Berkeley, California, ÉTATS UNIS Amériques
Résumé de l'étude de cas :

The project at 2012 Berkeley Way is a city of Berkeley-sponsored redevelopment of a city-owned surface parking lot in downtown Berkeley, composed of three distinct projects—an 89-unit affordable family housing development; a 53-unit permanent supportive housing development; and a homeless shelter plus transitional housing—in one unified building. This is the largest PSH project for people experiencing homelessness in Berkeley. BRIDGE Housing, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit developer, partnered with Berkeley Food and Housing Project (BFHP), a local homeless shelter operator and services provider, to build a new shelter and transitional housing facility for BFHP and additional family affordable housing owned and operated by BRIDGE in a mixed-income development at a city-owned property. Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects realized the design of this unique campus.

The project’s goal is to create a continuum of affordable and very low-income housing that is integrated into a vibrant downtown community with easy access to transit and services. 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.

This case study was originally published in the foundational Homeless to Housed research report Homeless to Housed: The ULI Perspective. To see more case studies like this one, check out the full report.

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.

 

Résumé de l'étude de cas : The project at 2012 Berkeley Way is a city of Berkeley-sponsored redevelopment of a city-owned surface parking lot in downtown Berkeley, composed of three distinct projects—an 89-unit affordable family housing development; a 53-unit permanent supportive housing development; and a homeless shelter plus transitional housing—in one unified building. This is the largest PSH project for people experiencing homelessness in Berkeley. BRIDGE Housing, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit developer, partnered with Berkeley Food and Housing Project (BFHP), a local homeless shelter operator and services provider, to build a new shelter and transitional housing facility for BFHP and additional family affordable housing owned and operated by BRIDGE in a mixed-income development at a city-owned property. Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects realized the design of this unique campus.

The project’s goal is to create a continuum of affordable and very low-income housing that is integrated into a vibrant downtown community with easy access to transit and services. 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.

This case study was originally published in the foundational Homeless to Housed research report Homeless to Housed: The ULI Perspective. To see more case studies like this one, check out the full report.

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.

 

UTILISATIONS DES TERRES

  • Résidentiel Mixte
  • Utilisation mixte--trois utilisations ou plus

CARACTÉRISTIQUES SPÉCIALES

  • Le logement abordable
APERÇU DU PROJET
Date d'ouverture : 2022
Station de métro : San Francisco
Type de lieu : Quartier central des affaires
Taille du site : 3.71 Acres / 1.50 Hectares
Type de projet : Résidentiel Mixte
EN RELATION
Signaler

Alberta's Escalating Housing Crisis: Impacts, Challenges and What Can Solve it by 2030

With many significant economic and social factors at play, the increasing challenge for average Albertans to find an affordable place to live is at the forefront of those who wish to make a life in this province.
Séance événementielle

Building the 15-Minute Community: Leadership Strategies in Real Estate and Infrastructure

Fifteen-minute communities hold the promise of accelerating decarbonization, increasing housing affordability, reducing climate and health risks, and fostering social equity. This approach to city building lays a foundation for developing compact, mi...
Séance événementielle

From Competitiveness to Well-Being: Changing Priorities for Cities?

This panel will explore the challenges and opportunities cities face with a focus on the U.S./North American context from a variety of different perspectives—economic, social, and governance. Many cities are incredibly desirable and expensive places ...
Sujets
Centres et initiatives
Centre Terwilliger pour le logement