HomeMy WebLinkAbout(0038) Draft Stop Six Transformation Plan-10.14.2019.pdfTHE
STOP SIX
CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
ICA-m-A
FORT WORTH HOUSING SOLUTIONS
THE CITY OF FORT WORTH
MCCORMACK BARON SALAZAR, INC.
URBAN STRATEGIES, INC.
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HOUSING SOLUTIONS
UPDATED O CTO B E R 2019 Eiin Housing with a Mission
FORT WORTH
MCCORMACK
BARON
SALAZAR
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USI I URBAN STRATEGIES, INC.
WITH GRATITUDE
THIS TRANSFORMATION PLAN IS THE RESULT OF A MULTI -YEAR PLANNING AND ENGAGEMENT EFFORT
UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF FORT WORTH HOUSING SOLUTIONS AND THE CITY OF FORT WORTH.
THIS WORK WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN POSSIBLE WITHOUT THE INPUT OF CAVILE PLACE RESIDENTS,
STOP SIX NEIGHBORS, KEY POLITICAL REPRESENTATIVES, AND STOP SIX BUSINESSES, INSTITUTIONS
AND STAKEHOLDERS. IN ADDITION TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD, THIS PLAN HAS BEEN INFORMED BY
WORK FROM THE CITY OF FORT WORTH AND ITS DEPARTMENTS, FORT WORTH HOUSING SOLUTIONS,
MCCORMACK BARON SALAZAR, INC., URBAN STRATEGIES, INC. URBAN DESIGN ASSOCIATES, FORT
WORT CREATIVE. SD, CVR ASSOCIATES, �E� -)KETDf -A, LL re-- ""N, AND BLUE LINEN
THIS UPDATE OWES A DEBT OF ff2MffInT0 'HE' ,...... 7F HE ORIG IAL 2013 PLANNING TEAM OF
GILMORE KEAN, DUVERNAY + BMW, CAMPUS G.JMMU6-T . STRATEGIES, EDGEMERE CONSULTING
CORPORATION, FREESE & NICHOLS, INC., THE CATALYST GROUP, AND OPEN CHANNELS GROUP.
THANK YOU, ALSO, TO ALL OUR NEIGHBORHOOD PARTNERS, INSTITUTIONS AND SERVICE PROVIDERS
WHO ARE A CRITICAL PART OF REALIZING THIS PLAN.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
r// INTRODUCTION 4
r// EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 5
r// COMMUNITY PLANNING PROCESS 6
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r// THE FINANCIAL PLAN 31
r// THE PEOPLE PLAN 36
r// PARTNERS 47
The Stop Six Choice Neighborhood
Transformation Plan envisions the creation
of a vibrant, sustainable, community
through a comprehensive community -
driven approach to neighborhood
transformation.
The plan is aligned with the three core
goals of HUD's Choice Neighborhood
Initiative (CNI):
HOUSING: Replace distressed public and
assisted housing with high -quality mixed -
income housing that is well -managed and
responsive to the needs of the surrounding
neighborhood;
PEOPLE: Improve outcomes of households
living in the target housing related to
employment and income, health, and
education; and
NEIGHBORHOOD: Create the conditions
necessary for public and private
reinvestment in distressed neighborhoods
to offerthe amenities and assets, including
safety, good schools, and commercial
activity, that are important to families'
choices about their community.
The boundaries of the CNI are the railroad
tracks north of East Rosedale Street, Miller
Avenue to the west, Carverly Drive to the
east, and Fitzhugh Avenue to the south.
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- 4 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBOPHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
This 2019 update to the comprehensive, multi -dimensional Stop Six Choice Neighborhood
Transformation Plan —originally completed in 2013—capitalizes upon the neighborhood's
abundant assets —multiple churches, green spaces, and strong relationships with
educational institutions at the elementary, secondary and post -secondary levels —
and offers fresh approaches for remedying persistent challenges, including the large
numbers of vacant lots and substandard housing. Most importantly, the Plan reveres the
neighborhood's rich history, preserves its character, and seeks to restore both its vibrancy
and livability.
0
0
THE NEIGHBORHOOD PLAN
The neighborhood plan builds
on the pre-existing assets and
relationships in the neighborhood
and provides a framework for
development of a neighborhood
of choice —all while improving
connectivity and infrastructure
throughout the neighborhood.
THE HOUSING PLAN
The housing plan replaces the
300 obsolete and outdated Cavile
Place public housing units one -
for -one in several well -designed,
high -quality, sustainable, mixed -
income communities with almost
1,000 new units. The plan
creates anchors at the corners of
the neighborhood and connects
with a large development at the
heart.
THE PEOPLE PLAN
The people plan addresses the
specific needs of the 252 target
households from Cavile Place
along with 48 households off
the Cavile Place waitlist. These
needs were identified through a
Resident Needs Assessment and
are being met with commitments
from service provider partners.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
5
In developing the Stop Six Choice
Neighborhood Transformation Plan, the
planning partners and participants have
embraced a shared intent: tofundamentally
improve Stop Six by employing proven
neighborhood revitalization efforts. The
work plan includes key strategies used
effectively in other CNI communities,
including:
• Restore neighborhood confidence —
the belief on the part of neighbors and
other stakeholders that conditions
in Stop Six will improve, and instill
confidence in their capacity to alter it.
• Re -position Stop Six in the market as a
place of choice and make it competitive
in attracting housing demand.
• Create new symbols and a new
narrative about the Stop Six Choice
Neighborhood — one that replaces
a story of decline with a story of
transformation.
In addition to undertaking a comprehensive
physical needs assessment, market analysis,
financial analysis, development feasibility
study, and a resident needs assessment,
the planning process relied heavily on the
participation of the residents of Cavile Place,
the residents of the surrounding Stop Six
neighborhood, and various neighborhood and
Fort Worth regional stakeholders.
The planning and development partners also
sought to learn critical lessons from other
Choice Nei hborhood communities and
tf coul dvefproomote
ple t the a orIan.
s a u tea an he a andsf this
neighborhood and its residents, and build
social connections, rather than organizing
around the goal of removing something bad
(dilapidated housing or crime). Similarly, the
focus remains on improving and enhancing the
neighborhood, not implementing a program.
Success is defined solely in terms of positive
neighborhood change. Finally, it is the intention
of all partners to create and perpetuate a
new, enhanced image of the Stop Six Choice
Neighborhood. To this end, the plan balances
the strategies of developing additional housing
supply, expanding services and amenities,
building housing demand and attracting new
residents to the neighborhood.
- 6 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
OUTREACH. Restoring confidence in the
Stop Six neighborhood is essential to a
successful revitalization process and must
begin with residents.
The effort to heighten or restore
confidenceand its by-product, pridebegan
with initial outreach in 2012-13, during
which the City of Fort Worth and Fort
Worth Housing Solutions staff invited
Cavile Place and Stop Six residents to think
and talk about their aspirations for the
neighborhood. Residents were encouraged
to describe what they loved about Stop
Sixthose centerpieces of the community they
wanted to preserveas well as the things that
needed to be fixed or improved. Because
the planning and development team has
demonstrated a genuine commitment to
resident engagement, the organization has
earned a positive relationship with those
it serves, resulting in seven years of well -
attended outreach and engagement activities
•,r
(hundreds of participants), and the consistent
presence of resident voices in planning.
