Florida Development Combines Housing and Health Care

Sulzbacher Village includes a health center as well as respite units for women leaving a hospital.

1 MIN READ

Hunt Capital Partners

Sulzbacher Village provides a long-term solution to homelessness in Jacksonville, Fla.

Developed by The Vestcor Cos. on behalf of Sulzbacher Center, the area’s largest provider of services for people experiencing homelessness, the ambitious development features 70 permanent affordable homes along with 54 other critical housing units, including emergency housing and 10 units for women leaving a hospital and in need of a place to recover.

Sulzbacher Village units came fully furnished with IKEA furniture

PQH Group

Sulzbacher Village units came fully furnished with IKEA furniture

Single women and children make up about 90% of the community’s population.

The housing alone would have been an accomplishment, but Sulzbacher Village goes further by having a 7,000-square-foot Federally Qualified Health Center that offers primary-care, dental, vision, and behavioral services, a therapeutic learning center, and a commercial kitchen.

PROJECT DETAILS

Developers: The Vestcor Cos. and Sulzbacher Center
Architect: PQH Group
General Contractor: Summit Contracting Group
Major Funders: Hunt Capital Partners; Florida Housing Finance Corp.; Florida Department of Economic Opportunity; Sulzbacher Center

“Everything is encompassed under one roof,” says Ryan Hoover, president of TVC Development, the affordable housing group at Vestcor.

By providing housing and health care, the development will help keep people off the streets and out of the emergency room. The 10 respite units will be supported by local hospitals that have entered into contracts for the rooms. Sulzbacher will provide women leaving a hospital with a place to go and further recover from their medical conditions as well as needed case management, including working with them on their long-term housing needs.

To finance the approximately $20 million project, the team tapped several sources, including low-income housing tax credits. In addition, Sulzbacher raised more than $6 million from over 400 individuals and donor groups.

About the Author

Donna Kimura

Donna Kimura is deputy editor of Affordable Housing Finance. She has covered the industry for more than 20 years. Before that, she worked at an Internet company and several daily newspapers. Connect with Donna at dkimura@questex.com or follow her @DKimura_AHF.

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