Posts Tagged ‘Birchwood Village’

The next phase for Birchez Associates

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

Aaron’s Birchez Associates opens fifth affordable housing facility in Ulster

Kingston Times, July 15, 2010  By Carrie Jones Ross   Pictured Below Right: Library/Game Room at The Birches at Chambers

The enigma stealing sleep from the burgeoning legion of baby boomers – “Where can I afford to live when I retire? Will it be safe? Will it be clean? Will I be lonely?” – just got a little easier to figure out.

Dignitaries from the county and state joined other people of influence and three full tents of perspiring seniors during last Thursday’s oppressive heat wave to cut the ribbon commemorating some 75 seniors  (62 and older) moving into the fully sustainable and LEED-certified 66 newly-constructed, 600+ square-foot apartments at Birches at Chambers on Maple Lane in the Town of Ulster. Chambers is fifth in a line of desperately-needed affordable housing projects in Ulster County built by developer Steve Aaron; his previous projects include Chambers Court, Birches at Esopus, Birches at Saugerties and Birchwood Village. The $16 million complex will be the first platinum-rated LEED-certified project of its kind in Ulster County.

Imagine paying a fixed monthly rent between $596 and $721 for a one-bedroom apartment. What would you get? Well-lit, freshly-carpeted halls with security cameras? Laundry rooms furnished with handicapped-accessible, brand-new machines for the long-gone bargain price of $1 a wash on every floor? A secure computer room with four flat-screen panel monitors? A free gym filled with new machines and classes just an elevator ride away? A beautifully furnished library with games and a community room with a kitchen and French doors leading to a patio? Media room with kitchenette? Would you expect beautifully kept grounds with a full-time groundskeeper and state-of-the-art security? In all likelihood, no, but Aaron’s new project promises all those amenities.

The community was designed for those who earn less than 60 percent of the area median income (currently $29,480 for a single person). The shift to friendlier colloquialisms reflects our slowly evolving views on affordable housing. Aaron emphatically concurred with the opening ceremonies speech given by County Executive Mike Hein when he stated, “It’s not about bricks and mortar, it’s about people – dignified housing for people.”

Aaron explained that his company has been dedicated to answering seniors’ and working families’ mounting housing crisis and has “gotten a little smarter” with each project. “We didn’t start off wondering what to do to be LEED-compliant,” Aaron explained. “But we found that we were already doing all that anyway.”

Birches at Esopus and Saugerties got the ball rolling forward with Energy Star appliances and energy-efficient radiant floor heat. Aaron took the Birches at Chambers project all the way, by including even more things like 97 percent-efficient Swiss-made boilers to accommodate the smart-design European heating system and solar hot water heaters. There are also energy recovery units recycling air through HEPA filters also pouring into a series of cooling condensers for air conditioning, eliminating the potentially harmful bacteria that collect in vents and ducts and saving big money for residents on extra-tight incomes.

Birchez is also referred to as “phase two”, conjoining the 2005-built Chambers Court community, oriented for 55 and older active lifestyle seniors. Aaron broke ground for Birches at Chambers in February 2009 to build the facility for residents with mobility issues. A community dining hall is in the works, at which point Birches at Chambers may likely go in the direction of assisted living, he said. Each apartment does have a kitchen (equipped with Energy Star appliances), however, those residents who do not cook rely upon the Meals on Wheels program.

Elant Home Health Care has an office in Birches and holds twice-weekly wellness clinics. ”We meet with the families, and if they opt for services we link with their primary practioner and devise care plans,” Elant health coordinator Kelly Ketcham explained. The goal, Ketcham stressed, is, “to keep people in their home setting, prevent hospitalizations and nursing home placements.” She added, “I do this for my head and heart, because that’s what I would want done for me.”

Aaron, who sits in good company on the executive committee of the Ulster County Housing Consortium, has his eyes on the horizon line of several locations including Fishkill, New Paltz and Ellenville. Aaron recently also submitted a building proposal in the Town of Rosendale in response to their request for affordable senior housing.

A myriad of agencies came together to make the building possible, including Enterprise Community Investments who notably found investors to actually finance portions of the project during this tight-fisted economy. One such financier was the “Oracle of Omaha” – Warren Buffett, who according to Aaron, has been financing affordable housing for years.

It did not come together without some issues, though. Aaron, who supported and employed former Town of Ulster supervisor Nick Woerner, got into a dispute earlier this year over alleged safety issues at Chambers Phase II with the town board led by the man who beat Woerner, Supervisor James Quigley. The spat held up the project’s temporary certificate of occupancy, which held up some of the first residents’ moving-in dates. Charges and counter-charges flew between Aaron and Quigley, but the dispute was resolved on March 31, allowing residents to claim their apartments.