Primary resident priorities have not deviated
significantly between 2012 and 2019, with
most values and expectations remaining
constant. For example, across five resident
and community meetings and community
strategy sessions (June to October 2019),
attended by approximately 200 residents (not
all in attendance signed in), representatives
from 25 stakeholder and anchor institutions,
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD -
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
7
0
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 O
and four elected officials (Mayor, City
Councilmember, State Senator, U.S.
Representative), priorities described by
all sources closely mirror those originally
developed in 2012.
• Parents want improved parks and
recreation opportunities, better
schools, and additional healthcare
resources.
• Young adults want enhanced access to
employment, education and training
resources.
• All residents wanttosee neighborhood
walkability upgraded as well as more
neighborhood amenities, including
restaurants, grocery and retail stores.
• Older and younger residents want a
library and access to the internet.
• Everyone wants more gathering
places where people can come
together.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD 9 -
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
Summary of Existing Conditions
Stop Six was originally known as
Cowanville, a community of small farms
and homesteads founded by Amanda
Davis, an African American pioneer of
the late 1800s. By the early 20th century,
Cowanville was a thriving working-class
African American neighborhood, though
it lacked municipal services and police
protection. The area was served by the
inter -urban railway and became known
colloquially as Stop Six, reflecting its
placement on the system's route from Fort
Worth to Dallas.
Today's Stop Six Choice Neighborhood
is located in the southeast quadrant of
Fort Worth and enjoys close proximity
(approximately 15-minute commute)
to downtown and the large, nationally
acclaimed biomedical center, Medical
City Fort Worth. Current neighborhood
boundaries -- the railroad tracks above
East Rosedale Street to the North, Miller
to the West, Fitzhugh to the South and
Carverly to the East —encompass just over
1.8 miles. Despite being engulfed by a
major metropolitan area, the neighborhood
retains some rural feel, thanks to abundant
green spaces and Dunbar Creek, which
runs through the center of the community.
O
— 10 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
O
While not technically a food desert,
the Stop Six neighborhood lacks a full
service grocery store. While having some
strong residential areas, it is somewhat
largely defined by the presence of the
large Cavile Place public housing site.
And while centrally located in the Fort
Worth metropolitan area, it lacks a major
employer or anchor gathering site.
Existing Assets
The Stop Six Choice Neighborhood has
multiple existing assets that can be
engaged to accelerate transformation.
Among the most enduring is this
community's long-standing role with Fort
Worth's African American community.
The community has a smaller population
than it did some years ago, but it remains
a strong neighborhood, anchored by the
educational institutions on its southern
boundaries and by the many churches that
continue to thrive, drawing congregational
membership and attendance from across
Fort Worth.
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The substantial amount of vacant land is
also an opportunity— providing significant
land areas for future development. In
addition, the recent improvements to
East Rosedale Street have dramatically
improved the appearance and impressions
of the neighborhood. The Transformation
Plan seeks to leverage these opportunities
toward the creation of a thriving,
sustainable community.
Recent Investments
In addition to the designation of the Stop Six Choice Neighborhood as a Neighborhood Empowerment Zone and
the inv ,uTlt, : bl one �_ 'y of F Wort aLLerl(Aaill U Mat designation, neighborhood property owners and
resider are a ) t ' hPr Jciar; o ithe +^Iizatil activities, including:
• ThI -, For Wor re .ntly (R e )19) comp ted major capital improvements to Ralph J. Bunche Park,
including trails, a group shelter, benches and picnic tables.
• The City of Fort Worth dedicated additional CDBG and HOME funds, leveraged with local tax dollars, toward
upgrading the water and sewer infrastructure to service new housing starts.
• The City's Neighborhood Improvement Program funded over $2.5 million in public safety improvements
including sidewalks, street lighting, security cameras, demolition of abandoned structures, and clearance of
trees and brush from vacant lots across the neighborhood.
• The City's Homebuyer Assistance Program provides up to $20,000 in mortgage assistance for income -eligible
first-time homebuyers in the Stop Six Choice Neighborhood.
The City's Economic Development Strategy is encouraging private sector entities to create job opportunities
within and around Stop Six as part of its commitment to deconcentrate poverty.
• The Texas Department of Public Safety completed a $21 million streetscape improvement of East Rosedale
Street, the Stop Six Neighborhood's major east -west artery.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 THE NEIGHBORHOOD PLAN
Proposed Neighborhood Investments
The Transformation Plan has been developed
to capitalize upon the neighborhood's
abundant assets and offer some fresh
approaches for remedying persistent
challenges. Most importantly, the Plan reveres
the neighborhood's rich history, preserves
its character, and seeks to restore both its
vibrancy and livability.
With the overarching goal to acknowledge and
preserve the unique historical heritage of the
community, the Transformation Plan provides
a comprehensive framework for short and
long-range actions to stabilize and rebuild the
historic Stop Six community.
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- 12 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
O
Key Neighborhood Opportunities
The Neighborhood Plan directly responds to
four key opportunities that now exist in Stop
Six:
• The opportunity to establish a major
anchor in the community that will serve
as a gateway and focal point of new
investment. The Transformation Plan
includes a large, new Neighborhood
Hub, that will offer a single, easily
accessed, highly visible site from which
all neighborhood residents can obtain
critical services and access neighborhood
amenities.
• The redevelopment the Cavile Place
public housing site. Fort Worth Housing
Solutions is commited to redeveloping
the Cavile site into a mixed -use, mixed -
income community that will blend with
and enhance the neighborhood. The re-
use of the property will remove what has
become an impediment to neighborhood
transformation and creates the opportunity
for new residential development
throughout the neighborhood.
• The enhancement of the appearance of
East Rosedale Street. The Plan leverages
the major streetscape improvements that
the Texas Department of Transportation
has made to East Rosedale Street. The
improvements have dramatically enhanced
the character of this important arterial
street and set the stage for introducing
much needed retail and commercial
activity.
• The presence of other vacant land
in the neighborhood that can be
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t
table y. hPlan ditio
sites in the neighborhood and connects
these together with planned parks,
infrastructure, and open space that re-
knit the community and will increase the
population of the community without
increasing density.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD ! ' 13 -
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 THE NEIGHBORHOOD PLAN
The Neighborhood Hub
Among the most frequently cited needs by
Stop Six Choice Neighborhood residents were
job training, employment assistance, education
for all ages, financial literacy training, and
primary healthcare. Each is methodically
addressed in the People Plan; however, to
further enhance service access and utilization,
the Transformation Plan proposes to build a
new Neighborhood Hub at the heart of the
neighborhood.
The Hub will offer a single, easily accessed,
highly visible site from which residents can
obtain critical services. Programs will include
an expanded Envision Center, a YMCA, a
Head Start Center, a city library, family case
management services provided by Urban
Strategies, and a host of other programs
aligned to resident needs, including: 1) a
job training and business incubator center;
2) afterschool programs for students from
kindergarten through 8th grade, with
instruction aligned with school curricula; 3)
financial literacy classes and credit repair
services; and 4) connections to primary care
providers and medical homes. The co -location
of job training and Head Start at the Hub will
eliminate a primary barrier to self-sufficiency
and will enable young parents to take full
advantage of these resources.
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FIRST FLOOR
SECOMOFLOOR
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- 14 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
Other Major Revitalization Concepts
EAST ROSEDALE STREET NEIGHBORHOOD
GATEWAY. The improvements to East Rosedale
Street have facilitated the opportunity to create
a new "front door" to the Stop Six neighborhood.
