. The preliminary project concept would include 245 dwelling units and a mix of retail, daycare, and community space. The development would also need to provide public space where the community can gather, a mid-block through connection for pedestrians, and a high quality design that responds to the active pedestrian-oriented nature of the site and station. Bellwether and Mercy would be expected to pay Sound Transit $6.75 million, a significantly discounted price. All 245 dwelling units would be set aside as long-term affordable housing. 40% of the dwelling units would be rented to households making between 30% and 50% of the area median income. The remainder of the units would be rented to households making at or below 60% of the area median income. On top of that, 42% of the dwelling units would be designed for families with two and three bedrooms.Capitol Hill Land Swap Agreement
Sound Transit is engineering another affordable housing project in Capitol Hill, albeit it in a very different way. Seattle Central College approached the transit agency to do a land swap since the college would like to own and develop a site closer to Capitol Hill Station. The college had already begun negotiating with Capitol Hill Housing to develop two parcels (known as the “Atlas Site”) on Broadway with affordable housing. The Sound Transit Board of Directors approved a memorandum of understanding allowing agency staff to negotiate the terms of the land swap, including discounted land value prices to accommodate development of affordable housing. The Atlas Site is midblock on Broadway between Pine Street and Pike Street and partially developed with street-front retail in two one-story buildings. The remainder of the site is surface parking. Development of the site would mean removal of some popular local businesses, at least for the interim.
First Hill Site for Affordable Housing Tower
In First Hill, non-profit developers Bellwether Housing and Plymouth Housing Group will have rights to develop a highrise tower on a 21,600-square foot site owned by Sound Transit. The property is an artifact of the University Link light rail extension which had originally planned a station at the site. However, development of a station in First Hill was never realized. The site is located at the corner of Madison Street and Boylston Avenue. The non-profit developer duo plans to construct a 13-story tower with 100% of the dwelling units set aside as affordable. Zoning on the site allows buildings as tall as 160 feet, though that could change to 200 feet by the end of next year. If completed, it would be the first highrise affordable housing project built in Seattle in more than 50 years. The estimated project cost minus land acquisition is $92 million, though the board indicated its willingness yesterday to transfer the property free of charge. The project is relying of funding from a variety of sources such as King County, Seattle Housing Trust Fund, and Washington State Housing Trust Fund.Sound Transit Board Considers Land Grant for First Hill Affordable Highrise Today