Housing Overview 16 buildings and 3,188 units of housing

PERMANENT HOUSING

THE THE DOROTHY ROSS THE PRINCE GEORGE THE CHRISTOPHER THE SCHERMERHORN THE BROOK THE LEE FRIEDMAN RESIDENCE Manhattan Manhattan Brooklyn Bronx Manhattan Manhattan Common Ground’s first Common Ground restored the The Christopher is home The Schermerhorn is Common The Brook is Common Ground’s The Lee is home to Common residence and the largest sup- Owned by The Actors Fund and Prince George Hotel to create to Common Ground’s first Ground’s first new construction first residence in the Bronx. Ground’s second Foyer Program. portive housing project in the managed by Common Ground, permanent supportive housing. Foyer program. Run by Good project. Run by The Door, the Foyer Opened 2010 nation. The Dorothy Ross Friedman Shepherd Services, the Foyer • provides housing and support • Opened 1999 • Opened 2009 Residence provides housing to provides housing and support • 190 Units services to youth aging out of Opened 1991 • 416 Units services to youth aging out of 217 Units foster care or housing needy. formerly homeless individuals • • • 120 formerly homeless • 652 Units and low-income working profes- foster care or housing needy. • Mix of low-income working • Mix of low-income working single adults, many with Opened 2010 sionals, many in the arts and • • Mix of low-income working persons and formerly home- Opened 2004 adults from the arts and special needs • 263 Units persons and formerly home- entertainment industry. less single adults entertainment industry and • 207Units • 70 low-income working less single adults • formerly homeless single • 104 formerly homeless • Opened 1996 • Support services provided (40 Foyer Units) adults from the South Bronx adults single adults, many with • Support services provided by the Center for Urban • 178 Units Mix of low-income working • Support services provided special needs by the Center for Urban Community Services (CUCS) • • Support services provided persons and formerly home- by Bronx Works Community Services (CUCS) • Elderly, low-income working by The Actors Fund and the • 103 low-income working • Restored Prince George less single adults, as well as professionals and people Center for Urban Commu- • 2,400 sq. ft. community adults from the Lower East • Listed on the National Regis- Ballroom event space youth in the Foyer program living with HIV/AIDS nity Services (CUCS) space Side ter of Historic Places • Partnership with Commu- Support services provided • Support services provided • • Green construction: Rooftop • Green building: LEED certi- • 55 Foyer youth • The 28th Bard Award for nity Supported Agriculture by the Center for Urban by The Actors Fund gardens, high efficiency fied, high performance boil- Excellence in Architecture program brings fresh, Community Services (CUCS) • Green building: LEED certi- boiler system, glass façade. ers, ventilation and lighting • On-site, free medical clinic organic, affordable produce fied, high performance boil- • The Rudy Bruner Award Site of the former Robert systems that maximize to tenants • • On-site community theater ers, ventilation and lighting for Excellence in the Urban McBurney YMCA natural light and solar heat, systems that maximize Environment • The 2003 World Habitat • Part of larger redevelop- water-saving fixtures, low $32 million natural light and solar heat, Award • ment plan for downtown toxicity materials, green • $50 million drought-resistant landscap- Brooklyn roof • $40 million ing, water-saving fixtures, • $59 million • $43 million green roof • $59 million PERMANENT HOUSING CT & UPSTATE NY • TRANSITIONAL HOUSING

THE DOMENECH THE HEGEMAN THE LENNIGER THE BETTY RUTH AND MONTROSE VETERANS JAMAICA SAFE HAVEN THE ANDREWS Brooklyn Brooklyn RESIDENCES MILTON B. HOLLANDER RESIDENCE Queens Manhattan Bronx FOUNDATION CENTER Montrose, New York The Domenech is Common The Hegeman provides afford- Hartford, Connecticut The Jamaica Safe Haven A reinvention of the “flophouse,” Ground’s first housing for able housing for formerly home- Owned by the Center for Urban Montrose provides transitional provides short-term housing, The Andrews provides private, seniors. less and low-income adults. Community Services (CUCS) and • Opened 2009 housing for veterans, and offers where residents work with case safe, clean and affordable managed by Common Ground, the support they need to resta- managers to find and prepare short-term accommodations to Opened 2011 Opened 2012 • 70 Units • • The Lenniger offers housing for bilize their lives. for permanent housing. chronically homeless adults. • 72 Units • 161 Units formerly homeless individuals • Low income families in downtown Hartford • Opened 2008 • Opened 2008 • Opened 2009 • 40% homeless seniors • 100 formerly homeless and low income individuals and 60 Units 146 Units with special needs. 60% single adults families. It is our first managed • 96 Units • • low-income seniors in the building in The Bronx. Small private rooms with 80 Safe Haven units for • 61 low-income working • Common Ground provides • • Brownsville area communal bathrooms and street homeless adults at or below 60% of • Opened 2011 on-site support services living spaces, meals, and • Green building: LEED certi- the area median income including assistance with • 38 shelter units • 92 Units links to critical supports like fied, highly insulating trans- re-establishing contact and • Green building: LEED medical care and individual- • 28 units for housing-needy lucent walls, high efficiency • Low-income individuals and relationships with family, certified, low environmen- ized case management persons condensing boilers, low families and formerly home- finding work, saving for an tal impact construction, toxicity paints and materi- less single adults CEDARWOODS apartment, and securing Common Ground leases • Partnering with the Archi- high efficiency mechanical • als, water-saving fixtures to Willimantic, Connecticut a home of their own in the tectural League of New York, systems and lighting, water- • Support services provided reduce water usage by up to community Common Ground held an saving fixtures, green roof by the Center for Urban 40%, green roof Community Services (CUCS) Located on a beautiful 19-acre • $876,000 architectural competition • $43 million site overlooking protected for the design of the units. • $24 million wetlands, Cedarwoods creates • $14 million affordable homes in an area of SCATTER SITE rural Connecticut where low- Different Locations income housing is scarce. STABILIZATION BEDS Different Locations • Opened 2012 The Scatter Site program provides individualized case • 60 Units We also have 84 stabiliza- management to clients living • Low-income working adults, tion beds – first-step housing in subsidized rental apartments 10% veterans with minimal social services across . provided. • $14 million • 78 apartments in the Bronx, NY • 41 apartments in Brooklyn, NY • 4 apartments in Queens, NY • Each Scatter Site client is 1630 DEWEY AVENUE assigned a Common Ground Rochester, New York case manager who helps identify support services in • Under Construction the community • 80 Units 505 Eighth Avenue, 5th Floor New York, NY 10018 tel 212.389.9300 www.commonground.org