There will be four key neighborhood gateways
along East Rosedale.
The first will be located at Rosedale's intersection
with Amanda Street, the traditional "main street"
of the neighborhood that, in the past, supported
both residential and local -serving retail. This
important street will include a mixed -use building
at its intersection with East Rosedale, along with
retail -serving street parking, to re-establish it as
a desirable address for neighborhood retail and
services.
The second neighborhood gateway will be
created at the intersection of East Rosedale and
Liberty Street, where a vista will showcase the
Neighborhood Hub and the improvements to
Rosedale Plaza Park, highlighting the services and
amenities now available to the community via the
Hub.
The third neighborhood gateway will be at
Stalcup and East Rosedale, where the prominent
new senior building will mark the transition from
neighborhoods to the east to the new Stop Six.
The fourth gateway will be created by the
development at East Rosedale and Miller, which
will be highly visible from that heavily trafficked
intersection, and will help to establish the
connections between higher -income communities
to the west and the new transformed Stop Six
neighborhood.
NEIGHBORHOOD OPEN SPACES. The existing
Rosedale Park will be improved and enhanced,
with programmatic and design connections to
the Neighborhood Hub, making it a more integral
part of the community and solidifying the new
gateway experience. In addition to Rosedale
Plaza Park, the Transformation Plan incorporates
recommendations for development of several
al ighb od o
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MIXED -USE CENTER. Starting at the corner of
Amanda Street and East Rosedale are a series
of mixed -use buildings with groundfloor space
for neighborhood retail, service providers,
entrepreneurs and other commercial tenants. Also
included in this space is the management office and
community amenity space for the new housing at
on the central housing site.
Parking for the mixed -use space will be provided
on -street while parking for the development
and employees will be located on the interior
of the blocks where it will not detract from the
streetscape.
The design of the frontage of the buildings will
create a walkable, pedestrian -friendly district.
O
TRANSPORTATION, STORMWATER AND UTILITY
IMPROVEMENTS. The Transformation Plan includes
several "levels" of street improvements, including
new streets, improved street connectivity and
rebuilt streets.
The plan calls for rebuilding key streets, including
resurfacing, rebuilding curbs and gutters, and
providing sidewalks, streetlights and landscaping.
The Stop Six neighborhood is served by a number
of bus routes that run along East Rosedale
Street, Stalcup Road and Ramey Street. The
Transformation Plan recommends enhancing the
existing bus stops in the neighborhood and, post -
residential development, re-evaluting bus service
lines to ensure coverage.
The plan also includes updates of existing utility
infrastructure and improvements to stormwater
management to mitigate the impact of new and
future investments in the community.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
Summary of Existing Conditions
One factor that illustrates both the
problems and opportunities embodied in
the Stop Six neighborhood is the wide
variety of housing character and quality.
While there are some homes that are
historic, dating to the earliest days of
settlement in the neighborhood, there
are also other older homes that have
been neglected and are now in very poor
condition. On the same blocks, there are
newly constructed homes in excellent
condition. This variation in circumstances,
coupled with the substantial amount
of vacant land located throughout the
neighborhood, creates a general sense of
uncertainty about the area's future.
There are 2,208 housing units in the Stop
Six Choice Neighborhood and the vacancy
rate is 6.38, three times higher than the
Tarrant County rate (2.07). Three-quarters
(79%) of all neighborhood housing was
developed for single families. Most homes
were built between 1940 and 1970; only
21 homes (1%) have been built since 2010.
Homes tend to be of good size, with 58%
having at least three bedrooms. About
half of all homes are owner occupied. The
neighborhood is highly stable, with 91%
of residents living in their homes for more
than five years.
The median value of housing varies across
the neighborhood, ranging from $48,200
to $65,800, while the median in Fort Worth
is $198,800. The average gross monthly
housing cost (with utilities) for owners
is $976 per month; the rate for renters
is $881. These monthly amounts cause
about half of neighborhood households to
be cost burdened with more than 30% of
their income going to housing costs.
Cavile Place is the only public housing
complex in Stqstc
and is demonstrably
D
lete. as a
n i p 20F
i is bad
understanding of these demographics
and it looks beyond them, to describe a
program for housing that will result in
a sustainable, desirable, mixed -income
community.
- 16 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
COMMUNITY -IDENTIFIED GOALS AND GUIDING PRINCIPLES
The Housing Strategy provides a comprehensive approach, plan and phasing
sequence to revitalize the housing in the neighborhood, and addresses the following
goals and guiding principles identified during community engagement throughout
the planning process:
• Create a neighborhood comprised of high -quality, well -maintained, mixed -
income housing that accommodates families and is compact and pedestrian -
friendly with an interconnected network of streets and defensible public open
spaces.
• Develop housing of the same design and c on making sitte
units indistinguishable from market -rate, affjajd rkf ho anensure adequate off-street parking.
• Follow a design approach that respects thee of t hborh
and incorporates traditional elements like porches, masonry, and design details.
• Eliminate the stigma of Cavile Place by demolishing the site and dispersing
HUD -assisted replacement units on a number of different sites, and developing
new mixed -income housing that blends with the density and character of the
surrounding neighborhood.
• Allow all existing Cavile Place residents the right to return to the site.
• Build at densities that blend into the existing neighborhood character, scale and
building grouping.
• Incorporate sustainable building elements such as energy efficient lighting,
appliances and building envelopes, low VOC (Volatile Organic Compounds)
paint, sustainable materials, and green site design elements
0 THE HOUSING PLAN
The community -driven plan works to
reverse the patterns of disinvestment in
the community by physically replacing all
300 distressed public housing units across
the neighborhood with project -based
voucher units, along with an additional
642 market -rate, LIHTC and workforce
(80%-120%AMI) units and 48 permanent
supportive units. In total, 990 new units
will be developed in the neighborhood,
with multiple additional sites and acreage
allowing for high -quality, mixed -income
housing at the same density levels
currently seen in the community.
The Housing Plan consists of five phases
of mixed -income, family housing and one
phase of mixed -income senior housing.
Each phase includes units for a range
of incomes (replacement, permanent
supportive housing, tax credit, and
market -rate), with this mix present in each
building (to the extent possible given the
number of units in each building). Each
phase also combines a blend of resources
(including Choice Neighborhood funds,
private debt, private Low -Income Housing
Tax Credit equity, other public dollars,
and philanthropic resources) to create a
strong financial underpinning and support
the development throughout its lifecycle.
Critically important, no family phase has
more than 30% replacement units.
Stop Six is a low-rise, low -density
neighborhood with strong historical
roots. While the Housing Plan will bring
more housing into the neighborhood,
strategic acquisitions will result in the new
housing being designed at neighborhood -
appropriate density levels, in two- and
three-story walk-up/garden apartments,
two-story townhouses and two-, three-,
and four-story mixed -use buildings,
weaving seamlessly into the existing
community.
Drh'fctZh
qgn o comnu Irere, en -richs the and
aspirations of current residents who wish
to remain in the community. At the same
time, it will attract market -rate residents
from other areas who are already
showing an interest in the greater Stop
Six neighborhood, which has had a 7.7%
increase in population since 2010.
