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Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, Housing Development Corporation (HDC) President Emily A. Youssouf and HDC Board Chairman Shaun Donovan today announced that in 2006 HDC will provide $1.8 billion to finance the construction or preservation of more than 9,000 affordable apartments. This is the largest volume of financing and the greatest number of apartments built or preserved in one year since the corporation was chartered 35 years ago. HDC functions like a private mortgage bank for affordable housing in New York City. Its operations are self-financing, and it does not use any tax levy dollars.
“Private market initiatives can serve the public good,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “HDC, which serves only New York City, this year has issued more bonds for affordable apartment buildings than any other city or state agency in the nation. It has been a banner year for HDC, and as a result we are continuing to make record levels of investments in the future of all five boroughs.” “I am proud to say that all our hard work
creating new programs and restructuring old ones has
given us another record year,” said HDC President
Youssouf. “These programs are attracting private
capital, and private developers, into affordable
housing at a rate never seen before in New York
City. The 25,500 apartments that we have financed
under the “HDC can celebrate another great year helping to create and preserve affordable homes for thousands of New Yorkers,” said HDC Board Chairman and Housing and Preservation Development (HPD) Commissioner Shaun Donovan. “The Mayor’s New Housing Marketplace Plan is the largest municipal affordable housing plan in the nation’s history and we are ahead of target with almost 49,000 units financed so far. Conventional wisdom says that you can’t build affordable housing in a strong market, but New York City is saying the opposite. The Mayor’s Plan actually harnesses the strength of our booming housing market to build affordable housing and HDC’s innovative financing is a sterling example of how we are doing that.” The financing provided by HDC is in the form of low-cost mortgages made by pooling the proceeds of the sale of tax-exempt and taxable bonds with money lent from its corporate reserves. These mortgages are provided to developers for the construction and preservation of affordable housing. HDC programs are designed for multi-family rental housing and cooperative developments and serve a wide range of income segments, from very-low to middle-income tenants. HDC’s final board meeting for 2006 was held today. The Corporation agreed to provide up to $550 million in financing to build or preserve more than 2,000 affordable apartments across all five boroughs. These approvals bring the total investment HDC will make in housing this year to $1.8 billion, which includes $1.7 billion in bond proceeds and more than $92 million in low-interest loans from HDC’s corporate reserves. Some of the developments represented in today’s approvals include: The Bronx HDC today agreed to provide at least $71.5 million in financing for buildings in the Bronx that will be reserved for households earning no more than $42,540 annually for a family of four, including these four buildings:
Brooklyn Today, HDC approved $22 million for financing of two buildings in Brooklyn:
Manhattan Developments from the Lower East Side to East Harlem were approved today as HDC agreed to provide at least $172 million for affordable housing in Manhattan, including:
Queens HDC today approved at least $49 million in financing for three buildings in Queens containing 484 apartments. Specifically:
Staten Island HDC approved $25 million in financing today for the redevelopment of the Markham Gardens public housing project on the island’s north shore into a privately-owned mixed-income neighborhood with 23 three-story buildings containing a total of 240 apartments.
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