A rendering of The Watson, a workforce housing development underway in Quincy

Construction is underway at The Watson in Quincy, as MassHousing has closed on $37.2 million in financing to the WinnCos. and NeighborWorks of Southern Massachusetts, to support the development of 140 new apartments for middle- and lower-income residents.

MassHousing is providing the WinnCos. and NeighborWorks a $29.3 million permanent mortgage, $7 million in workforce housing financing from MassHousing’s Opportunity Fund, and $900,000 from the Affordable Housing Trust Fund, which MassHousing manages on behalf of the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD).

“The Watson is a dynamic project that showcases a number of MassHousing’s priorities,” MassHousing Executive Director Tim Sullivan said in a statement. “The Watson will deliver new growth to a Gateway City. It will create a true mixed-income community. And, by combining workforce housing funding with market-rate and low-income housing tax credits, the Watson will generate long-term affordability for both low-income and middle-income households, while minimizing the use of scarce state affordable housing resources. MassHousing is proud to partner with the WinnCos., NeighborWorks and the city of Quincy, to help advance this exciting new housing community.”

Eighty-six of the 140 units at the Watson will be workforce housing units, affordable to middle-income households. The workforce housing units will be targeted to households earning at or below 110 percent of the area median income, or $113,740 for a family of four. Twenty-eight of the units will be affordable to households earning at or below 50 percent of AMI, or $51,700 for a family of four. The remaining 26 apartments will be rented at market rates.

The 86 workforce housing units at the Watson represent the largest number of workforce units for a single project financed through MassHousing’s $100 million Workforce Housing Initiative to date.

In addition to MassHousing financing, other sources for the $44 million project include allocations of federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credits and Housing Development Incentive Program tax credits from DHCD, a $2 million affordable housing contribution from the city of Quincy, and financing from Citigroup.

“This is a great project that is going to make a major difference in the neighborhood and we look forward to its completion,” Quincy Mayor Thomas P. Koch said in a statement. “This area is kind of the last frontier for Quincy. Other parts of the city have adjusted from a manufacturing economy to service industries.”

The Watson is being developed on a 1.7-acre site at 116 East Howard Street, adjacent to the former Fore River Shipyard. The project involves the demolition of a long-vacant former office building. Construction is underway by DellBrook Construction, and work is expected to be completed by July 2018.

MassHousing Finances Workforce Housing In Quincy

by Banker & Tradesman time to read: 2 min
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