DECONCENTRATING
POVERTY
Deconcentrating poverty has been a major
goal of the City of Fort Worth and Fort
Worth Housing Solution's public housing
repositioning efforts across the City. The
Housing Plan reflects this intent, with 300
replacement units representing 30% of
the 990 total planned new units. The new
housing is not limited to the original Cavile
Place site, but includes multiple strategic
sites acquired throughout the community
to create a cross -neighborhood market
transformation, anchor key entry points
into the community, and bring visibility to
the transformed central site on the highly
trafficked Rosedale Avenue.
- 18 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
ONE -FOR -ONE
REPLACEMENT
The Housing Strategy replaces all 300
Cavile units one -for -one within the
neighborhood on four major development
sites: Stalcup (the senior site which
establishes the northeast corner of the
neighborhood), the Cavile Place site
plus additional surrounding lots (which
establishes the "heart" of the community),
Ramey (establishing the southwestern
cornerofthe neighborhood) and Rosedale/
Miller (establishing the northwest corner).
The southeast corner of the neighborhood
is anchored by the educational campus
of Dunbar High School, Jacquet Middle
School and the Tarrant County College
Opportunity Center. The proposed
bedroom sizes of the replacement
units reflect the current needs of the
existing families in Cavile Place (and also
additional families on the Fort Worth
Housing Solutions waiting list). Because it
is more difficult to find larger apartments
with housing vouchers, the plan builds
back more of the larger two- and three -
bedroom units to meet the needs of
harder -to -house wait list families. As
the Transformation Plan is implemented,
bedroom sizes will continue to be adjusted
to meet the needs of families.
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ONE FOR ONE REPLACEMENT UNIT MIX
1 BR
2 BR
3 BR
4 BR
TOTAL
Cavile Place
(Existing)
60
144
70
26
300
Cavile Place
Resident Need
96
119
31
6
252
Wait List and
Market Need
8
18
22
-
48
Total
Replacement
Need
104
137
53
6
300
P e 1
AF
-
-
39
P e 2
8
3
63
Phase 3
17
29
10
-
56
Phase
5
18
25
3
51
Phase 5
6
8
10
-
24
Phase
27
40
-
-
67
TOTAL
104
137
53
6
300
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
19
0 THE HOUSING PLAN
HOUSING DESIGN
From the planning process, a shared vision
of the neighborhood emerged: a vibrant,
sustainable community with the attributes —
education, healthcare, safety, services, and
amenities — of a neighborhood of choice.
During the planning process, design, density,
and amenity preferences were surveyed
from Cavile Place residents, neighborhood
residents, and other community stakeholders.
Those preferences were reviewed and are
reflected in the resulting Housing Plan. This
plan integrates the mixed -income, mixed -
use redevelopment of neighborhood housing
with a host of complementary investments
in the neighborhood, connected by improved
infrastructure, services and streetscapes. The
plan works to restore and reinforce the qualities
of adjacent streets and blocks, knitting the
neighborhood together with surrounding blocks
by eliminating inward -facing super blocks,
reconnecting the street grid and creating a new
pedestrian -friendly scale.
DESIGN ELEMENTS. The design replaces
distressed and obsolete units with a selection
of new mixed -income walkup/garden,
townhouse and elevator -served apartments.
The buildings, some of which are also
mixed -use, are designed to contemporary
architectural standards and reflect market
tastes, the historic context of the Stop Six
neighborhood, and feedback gathered from
residents and stakeholders. Rather than front
doors facing parking lots or interior courtyards,
all residential front doors and front porches
will face public streets. The design is updated,
yet well -integrated with the architectural
character of Stop Six — with gabled roofs,
front porches, materials, style and colors —
appealing to families and individuals who have
the means to move anywhere, but choose to
N
live in the Stop Six neighborhood and an urban
environment.
UNIT AND ROOM SIZES. All new units will be
designed to the same market -rate standard
and will be indistinguishable from each other.
Rooms are large enough to accommodate
modern furniture and room sizes, and
bedroom configurations have been designed
to accommodate the needs of contemporary
— 20 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBOPHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
families, including ground -floor powder rooms
in townhouses, in -unit washers/dryers, and
large closets to provide sufficient storage.
Units have high -quality, market -rate finishes
and appliances, as expected in the Fort Worth
market.
COMPACT, PEDESTRIAN -FRIENDLY,
MIXED -USE NEIGHBORHOOD. The plan
reconnects to the traditional block pattern to
create a framework that supports compact
yet comfortable development, connections
for pedestrians, and an integrated plan that
supports a core of diverse land uses. The
housing is well -integrated into the planned
neighborhood investments, including
connections to the Neighborhood Hub and
EnVision Center from all sites, connections
from each site to parks and greenspace,
and walkable connections to transit. It has a
diversified architectural density of two- and
three-story garden, townhome and mixed -
use elevator buildings with higher densities on
the major thoroughfare, Rosedale. Different
N
building types create variety and diversity
from the street that is attractive to
pedestrians, and both contextual and
contemporary, elevating traditional
designs to tangibly demonstrate new
investment in Stop Six. The plan features
new, continuous, and accessible sidewalks
and crosswalks; improved street lighting,
street trees/landscaping and drainage;
buildings that face the public realm; and
improved local streets that provide better
connection to Rosedale, the new Hub,
parks, and schools. The improvements
promote walking, biking, and accessibility
to the Hub to aid in a healthy lifestyle.
RESIDENT COMMUNITY SPACE AND
RECREATION. The design centers
around the new Neighborhood Hub at
the heart (literally and figuratively) of
the community. In addition, each of the
four housing sites will have resident -
only amenities —an expectation for all
market -rate housing in Fort Worth. These
amenities include clubhouses/community
spaces, fitness centers, outdoor spaces
(including pools and water features), and
management offices in all four sites. Each
new multi -family block incorporates an
interior playground and green space.
DEFENSIBLE SPACE. The plan is designed
to create defensible space by incorporating
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
21
Crime Prevention Through Environmental
Design (CPTED) principles to deter criminal
activity through natural surveillance, natural
access control, and clearly defining public
versus private spaces. On -site elements
include: buildings that front the street; no blank
elevations; security lighting; security cameras;
windows overlooking sidewalks, parking lots,
and parks; limited entrances to buildings
and parking spaces; and see -through fences
between buildings. Off -site elements include
recent investments by the City of Fort Worth
in street lights and cameras.
MICRO -CLIMATE APPROPRIATE
LANDSCAPING. The plan follows Enterprise
Green Communities (EGC) criteria, which
include native species and xeriscaping to
reduce the need for irrigation and provide
for landscaping that is resilient to dramatic
weather events. Native shade trees will help
restore the native microclimate and reduce
the heat island effect, conserving energy
and promoting livability by creating more
comfortably enjoyable outdoor spaces.
STORMWATER MANAGEMENT PRACTICES.
Drainage is a known challenge in Fort Worth.
In addition to investments by the city to reduce
runoff from upstream sources, aggressive
strategies will be employed to address
stormwater run-off management on -site and
reduce our impacts downstream. The design
incorporates native raingardens, retention
ponds and underground storage piping
to detain and filter precipitation, decrease
pooling, decrease the impact to the combined
stormwater system, and increase resilience to
extreme weather events.
