Housing Overview 17 buildings and 3,128 units of

PERMANENT HOUSING

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 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 transformed to our first Foyer program. Common Ground’s first new Common Ground’s first resi- The Lee is home to Common residence and the largest sup- Owned by The Actors Fund and the Prince George into run by Good Shepherd Services. construction project. dence in the Bronx. Ground’s second Foyer Program. portive housing project in the managed by Common Ground, permanent . The Foyer provides housing and Run by The Door, the Foyer nation. provides housing to formerly support to youth aging out of • Opened 2009 • Opened 2010 provides housing and support homeless individuals and low- • Opened 1999 foster care or housing needy. services to youth aging out of • Opened 1991 • 217 Units • 190 Units income working professionals, • 416 Units foster care or housing needy. • 652 Units many in the arts and entertain- • Opened 2004 • Mix of low-income working • 120 formerly homeless • Mix of low-income working adults from the arts and single adults, many with Opened 2010 ment industry. 207 Units (40 Foyer Units) • • Mix of low-income working persons and formerly home- • entertainment industry and special needs 263 Units persons and formerly home- less single adults Mix of low-income working formerly homeless single • • Opened 1996 • • 70 low-income working less single adults persons and formerly home- adults • 104 formerly homeless 178 Units • Support services provided adults from the • less single adults, as well as single adults, many with • Support services provided by the Center for Urban • Support services provided Elderly, low-income working youth in the Foyer program • Support services provided special needs by the Center for Urban • Community Services (CUCS) by The Actors Fund and CUCS professionals and people by Bronx Works Community Services (CUCS) • Support services provided • 103 low-income working living with HIV/AIDS • Restored Prince George • Green construction by the Center for Urban • 2,400 sq. ft. community adults from the Lower East • Listed on the National Regis- Ballroom event space ter of Historic Places • Support services provided Community Services (CUCS) • On-site community theater space Side by The Actors Fund • CSA program brings fresh, Site of the former Robert • Part of larger downtown • LEED certified 55 Foyer youth • $50 million affordable produce to ten- • • On-site, free medical clinic McBurney YMCA Brooklyn redevelopment • ants and local community • $43 million LEED certified plan • $32 million $40 million • $59 million • • $59 million •

8 9 10 11 12 THE DOMENECH THE HEGEMAN THE LENNIGER BOSTON ROAD LA CENTRAL SCATTER SITE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT Brooklyn Brooklyn RESIDENCES Bronx Bronx Different Locations Bronx The Domenech is Common for for- Funded in part by Medicaid sav- Part of a massive revitalization The Scatter Site program Common Ground continues to Ground’s first housing for merly homeless and low-income Owned by CUCS and managed ings, Boston Road will improve project in the South Bronx. provides individualized case pursue new opportunities to seniors. adults in Brownsville, Brooklyn. by Common Ground, The Len- the lives of seniors who are high management to clients living further our mission of providing niger offers housing for formerly cost users of healthcare. • Opening 2015 in subsidized rental affordable and supportive • Opened 2011 • Opened 2012 homeless individuals and low • 160 affordable housing across New York City. housing to New Yorkers in great Opening 2015 • 72 Units • 161 Units income individuals and families. • units, 96 of which will serve need. • Apartments in the • 154 Units as supportive housing for • 40% homeless seniors • 100 formerly homeless Opened 2011 Bronx (78), Brooklyn (41), • formerly homeless veterans with special needs. 60% single adults • Low-income individuals and and Queens (4) 92 Units low-income seniors in the • formerly homeless single and New Yorkers living with • 61 low-income working • Common Ground case man- Brownsville area • Low-income individuals and adults HIV/AIDS adults at or below 60% of agers help identify support families and formerly home- • YMCA and daycare facilities • LEED certified the area median income • $47 million services in the community less single adults • $24 million • LEED certified • Restaurant and retail space • Support services provided • $43 million by CUCS www.commonground.org • PERMANENT TRANSITIONAL HOUSING HOUSING CT & UPSTATE NY • TRANSITIONAL HOUSING

13 14 15 16 17 THE BETTY RUTH AND CEDARWOODS EASTMAN COMMONS MONTROSE VETERANS THE ANDREWS STABILIZATION BEDS MILTON B. HOLLANDER Willimantic, Connecticut Rochester, New York RESIDENCE Manhattan Different Locations FOUNDATION CENTER Montrose, New York Hartford, Connecticut Located on a beautiful 19-acre Eastman Commons has been A reinvention of the “flophouse,” We also have 84 stabilization site overlooking protected transformed from a deteriorat- Montrose provides transitional The Andrews provides private, beds – first-step housing • Opened 2009 wetlands, Cedarwoods creates ing, vacant and contaminated housing for veterans, and offers safe, clean and affordable with minimal social services affordable in an area of manufacturing building into a the support they need to resta- short-term accommodations to provided. • 70 Units rural Connecticut where low- new affordable residential hous- bilize their lives. chronically homeless adults. • Low-income families in income housing is scarce. ing complex. downtown Hartford • Opened 2008 • Opened 2009 • Opened 2012 • Opened 2011 • 96 Units • 146 Units • 60 Units • 92 Units • Common Ground provides • Small private rooms with • Low-income working adults, • Low-income individuals and on-site support services communal bathrooms and 10% veterans families and formerly home- including assistance with living spaces, meals, and • $14 million less single adults re-establishing contact and links to critical supports like medical care and individual- • Support services provided relationships with family, ized case management by the Center for Urban finding work, saving for an Community Services (CUCS) , and securing • Partnering with the Archi- a home of their own in the tectural League of New York, community Common Ground held an • $876,000 architectural competition for the design of the units. • $14 million

505 Eighth Avenue, 5th Floor New York, NY 10018 tel 212.389.9300 www.commonground.org www.commonground.org Locations Buildings and program sites in New York City and beyond

15

11

12

10 6

2 13 1 14

4 3

17 7 16 5

8

9

= permanent housing = transitional housing = Common Ground offices www.commonground.org