They love it here

A group of residents rested in the bright, crisp entrance room from the day’s oppressive heat during the ribbon-cutting and subsequent luncheon, talking excitedly in a group about their appreciation of the new facility. Resident Clara McGill said that she always enjoyed visiting Kingston as a place to shop and dine, but never before considered living there until Birches at Chambers was built. “I have rented most of my life, and I have never seen anything like this place. It’s incredible here. Sometimes I even feel guilty for having this place,” McGill said. Lifelong Kingston resident “Mary” agreed. “We have fallen into a gold mine here. It was a little rough in the beginning, but I don’t think we could ask for a better place to live. The amenities are incredible.”

The residents commented on how often they see Aaron and his wife Judy, and how easily they can communicate with the couple. They love the decor (for which Judy is responsible), the fitness studio, their apartments (“It’s beautiful!” they crooned), and asked the Kingston Times to put out a message of sincere thanks to everyone on their behalf; to the Aarons, groundskeepers, maintenance and security.

To discuss the article in Ulster Publishing’s forum, click here and scroll to the bottom of the article.

Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need

Thursday, December 22nd, 2005
December 22, 2005

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based
Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need

by Chester J. Straub, Jr.

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based
Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need….

BIRCHEZ ASSOCIATES: Kingston-Based Developer Grows in Response to Critical Need….

Birchez Associates was founded by Kingston developer Steve Aaron, in response to the critical need for affordable housing in Ulster County. After building two highly successful communities in Ulster County, with several more in various stages of development, Birchez has earned a reputation for creating original strategies and partnerships to build innovative communities designed specifically for workforce families, senior citizens, single parents and veterans. (more…)


Kingston welcomes subsidized housing project

Tuesday, October 25th, 2005
Top Stories, Daily Freeman, 10/25/2005

By Paul Kirby, Freeman staff

KINGSTON – Developer Steve Aaron promised Monday to help offset college costs each year for one student from his new affordable housing complex on Flatbush Avenue.

Aaron announced the establishment of the Birchez Associates Scholarship Fund for high school graduates at the formal opening of the 80-unit apartment complex known as Birchwood Village.

The developer said his company will donate $3,500 for higher education each year to individuals living at the facility, which was fully occupied in about three weeks time.

“We realize that this is an unusual step for a developer to take, but we are not the usual developers,” Aaron told a gathering of people who attended the opening.

Aaron also announced that Birchez Associates will hire an in-house family advocate to “support our residents located in the community and to make sure that no one falls through the cracks.”

He also urged other communities to participate in affordable housing initiatives.

“In forming … partnerships, Birchwood Village has paved the way for other communities,” said Aaron, who built the Chambers Court senior housing complex in the neighboring town of Ulster and is planning similar projects in Saugerties and Esopus. “We ask our officials from neighboring towns to take a look at what we have done, because affordable housing is needed everywhere.”

The ribbon-cutting ceremony included residents of the new complex, some of them had moved from other subsidized housing in Kingston. Rori Sweeney, 28, a single mother, was among them.

Sweeney said she slept in her new apartment for the fist time Sunday night after moving from Rondout Gardens. The Birchwood Village apartment is more expensive, Sweeney said, but she said it is in a better environment for her 4-year-old daughter.

“It is in a better area,” she said. “Everything is new and it was just better for the both of us and somewhere that I thought my daughter and I would feel safer.”

U.S. Rep. Maurice Hinchey, D-Hurley, said Birchwood Village is the kind of housing the Hudson Valley needs.

“As all of you know, we are facing a number of problems as a result of some good things that are happening,” Hinchey said. “Property values here in the Hudson Valley, over the course of the last three or four years, have gone up very, very sharply. That is a good thing for many people but for others it is not so good at all.

“It has made the cost for affordable housing very, very difficult to achieve,” Hinchey said.

The complex, originally intended to be managed by the Kingston Housing Authority, is instead being rented and managed by Aaron’s company.


Kingston rentals answer housing crunch

Tuesday, October 25th, 2005

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

Ribbon cut on 80-unit complex

By Nicole G. Ray
Poughkeepsie Journal

KINGSTON — For nearly two years, Miriam Caraballo searched for an affordable place to live in a safe neighborhood.

“I have been looking for an affordable place, somewhere we could live and still be able to eat,” she said. “It was very difficult.”