ENERGY EFFICIENT, SUSTAINABLE, AND
RESILIENT. All new housing will be built and
certified to Enterprise Green Communities
Criteria (EGC) 2020 Standards (or a newer
version as applicable) and ENERGY STAR for
Homes (ES). EGC and ES increase the efficiency
of the buildings and systems, and require energy
efficient appliances, lighting, and roofing
products. EGC prevents waste of natural
resources by using environmentally preferable
materials, minimizes construction waste, and
promotes healthy living environments through
the use of healthy interior materials (low- and
no-VOC paints and adhesives, Green Label
carpeting and other environmentally preferable
22 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBOPHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
flooring, formaldehyde -free wood products,
and asthmagen-free materials), integrated pest
control, adequate ventilation planning, and mold
prevention. EGC 2020 also includes planning for
mitigating the impact of natural disasters.
ACCESSIBLE AND FREE FROM DISCRIMINATION.
In the Stop Six neighborhood census tracts,
37.2% of residents are identified as disabled.
For this reason, it was critical to ensure there are
ample accessible housing opportunities in the
new housing. Five percent of the units across unit
sizes will be accessible to persons with physical
disabilities, 100% of ground floor garden and
elevator -accessible apartments — including 100%
of the senior building — will be adaptable and
visitable (i.e. able to be visited by a person who
uses a wheelchair). All townhomes will be visitable
on the first floor (zero -step entrance, 32 inches of
door passage space, and a wheelchair -accessible
ground floor bathroom). At least 2% of units will
be wired to accommodate persons with visual
It
and/or hearing impairments. All sidewalks and
paths of travel will be designed to ADA and UFAS
standards, and playgrounds and fitness equipment
will include accessible options. Fort Worth's CNI
team is also committed to affirmatively furthering
Fair Housing and increasing racial, ethnic, and
economic diversity to create a community free from
discrimination.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
23
0 THE HOUSING PLAN
IMPLEMENTATION AND PHASING PLAN
The phasing plan anticipates six total phases of multi -family, mixed -income residential housing across the Stop Six neighborhood.
The phasing plan responds to the specific realities of the sites, the market and the requirements of funding sources.
1
1
1
I
1-
< Phase I
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
I
1
1
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A
SENIOR SITE K C1
(STALCUP & ROSEDALE)
MILLER SI'
(MILLER &
PHASING PLAN
CAVILE PLACE CNI / FORT WORTH, TEXAS / SEPTEMBER 27, 2019
Rosedale4 � � —
------------- -----, --------- ------ -
E E,
---; Phase Phase
E
E E
i i E ni nG i E
' -------- i �1
F
_I•------• •-- ---- --• i it
Ph ,e4-
! I 1 11 — 1 1 11
-
CAVILE PROPER & ROSEDALE SITES 7'"iie15t
---------------7
I 1
1 1
1 1�
< 1 Phase 5 1
I 1
�I I
1 1
L.-AeExI1.1,°„ 1
0
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- 24 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
PHASE 1.
Phase 1 is mixed -income senior building to be built
on currently vacant land at East Rosedale Street and
Stalcup. It includes 111 1-bedroom and 11 2-bedroom
apartments and directly fronts Rosedale, boldly
announcing the change and opportunity coming to Stop
Six. A 9% Low -Income Housing Tax Credit-equityfunded
development, Phase 1 can begin development before
any shift in market dynamics on a site that needs little
site preparation and no relocation. The demographics
of current residents at Cavile justify the 56 subsidized
units and, with 533 seniors in the neighborhood,
the broader market area will quickly absorbA66,l
income and market -rate senior units. The bVin
include universal design features with 10units visitable and adaptable. In addition tthe senior building will include ample comm
activity space for residents (including a movie room
and billiard table), outdoor passive and active space, a
community garden for residents, a health suite, a beauty
salon and a fitness center.
PHASE 1: SENIOR UNIT MIX
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBv/
Replacement
Total
1
12
63
8
28
111
2
11
11
Total
12
63
8
39
122
II
1
Rosedale St
Kutman Ct
It
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
25
0 THE HOUSING PLAN
PHASE 2.
Phase 2 is a large 4% LIHTC development meant to bring
attention to the heart of the transformation with a large,
visible investment along Rosedale Street, the major
artery in the community. Because 4% LIHTC are non-
competitive, the 210-unit Phase 2 can move forward
quickly upon award of CNI funding and will signal the
turning point in the Stop Six neighborhood. Phase 2
consists of two elevator -accessed buildings with 12,000
square feet of ground floor retail/commercial space along
Rosedale and the historic commercial corridor, Amanda
Avenue. The commercial space will be split between
community space, space for partners and soci ice
providers, and retail space. In addition, Ph
garden apartments and townhouses furt do
Amanda, making the transition to lower -den 'Der.
of the neighborhood with more residential er.
Phase 2 will include market -rate amenities to serve all
residents of the new site, including the management
office, fitness space, a clubhouse, a kids' activity room
and a swimming pool.
PHASE 2
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBV /
Replacement
Total
1
20
33
8
21
82
2
30
49
5
31
115
2
8
30
4
E3
3
3
Total
50
84
13
63
210
Wpm"%
.ems
- -a
000
26 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
O
�
PHASE 3.
Phase 3 is another 4% low-income housing tax -credit -
financed phase developed on the central site. With
187 units in elevator buildings, walkup/gardens and
townhouses, Phase 3 lengthens development along
Rosedale Street and brings additional diversity of
housing types into the new community. Phase 3 has
1-3 bedroom units and continues in uniting the "new"
frontage on Rosedale with the historic Cavile site. The
new development will be 25% market -rate, reflecting the
desirability in the community of market -rate garden and
townhouse apartment options as well as the anticipated
shift in market perceptions..j IF R
71
PHASE 3
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBV /Total
Replacement
1
16
47
10
17
90
2
30
24
2
29
85
3
2
10
12
4
0
0
Total
46
73
12
56
187
9 o'
`r:. iw.
r
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
27 TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 THE HOUSING PLAN
PHASE 4.
Phase 4 is the final phase on the central site and is a 168-
unit 4% LIHTC phase. Phase 4 makes the connection
between the new housing and the Neighborhood Hub,
building out the bulk of the original Cavile site with
townhouse and walkup/garden apartments. Phase
4 has 1-4 bedroom unit options and 30% of the units
will be replacement, 39% LIHTC-only, 5% permanent
supportive housing, and 25% market -rate.
PHASE 4
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBV /
Replacem
1
17
7
7
5 36
2
25
52
4
18 9
3
5
25
4
3 3
Total
1 42
1 64
1 11
1 51 168
- 28 STOP SIXCHOICENEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
PHASE 5.
Phase 5 is a 9% LIHTC phase of walkup/garden and
townhouse apartments in the southwestern corner of
the neighborhood. On the Ramey site, and across from
Eastover Park, Phase 5 will anchor this corner of the
neighborhood, connecting the improvements in Eastover
Park with the established residential communities on
the southwestern border of Stop Six. With 79 units,
and a full amenity package including a fitness center,
clubhouse and pool, Phase 5 makes the connection
between the new investments and the well -trafficked
Ramey Avenue, creating a new gateway to welcome
people into the Stop Six neighborhood. 1�
L) RIff
L
PHASES
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBV
Replacement
Total
1
5
4
3
6
18
2
12
24
3
8
47
3
4
10
14
4
0
Total
1 17
1 32
1 6
1 24
1 79
°a
c
w
V1
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
29
0
THE HOUSING PLAN
PHASE 6.
