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NeighborWorks Affiliates' Green Projects Rental Developments
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Cambridge Neighborhood Apartment and Housing Services, Cambridge, MA Trolley Square
Cambridge Neighborhood Apartment and Housing Services' (CNAHS) Trolley Square is a 40-unit sustainable design project in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It incorporates many green components, including water conservation, attention to building envelope, energy-efficient lighting and appliances, an efficient, gearless elevator, and a 42 kW solarphotovoltaic array on the roof and facade of one of the buildings that offsets the electriccosts of the underground garage. Residents moving in to Trolley Square are given two resources: the “Trolley Square Living Green Guide” to teach them about the green features in their new homes as well as the importance of living an environmentally friendly lifestyle; and personal assistance from a Resident Service Coordinator who can verify that the residents are making use of the green features at Trolley Square.
Community HousingWorks, San Diego, California
Solara, developed by Community HousingWorks, is California's first apartment community to be fully powered by the sun. Solara was the recipient of the Urban Land Institute’s 2008 Award of Excellence and a runner up in The Home Depot Foundation Awards of Excellence for Affordable Housing Built Responsibly. Community HousingWorks designed SOLARA with all 5 of the major green elements – besides renewable energy – including:
Located on 2.5 ground-leased acres adjacent to a floodway that has a recreational relationship to the development, Solara overcame a myriad of entitlement, financing, technical, and community challenges to become a fully-leased community of households committed to a green program.
Foundation Communities, Austin, TX
Foundation Communities is deeply committed to building and managing affordable housing that is rooted in sustainable principles. The organization chooses to engage sustainability as a conceptual practice that addresses “green building” methods in order to improve the health of their residents, the durability of their buildings and the well-being of the environment. Foundation Communities uses 100 percent renewable energy (solar or wind) for all their learning centers and supportive housing, making Foundation Communities one of the largest private producers of solar energy in central Texas. Since 2003, Foundation Communities has incorporated numerous “green building” design elements into all new construction and renovation projects, winning grants from Enterprise Community Partners’ Green Communities program and the Kresge Foundation’s innovative green building program.
Southwest Minnesota Housing Partnership, Slayton, MN
The Viking Terrace rehabilitation project involved the extensive redevelopment of three buildings of one, two, and three-bedroom apartments. The development includes substantial rehabilitation inside and outside the building. The apartments feature a wide range of improvements that focus on a reduction in energy consumption producing tangible and long-term benefits for the low-income tenants, including:
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