Affordable Units for $2.2
Million
Five units will be accessible to people
with disabilities.
By
Jason Hartke - May 10, 2006

Photo by
Jason Hartke/The Connection
Supervisor
Cathy Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill), with Fairfax
County Board of Supervisors Chairman Gerry
Connolly in the background, announces the
county’s purchase of 10 affordable units at
ParcReston. Five units will be accessible for
people with disabilities. |
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Fairfax County paid $2.2
million to Athena Renaissance, LLC, Friday to buy 10 affordable dwelling
units in Reston as part of the county’s continuing effort to preserve
affordable housing.
“The preservation of affordable housing within Fairfax County moves
quickly and strongly ahead with the purchase of these units,” said
Supervisor Cathy Hudgins (D-Hunter Mill), who represents Reston.
The 10 units, located at ParcReston across the street from the Reston
Town Center, were purchased after a year’s worth of work using money
from a Community Development Block Grant, according to housing
authorities. Five of the units will be made accessible to people with
disabilities.
The county plans to add the units to its rental program and expects they
will be lived in “within weeks,” according to Paula Sampson,
director of the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD).
Half of the accessible units, Sampson said, will be “custom-fitted”
to five households that will go through the waiting list process and
have need for accessibility.
Roughly a third of the 9,000 households on the county’s housing wait
lists include someone with a disability, according to Kristina Norvell,
director of public affairs, DHCD.
COUNTY REPRESENTATIVES have long recognized the loss of affordable
housing within the county, which has cited a 30,000-unit gap in
affordable housing needs.
Two years ago this month, the county created the Affordable Housing
Preservation Initiative, which employs a variety of tools to increase
the amount of affordable housing that is preserved.
For the past two years as part of that effort, the county has dedicated
one penny from each taxpayer’s real estate tax to go toward affordable
housing, totaling $18 million from last year’s budget and $22 million
this year.
In addition, the county intends to preserve 1,000 affordable housing
units by 2007. With the addition of the 10 units at ParcReston, the
county has preserved 879 units.
“We’re losing so many [affordable] units because of the value of
land and the power of market redevelopment,” said Board of Supervisors
Chairman Gerald E. Connolly (D), explaining why the county adopted the
measurable goal of preserving 1,000 units. “It’s not good enough to
talk the talk.”
Connelly said similar preservation efforts are ongoing, specifically one
near Fairfax City and another in Mt. Vernon along Richmond Highway.
“We’re leaving no stone unturned in terms of how we can preserve
affordable housing.”
THE COUNTY entered discussions with Athena Renaissance almost a year
ago. The developer is in the middle of an application process for plans
to build two, high-rise buildings with a total of 360 units at the same
site.
“We approached the developer after preliminary discussions with
Supervisor Hudgins to get the units here,” said Tom Devaney, a county
housing specialist who helped negotiate the deal.
Athena Renaissance gave the county a “good deal” for the units.
“It was well below the original market value rate. There was no
formula. We just agreed to a number that the county thought would work
for them,” said Sonny Small, president of Renaissance.
This is the second move the county has made to preserve affordable
housing in Reston in as many months. In February, the county agreed to
pay the Mark Winkler Co. $49 million to buy the 181-unit Crescent
Apartments near Lake Anne. Monthly rents at the complex, considered
“affordable,” run an average of $1,023 for a one-bedroom apartment
and $1,170 for two bedrooms.
Connolly said Friday that the 16-acre Crescent site may be considered to
further support affordable housing. “We can bank that land for future
development of affordable housing or do other things that might finance
future affordable housing,” said Connolly.
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