Phase 6 is the final phase of the Housing Plan and is
representative of the sea -change thatthe plan anticipates
happening in the neighborhood. With 224 units at the
intersection of two major corridors (Miller Avenue and
Rosedale Street), Phase 6 has replacement units, market
units and workforce units and is financed without LIHTC.
With a full amenity package of clubhouse, fitness center
and pool, Phase 6 will attract an entirely new market to
the transformed Stop Six neighborhood — specifically
marketing to Texas Wesleyan University students and
employees. Phase 6 will serve as a gateway to the
community from the west.L)p
PHASE 6
BR
Market
LIHTC
Permanent
Supportive
PBV /
Replacement
Total
1
79
27
106
2
78
40
118
3
0
4
0
Total
157
0
1 0
67
1 224
1
t
N
— 30 = STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
OVERALL USES BY SOURCE
City of Fort Worth
Fort Worth Foundations / Housing
Programs Philanthrophic
Solutions
and Waivers
20,465,000 28,175,000 11,556,873
CNI First
Mortgage
Tax Credit
Equity
City of
Fort Worth
Improvements
Subordinate
Debt/Grants/
FWHS
TOTAL
TOTAL PLAN
35,000,000
98,408,800
70,180,077
29,595,000
51,025,731
344,406,481
Neighborhood
3,150,000
-
-
9,405,000
12,175,000
-
4,595,000
-
29,325,000
Housing
24,500,000
98,408,800
70,180,077
11,060,000
1,250,000
6,594,993
25,000,000
51,025,731
288,019,601
People
5,250,000
-
- -
50, 0
-
-
20,000,000
4,961,880
Relocation &
Demolition
_
-
- - -
4,- ,880
-
-
Grant Administration
and Evaluation
2,100,000
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
2,100,000
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
31
TRANSFORMATION PLAN -
I[IOUSING TOTAL USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
174,272,750
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
10,777,000
Finance Fees and Interest
6,907,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
40,556,000
Contingency
1,991,000
Reserves
5,098,000
TOTAL PART A
239,601,750
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
8,278,188
Fees
4,568,558
Offsite Public Improvements
28,886,112
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
6,594,993
TOTAL PART B
48,327,851
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
287,929,601
T
%OUSING TOTAL SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
98,408,800
CNI Funds
24,500,000
Tax Credit Equity
70,180,077
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
11,060,000
PSH Foundation Match
1,250,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
34,202,873
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
239,601,750
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
6,594,993
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
25,000,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
16,732,858
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
48,327,851
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
287,929,601
32 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
HOUSING PHASE 1 USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
19,340,000
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
1,257,000
Finance Fees and Interest
560,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
4,792,000
Contingency
224,000
Reserves
565,000
TOTAL PART A
26,738,000
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
1,003,958
Fees
594,184
Offsite Public Improvements
4,003,922
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
417,208
TOTAL PART B
6,019,272
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
32,757,272
OUSING PHASE 1 SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
9,040,000
CNI Funds
3,185,000
Tax Credit Equity
13,799,000
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
514,000
PSH Foundation Match
200,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
-
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
26,738,000
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
417,208
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
3,501,485
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
2,100,579
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
6,019,272
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
32,757,272
HOUSING PHASE 2 USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
42,508,700
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
2,213,000
Finance Fees and Interest
2,166,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
9,122,000
Contingency
474,000
Reserves
1,099,000
TOTAL PART A
57,582,700
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
1,475,760
Fees
910,695
Offsite Public Improvements
6,982,345
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
2,668,875
L PAR
OT R AN RT
69,620 4
OUS P E 2 RC
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
21,253,000
CNI Funds
5,145,000
Tax Credit Equity
13,798,620
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
3,669,000
PSH Foundation Match
325,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
13,392,080
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
57,582,700
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
2,668,875
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
5,885,293
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
3,483,507
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
12,037,674
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
69,620,374
HOUSING PHASE 3 USES AL
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
32,826,000
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
2,133,000
Finance Fees and Interest
811,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
7,724,000
Contingency
371,000
Reserves
942,000
TOTAL PART A
44,807,000
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
1,284,056
Fees
769,787
Offsite Public Improvements
3,727,705
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
164,000
TOTAL PART B
5,945,548
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
50,752,548
HOUSING PHASE 3 SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
17,473,000
CNI Funds
4,573,000
Tax Credit Equity
17,478,000
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
2,284,000
PSH Foundation Match
300,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
2,699,000
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
44,807,000
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
164,000
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
3,305,335
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
2,476,213
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
5,945,548
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
50,752,548
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
33
HOUSING PHASE 4 USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
31,379,000
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
2,040,000
Finance Fees and Interest
1,672,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
7,363,000
Contingency
364,000
Reserves
877,000
TOTAL PART A
43,695,000
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
2,167,759
Fees
897,241
Offsite Public Improvements
5,002,623
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
741,911
TOTAL PART B
8,809,533
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
52,504,533
OUSING PHASE 4 SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
16,827,000
CNI Funds
4,165,000
Tax Credit Equity
11,305,457
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
2,259,000
PSH Foundation Match
275,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
8,863,543
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
43,695,000
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
741,911
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
4,400,337
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
3,667,286
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
8,809,533
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
52,504,533
HOUSING PHASE 5 USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
14,499,800
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
942,000
Finance Fees and Interest
430,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
3,714,000
Contingency
168,000
Reserves
363,000
TOTAL PART A
20,116,800
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
928,111
Fees
573,277
Offsite Public Improvements
4,415,361
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
1,104,000
R
OTAL R AN ART
7,137, 9
PH ESS
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
5,820,800
CNI Funds
-
Tax Credit Equity
13,799,000
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
350,000
PSH Foundation Match
150,000
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
-
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
20,1169800
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
1,104,000
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
3,835,270
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
2,081,479
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
7,020,749
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
27,137,549
HOUSING PHASE 6 USES AL
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
33,719,250
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
2,192,000
Finance Fees and Interest
1,268,000
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
7,841,000
Contingency
390,000
Reserves
1,252,000
TOTAL PART A
46,662,250
PART B COSTS
Site Preparation & Remediation
1,418,544
Fees
823,374
Offsite Public Improvements
4,754,156
Master Planning, Acquistion, Legal
1,499,000
TOTAL PART B
8,495,074
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
55,157,324
HOUSING PHASE 6 SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
First Mortgage
27,995,000
CNI Funds
7,432,000
Tax Credit Equity
-
City of Fort Worth (Sub. Debt, Fee Waiver)
1,984,000
PSH Foundation Match
-
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
9,251,250
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
46,662,250
PART B SOURCES
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
1,499,000
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
4,072,280
Subordinate Debt/Grants/FWHS
2,923,794
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
8,495,074
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
55,157,324
34 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
NEIGHBORHOOD USES
TOTAL
PART A COSTS
Construction Hard Costs
17,604,000
Architecture, Engineering, Environmental
1,144,000
Finance Fees and Interest
1,325,039
Insurance, Prof. Fees, Legal, Taxes, Misc
4,443,961
Contingency
213,000
TOTAL PART A
24,730,000
PART B COSTS
Offsite Public Improvements
4,595,000
TOTAL PART B
4,595,000
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
29,325,000
NEIGHBORHOOD SOURCES
TOTAL
PART A SOURCES
CNI Funds
3,150,000
City of Fort Worth
9,405,000
Philanthropic Contributions
12,175,000
TOTAL PART A SOURCES
24,730,000
PART B SOURCES
City of Fort Worth (Public Improvements)
4,595,000
TOTAL PART B SOURCES
4,595,000
TOTAL PART A AND PART B
29,325,000
PEOPLE USES
TOTAL
Workforce
4,200,000
Education
3,200,000
Healthcare
2,200,000
Case Management
10,400,000
TOTAL
20,000,000
PEOPLE SOURCES
TOTAL
CNI Funds
5,250,000
Grants/Philanthropic Contributions
14,750,000
TOTAL
20,000,000
I
OTHER USES
TOTAL
Relocation and Demolition
4,961,880
Administation and Evaluation
2,100,000
TOTAL
7,061,880
OTHER SOURCES
TOTAL
Fort Worth Housing Solutions
4,961,880
CNI Funds
2,100,000
TOTAL
7,061,880
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
35
0 THE PEOPLE PLAN 19
Resident Needs Assessment
and Results
A needs assessment, completed in 2012
as part of the original Transformation
Plan, identified multiple resource gaps
that were adversely impacting residents'
health, quality of life and ability to support
their families. Since that time, Fort Worth
Housing Solutions has methodically built
relationships with existing providers, and
recruited new partners in an effort to
expand the base of available supportive
services.
