ULI Homeless to Housed Case Study: Jazzie Collins Apartments
Permanent Supportive Housing in San Francisco
Jazzie Collins Apartments (the Apartments) is a permanently supportive, affordable housing development for adults exiting homelessness in San Francisco. Its creation addressed the need for new and enhanced housing opportunities for legacy residents of the neighboring Civic Center Hotel and formerly homeless residents based on referrals from San Francisco’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing. The Apartments, located at 53 Colton Street, helped transform the project area from commercial buildings and surface parking lots into a mixed-use development at the existing Civic Center Hotel. The development aligns with the city’s strategy for economic recovery, focusing on job creation and infrastructure investment after COVID-19. It also advanced Mayor London Breed’s Homelessness Recovery Plan. The plan was to expand the capacity of the Homelessness Response System by creating 1,500 units of permanent supportive housing between 2020 and 2022. By the end of 2022, the city more than doubled this goal, with 3,081 active or under-contract units.
Interested in ULI's work on addressing homelessness? In 2022, the Terwilliger Center for Housing, with initial funding by philanthropist and entrepreneur Preston Butcher, launched the Homeless to Housed Initiative, which works to explore real estate solutions to the growing crisis impacting communities everywhere. Learn more about the ULI Homeless to Housed Initiative.
Case Study Summary: Jazzie Collins Apartments (the Apartments) is a permanently supportive, affordable housing development for adults exiting homelessness in San Francisco. Its creation addressed the need for new and enhanced housing opportunities for legacy residents of the neighboring Civic Center Hotel and formerly homeless residents based on referrals from San Francisco’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing. The Apartments, located at 53 Colton Street, helped transform the project area from commercial buildings and surface parking lots into a mixed-use development at the existing Civic Center Hotel. The development aligns with the city’s strategy for economic recovery, focusing on job creation and infrastructure investment after COVID-19. It also advanced Mayor London Breed’s Homelessness Recovery Plan. The plan was to expand the capacity of the Homelessness Response System by creating 1,500 units of permanent supportive housing between 2020 and 2022. By the end of 2022, the city more than doubled this goal, with 3,081 active or under-contract units.
Interested in ULI's work on addressing homelessness? In 2022, the Terwilliger Center for Housing, with initial funding by philanthropist and entrepreneur Preston Butcher, launched the Homeless to Housed Initiative, which works to explore real estate solutions to the growing crisis impacting communities everywhere. Learn more about the ULI Homeless to Housed Initiative.
LAND USES
- Mixed Residential
SPECIAL FEATURES
- Housing for the homeless
- Permanent supportive housing
- Stabilized housing