For the 44-year-old Caraballo, who worked in the mental health field before becoming disabled, the answer was the Birchwood Village apartments in Kingston. Since September, Caraballo and her sons — Aaron, 19, and Timothy, 16 — have been living there in a three-bedroom apartment.

“This is the answer to affordable housing in Kingston,” she said. “We are safe and beautiful.”

On Monday, the owners of Birchwood Village held a ribbon-cutting and dedication ceremony. The project was developed to satisfy the need for working families to get housing in Ulster County, said Steven Aaron, founder and managing partner of Birchez Associates LLC, the project’s developer and builder.

The townhouse-style de- velopment has 80 units, housing approximately 220 people. Units were available for working families with minimum annual incomes between $14,297 and $24,857. Rents range from $380-$680 per month.

The Ulster County Housing Consortium released a report earlier this month describing the county’s housing problem.

In 2004, renters needed household income of about $30,000 to afford the estimated median market rent of $740, according to the report.

Rental vacancies low

A survey of rental units in the county by the Ulster County Planning Board showed that vacancy rates for rental housing are very low, waiting lists for subsidized units are long and rents for non-subsidized rental units are increasing.

The cost for a two-bedroom unit requires an hourly wage of nearly $15 to be affordable.

“Our primary goal is we have got to get the word out that there is a housing crisis,” said Aaron, also a member of the Ulster County Housing Consortium. “It [Birchwood Village] is one of the answers. It is certainly not the answer, but it is a big part of it.”

Ground-breaking for the $10 million housing complex took place in August 2004. The complex was fully rented by the end of August 2005.

Funding for Birchwood Village came from a partnership with the New York State Division of Community Renewal, First Sterling Financial, the Federal Home Loan Bank, the Community Preservation Corporation and the Ulster County Development Agency — which received $750,000 in federal grants.

“This development is wonderful, but we need a lot more,” said Shona Penman, 39, an investigator with the Ulster County Department of Social Services, who lives in a three-bedroom apartment with her two sons. “There are a lot of families out there that can’t afford their rents and mortgages.”


Birchwood Village Opens to Acclaim

Monday, October 24th, 2005

Developer Steve Aaron, center, gets help from U.S. representative Maurice Hinchey and Kingston mayor James Sottile.

BUILDING COMMUNITY
Ulster County’s first affordable workforce housing complex in 30 years.
BY MARLEINA BOOTH-LEVY, PHOTOS BY LINDA BELL HALL  Published in Green Real Estate Daily

Residents Candace and Joseph Belles: ?We?re just thrilled to be here.?

Remember this day; it’s a feel-good day,” encouraged Ron Marquette, executive director of Kingston’s Ulster Performing Arts Center, capturing the prevailing sentiment at the ribbon-cutting ceremony for Birchwood Village in Kingston on October 24.

Birchwood Village is Ulster County’s first affordable housing complex for workforce families, veterans, and single-parent families built under N.Y. State’s Section 42 housing program, and the first of its kind built in Kingston in more than 30 years.

Located on Flatbush Avenue on an immaculate plot of land, the complex features 80 units of affordable workforce rentals. Each two- or three-bedroom apartment is pleasant, bright, and equipped with such amenities as Energy Star–rated appliances; high-grade doors, walls, and carpets; and ceramic tile in the kitchen. Apartments are available to working families with a minimum annual income of $16,680 to $29,000, with preference for veterans and single-parent families. A community building serves as a common area for residents and houses the offices of property managers and a tenant liaison to help residents with city services.

The immaculate, townhouse-style complex.

Developer Steve Aaron, founding manager of Birchez Associates LLC, which has built one senior housing complex in Ulster County and is working on several others, spearheaded the project. “This is about helping people regain their dignity and hope for the future,” Aaron said at the ceremony.

A $10 million construction project, Birchwood Village is the result of Aaron’s forging partnerships with both private and public investors, including First Sterling Financial, the Federal Home Loan Bank of New York, the N.Y.S. Division of Housing and Community Renewal, and the Community Preservation Corporation. Section 42 encourages the construction of affordable housing by recompensing its private investors with annual tax credits.

Inside the home of Cheryl James, Assistant Housing Manager.

Several new Birchwood Village residents who spoke at the ceremony expressed their gratitude and told of their desperation at not being able to afford safe housing for their families. (More than 500 people applied for the 80 apartments.) Shona Penman, a child-support investigator for Ulster County and the mother of two boys, summed it up: “Even though we are low income, we need someplace safe and drug-free to raise our kids.”The End