In 2019, to ensure current needs were
captured and addressed in the updated
Transformation Plan, this comprehensive
household needs assessment was
repeated as a part of the planning process.
The needs assessment was completed
by Fort Worth Housing Solutions
staff who have worked with Cavile
Place residents for years. The existing,
trusting relationships between staff and
Cavile Place residents played a critical
role in ensuring resident participation.
The needs assessment surveys were
also completed in conjunction with the
beginning of relocation for Cavile Place
residents. Incorporating the survey into
the relocation paperwork process also
elevated the interest level of residents to
participate, resulting in a response rate
of 100% (259 surveys completed, which
included seven households who were
from the Cavile Place Waiting List).
The Needs Assessment survey addressed
all members of the household and
captured current circumstances, needs,
and preferences in eight focal areas:
Housing, Neighborhood Development,
Economic Well-being, Education, Safety,
Health, Transportation, and Improving
C
ira
f Life. The survey was also
i sh a Viete esi t' ee I to veFT
gies, nalyze
management data to understand the
demographic profile of target households
and obtained secondary data from US
Census, Fort Worth Independent School
District (FWISD), and Fort Worth Police
Department to further understand crime,
public health, education and labor force
characteristics for target residents.
KEY DEMOGRAPHICS
There are a total of 252 target households
with 692 target residents residing at
Cavile Place. The next few pages explain
key demographic information about these
target residents.
36 M STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
DEMOGRAPHICS: KEY DEMOGRAPHICS
AGE:
70 69
0-3 4-5
155
Children: 420 Total
189
It 92
_M
6-12 13-18
Adults: 272 Total
GENDER:
429
Id
Female
220
38 E � 60
19
19-24 25-44 45-64 65+
DRAFF
RACE:
579
80
Black White
29 4
Hispanic Other
Individual: 692 Total
263
0
Male Other
Head of Household: 252 Total
32 0
Male Other
R
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
37
0 THE PEOPLE PLAN
DEMOGRAPHICS: INCOME AND EMPLOYMENT
AVERAGE TOTAL HOUSEHOLD INCOME:
$8,984/year
IAil :7z1=1171z1*10]ul4
HOUSEHOLDS RECEIVING
FOOD STAMPS:
[18.69Oi
DRAF I
EMPLOYMENT BARRIERS:
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS EARNING
LESS THAN $5,000
(WITHOUT DISABILITY OR RETIREMENT):
95
Affordabilit,
Childcare
Transportatio
19
Lack of skills /
education
lal history
- 38 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
DEMOGRAPHICS: HEALTH DATA
HEALTH INSURANCE (ADULTS):
CF
Do Not Have Health Insurance
Have Health Insurance
Have access to private insurance
OVERALL:
RA
give
caid
R
Connected to a
Primary Care Physician
Respondents report having visited
a doctor within the last 12 months
Target residents self -reported a
chronic health condition
TOP 3 IN ADULTS: high blood pressure,
diabetes, and chronic back pain
MOST COMMON IN CHILDREN:
Asthma, ADD/ADHD, and Autism
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
39 �
0 THE PEOPLE PLAN
Strategies and Impacts
HEALTH
GOAL: Children, Youth, and Adults are Physically & Mentally Healthy
BASELINE: 84% (534) of target residents currently have a place where they regularly go, other
than the Emergency Department, when they are sick or in need of advice about their health. This
breaks down to 68% (162) of target adults, and 93% (282) of target dependents.
84% or (407) of all target residents currently have health insurance. This breaks down to 67%
(114) of target adults, and 94% (372) of target dependents.
STRATEGY: Increase the number of
residents accessing quality physical and
mental healthcare
KEY PARTNERS:
Cook Children's
John Peter Smith Health Network
ST I ealth tcom
th gh a do an Ilne
pr amm ting lis
he i vid
KEY PARTNERS:
Cook Children's
John Peter Smith Health Network
Lena Pope Counseling
YMCA of Metropolitan Fort Worth
Fort Worth Bike Sharing
Catholic Charities
Healthy Tarrant County Collaborative
Meals on Wheels of Tarrant County
OUTCOMES: 95% of all target residents will have a place where they regularly go, other than the
ER, when they are sick or in need of advice about their health. 88% of all target residents will have
health insurance (70% of adults and 100% of dependents).
19
- 40 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
ECONOMIC MOBILITY
GOAL: Households are Economically Stable and Self -Sufficient
BASELINE: 118 residents between the ages of 18 and 64 have wage income (61 employed FT and PT, 57 self-employed). $8,984 is the current average annual
household income for target residents.
STRATEGY: Increase adult
educational attainment
KEY PARTNERS:
Goodwill Industries of Fort
Worth
Tarrant County College
Texas Wesleyan University
STRATEGY: Increase
opportunities for job training in
growth sectors
KEY PARTNERS:
STRATEGY: Increase opportu-
nities for wealth generation
through entrepreneurship
KEY PARTNERS:
Workfor )tions CentTarrant mfR IvesGoodwill duty or usiness
Worth i nce Cente
Fort Worth Housing
Solutions
STRATEGY: Increase adult
financial empowerment and
wealth -building skills
KEY PARTNERS:
Pathfinders
Center for Transforming
Lives
Catholic Charities
United Way of Tarrant
County
City of Fort Worth
Department of
Neighborhood Services
OUTCOMES: 70% of all target residents
between the ages of 18 and 64 will have
wage income. $24,706 average annual
income of target households (excluding
those who cannot work due to being
elderly or disabled) —a 275% increase
from baseline.
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD 41 —
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 19
EDUCATION
GOAL: Children Enter Kindergarten Ready to Learn
BASELINE: Among the 259 respondents to the survey, 50% said they had a child in some type of pre-school
childcare, including Head Start and pre -kindergarten program. These parents reported a total of 36 children
in some type of early education program.
36 (50%) of 72 target children, from birth to kindergarten entry, are participating in center -based or formal
home -based early learning settings or programs.
At Maude Logan Elementary School, 55 (83.3%) kindergarteners who were assessed upon entrance to
kindergarten were "ready" according to the TX-KEA during the 2018-2019 school year.
