AHF’s Healthy Housing Foundation purchases 158-unit, 1896-era historic hotel on West 4th Street in downtown L.A. to repurpose as housing for low-income and formerly homeless people
Foundation will also run a full-page ad in this Sunday’s Los Angeles Times (10/17) highlighting the acquisition and promoting adaptive reuse of existing older buildings as housing stock
AHF, the largest global AIDS organization, under its Healthy Housing Foundation banner, is pleased to announce the purchase of the historic Barclay Hotel, a 158-unit, 1896-era hotel in downtown Los Angeles, that it will repurpose as housing for extremely-low-income and/or formerly homeless individuals. The sale closed this week (October 13). Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, however, no formal ribbon-cutting event or ceremony will take place at this time.
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To mark its recent acquisition of the Barclay Hotel and promote the adaptive reuse of existing older buildings as affordable housing stock for extremely-low-income and homeless individuals, the Healthy Housing Foundation will also run a full-page advocacy ad in this Sunday’s Los Angeles Times (10/17/21). (Photo: Business Wire)
To mark the acquisition and promote the adaptive reuse of existing older buildings as affordable housing stock, the Healthy Housing Foundation will also run a full-page advocacy ad in this Sunday’s Los Angeles Times.
The Barclay Hotel becomes the eleventh hotel or motel in the Los Angeles area that Healthy Housing Foundation has purchased and repurposed as homeless or extremely-low-income housing since 2017 when AHF first kicked off its housing program. In addition to the Barclay Hotel, Healthy Housing also has one additional L.A. area hotel purchase for use as affordable housing pending, near HHF’s Sinclair Hotel, which became part of AHF’s ‘family of housing’ in April. The organization is also well underway with plans and permitting to build a new, 250+ unit affordable housing development on L.A.’s Skid Row using pre-fab elements that will be built on two development lots next to HHF’s Madison Hotel, the first hotel property in Healthy Housing Foundation’s portfolio. In Fort Lauderdale, AHF is also well underway with plans for a newly built, state-of-the-art affordable housing complex that will include over 500 micro-units.
AHF launched Healthy Housing Foundation in 2017 to address the rampant affordable housing crisis sweeping the nation by providing fast, easy, and compassionate access to affordable housing with a focus on addressing the needs of low-income individuals, struggling families, youth, and those living with chronic illness.
“AHF’s Healthy Housing Foundation focuses on the faster, much less expensive model of adaptive reuse of existing buildings, repurposing them as housing for those previously unsheltered, homeless and/or for extremely-low-income individuals,” said Michael Weinstein, president of AHF. “We previously renovated and repurposed ten historic or older Los Angeles buildings, and with this latest building, AHF has now created a combined total of 1,183 units in L.A. in our effort to more quickly house individuals and families. Due to the enormity of the homeless and housing affordability crises, we need viable solutions that are economic and fast because communities—and the people in those communities—simply cannot wait any longer.”
AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, currently provides medical care and/or services to over 1.6 million individuals in 45 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe. To learn more about AHF, please visit our website: www.aidshealth.org, find us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/aidshealth and follow us @aidshealthcare.
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AHF’s Healthy Housing Foundation wants to urge gov't and other organizations to use the faster, less expensive model of adaptive reuse of existing buildings, repurposing them as housing for those previously homeless and for extremely-low-income individuals
Contacts
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Ged Kenslea, Senior Director, Communications, AHF +1.323.791.5526 cell gedk@aidshealth.org