STRATEGY: Increase enrollment in high
quality early learning programs
KEY PARTNERS:
Childcare Associates
FWISD
Early Learning Alliance
ST Rcrea milt'- ST TEGY: Increase participation in
literacy screening for health development for all
children 0-5
KEY PARTNERS:
City of Fort Worth Library
United Way of Tarrant County
Childcare Associates
KEY PARTNERS:
FWISD
Childcare Associates
Cook Children's
My Health My Resources of
Tarrant County
OUTCOMES: By the end of the grant period 65% of 139 target children, from birth to kindergarten entry, will be participating in center -based
or formal home -based early learning settings or programs. 85% of kindergarten students will demonstrate age -appropriate functioning
across multiple domains of early learning.
- 42 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
GOAL: Children are proficient in core academic subjects (reading and math)
BASELINE: 17% target 3rd graders, 34% target 4th graders, 70% target 5th graders, 42% target 6th
graders, 25% target 7th graders, and 44% target 8th graders were proficient in math.
35% target 3rd graders, 48% target 4th graders, 75% target 5th graders, 25% target 6th graders, 44%
target 7th graders, and 44% target 8th graders were proficient in reading.
STRATEGY: Increase
participation in high quality
extended learning opportuni-
ties
KEY PARTNERS:
FWISD
AB Christian Center
YMCA of Metropolitan Fort
Worth
Boys and Girls Club of
Greater Tarrant County
City of Fort Worth Library
Texas Wesleyan University
STRATEGY: Enhance STRATEGY: Decrease chronic
innovative school -based learn- absenteeism
ing opportunities to improve
academic perfor K
KEY PARTNERSDRAP
FWISD
Texas Wesleyan University
Reading Partners
Idea Public Schools
OUTCOMES: By the end of the grant period, 132 (70%) of 189 target children, are proficient in Reading/
Language Arts as compared to the state average of 74%. 132 (70%) of 189 target children are procient in
Math as compared to the state average of 77%.
R
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
43 �
0
GOAL: Youth graduate from high school college/career-ready
BASELINE: Dunbar High School has a 72% graduation rate as of the 2016-2017 school year.
STRATEGY: Increase participation in STEM -
based certification and training programs
KEY PARTNERS:
FWISD
Texas Wesleyan University
Tarrant County College
OUTCOMES: By the end of the grant period, 90%
of target youth, including youth with disabilities,
will graduate from high school college and career
ready.
STRATEGY. Increase participation in AP and
dual -enrollment courses
KEY PARTNERS:
FWISD
Texas Wesleyan University
nt Co ollege
aul olle
19
STRATEGY: Increase exposure to post-
secondary education and career pathways
KEY PARTNERS:
Texas Wesleyan University
Paul Quinn College
Goodwill Industries of Fort Worth
Idea Public Schools
44 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0 THE PEOPLE PLAN
Case Management
Critical to success of the People Strategy
is a well -managed, integrated case
management program. Urban Strategies,
Inc. will implement case management,
coordinate partnerships with supportive
service partners, and develop a resourcing
strategy for long-term sustainability
of the People Strategy. All supportive
service activities will be coordinated
with the Housing and Neighborhood
Implementation Entities to support the
revitalization schedule and to achieve
Section 3 goals. This is especially
important given stringent timelines,
relocation, and re -occupancy associated
with a Choice Neighborhood grant.
Case management will initially be
available for all 252 original Cavile Place
households as well as the 48 households
receiving a voucher as part of Cavile
Place relocation. Upon completion of new
replacement housing, case management
will be available for those who occupy
the CNI replacement units in the new
development. The purpose of case
management is to establish positive
rapport with residents in order to offer
personalized and culturally sensitive
assistance with assessing complex
problems, selecting effective problem -
solving interventions, and accessing the
services they desire or need to pursue
their goals.
A comprehensive outreach and
engagement campaign to offer case
management services to all target
households will be launched within 60
days of a Choice Neighborhood grant
award. This outreach and engagement
campaign will utilize a multifaceted
approach including door-to-door outreach,
phone calls and text messages, mailing
o eside +roup
ordi cial
io nua - rtifi
d rggagem
case in t
tio
management services.
Urban Strategies' case management
protocol includes, as a first step, a
comprehensive assessment of each
participant to identify their assets,
needs and goals related to employment,
education, health, economic mobility, and
housing stability. Based on this in-depth
assessment, all target adults and out -of -
school youth will have the opportunity to
work closely with a culturally responsive,
trained and skilled USI social work
professional (i.e., case manager) to develop
a flexible but time -sensitive roadmap
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD 45
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
0
towards their personal aspirations, in
what are called Individual Development
Plans (IDPs). The IDP will identify specific
employment, education and health goals,
and related supportive service needs. Risk
factors that are assessed and addressed
by the IDP include, but are not limited to:
risk of unemployment; risk of incarceration;
physical and behavioral health risks; and
risk of being disconnected from school,
job, or caring adult (for children and youth).
In addition to an IDP, parents and heads
of household will have the opportunity to
work with the case manager to develop
a family -centered roadmap (a Family
Development Plan or FDP) with goals that
address housing stability, housing choice,
and the educational, health, and social
needs of each dependent or in -school
youth.
SERVICE COORDINATION
Built around the core of on -site case
management services, and leveraging
the data collected via case management
as described above, the ultimate purpose
of service coordination is to increase
the collective impact of supportive
service providers by braiding programs
and services together, and increasing
collaboration. Capitalizing on existing
relationships with residents, private/
public sector stakeholders, and supportive
e pa Urban rategi
i s a ice P er N wor
PN) ig p ty p
d t eir pp a ople
y. ne will f n as
a professional learning community that
meets regularly and uses iterative Result -
Based methodologies to continually
review outcomes, identify and address
gaps in needed services, share lessons
learned, and coordinate strategies.
19
MOBILITY SUPPORT
With relocation of the current Cavile Place
residents underway in the fall of 2019,
Urban Strategies will work closely with
Fort Worth Housing Solutions to track all
target households and engage residents
in mobility counseling. Recognizing the
tremendous impact of moving from one
household to another, case managers
will be trained to engage proactively with
residents around the housing options
available when a resident's lease is coming
up for renewal.
46 STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
PARTNERS
AB Christian Learning Center
Boys and Girls Club of Greater
Tarrant County
Brighter Outlook
Camp Fire First Texas
Camp Fire First Texas
Catholic Charities Fort Worth
Center for Transforming Lives
Childcare Associates
Chba HUdng iDao
City of Fort Worth (Library)
City of Fort Worth Business
Assistance Center
Cook Children's
Early Learning Alliance
Envision Center/City of Fort Worth
Neighborhood Services
Fort Worth Bike Sharing
FWISD
Goodwill Industries of Fort Worth
Healthy Tarrant County Collaborative
IDEA Public Schools
John Peter Smith Clinic (JPS)
Lena Pope Counseling Services
MBS Urban Initiatives CDE
Meals on Wheels of Tarrant County
My Health My Resources of Tarrant
C1
P hfin s '
P nn Ileg,- AV
Read Fort Worth
Reading Partners
Tarrant County College
Texas Wesleyan University
U.S. Bancorp Community
Development Corporation
United Way of Tarrant County
Workforce Solutions of Tarrant
County
YMCA of Metropolitan Fort Worth
STOP SIX CHOICE NEIGHBORHOOD -
TRANSFORMATION PLAN
47 �
•
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