&EFK
    United States
    Environmental Protection
    Agency
                EPA Region 9 Brownfields Program Success Stories
                Vineyard Town  Homes • Anaheim, CA
                     Home Sweet Homes  in Anaheim
 Property Size:
 Former Uses:
Project Description
Property Address:    385 South Vine Street,
                   Anaheim, CA 92805
                   2 acres
                   Commercial, industrial, bulk
                   petroleum product storage,
                   residential
Contaminants Found: Petroleum, volatile organic
                   compounds (VOCs),
                   lead, polycyclic aromatic
                   hydrocarbons (PAHs)
                   Affordable housing
                   Anaheim Housing Authority
 Current Use:
 Current Owner:
 Project Partners
 • Anaheim Redevelopment Agency
 • Anaheim Housing Authority
 • City of Anaheim
 • HUD
 • U.S. EPA
 • Mercy Housing Corporation

Property History
This two-acre property was assembled from four
separate parcels that had been purchased by the
Anaheim Redevelopment Agency (ARA) for this
project from approximately 2002 to 2004. These
individual sites had mixed uses, primarily industrial,
dating back to 1907. A series of assessments
conducted by the ARA during property assembly
confirmed that some of those prior uses—which
included the bulk storage of petroleum products—
had contaminated the assembled site's soil with
petroleum, lead, VOCs and PAHs. With a plan to turn
the assembled property into an affordable housing
development, the ARA needed to clean up this site to
residential standards.
                   The completed Vineyard Town Homes Complex

Highlights
•  One of the first successful projects under the ARA's
  Affordable Housing Strategic Plan
•  The ARA combined idle properties with contamination
  issues into a cleaned, residential complex, in a city
  where space for residential development is limited
•  Utilized a variety of federal and state resources to
  provide the funding needed for redevelopment
                                                Drivers for Redevelopment
                                                Providing affordable housing had long been a priority
                                                for both the ARA and the City of Anaheim; the city
                                                had sponsored a substantial number of multifamily
                                                developments and been offering rental assistance
                                                program vouchers to more than 6,000 residents at the
                                                time of the property's purchase and assembly. The
                                                city created a new "Affordable Housing Strategic
                                                Plan" and intended to redevelop this property into
                                                more affordable housing as the first project under
                                                that Plan. In 2003, the ARA received a $1,450,000
                                                Brownfields Cleanup Revolving Loan Fund (RLF)
                                                grant from EPA, which was seen as a way to initiate
                                                cleanup and prepare the property for redevelopment.

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Project Results
In 2006, the ARA conveyed ownership of the property
to the Anaheim Housing Authority (AHA), then
provided nearly $195,000 from EPA's RLF grant
to prepare the site for redevelopment. The City of
Anaheim contributed an additional $355,000 toward
cleanup, which involved the removal of 385 tons of
contaminated soil and installation of vapor barriers
to ensure long-term safety. These efforts cleared the
way for a $17.5 million redevelopment project that
provided 160 construction jobs and created a 60-
unit, affordable housing complex that is now home
to more than 200 residents, all of whom earn less
than 60 percent of the area's median income. As
expected, this project—known as the Vineyard Town
Home development—became the first success under
the  city's Affordable Housing Strategic Plan. The
land was leased by the AHA to a nonprofit housing
corporation for a 55-year term; the AHA and the ARA
will recapture project costs through the resulting land
lease payments and associated future revenues.
Funding Information
$190,332   Environmental assessments, from the
           Anaheim Redevelopment Agency
$194,926   Cleanup, as a sub-grant from EPA's 2003
           Brownfields Cleanup RLF grant
$355,008   Cleanup from the Anaheim Redevelopment
           Agency (under Housing Set-Aside Funds)
$17,517,577 Bulk of funding received from federal
           and state low-income housing tax credits
           obtained by the developer. Additional
           funding came from the HUD Home
           Investment Partnerships Program.

Project Timeline

2002-2004 The ARA purchases adjacent industrial
          parcels for assembly; assessments begin on
          the assembled parcels
2006      Property transferred to the AHA; cleanup
          begins
2007      Cleanup completed; redevelopment begins
2008      Redevelopment completed; the  new
          Vineyard Town  Home Development opens
                                 For additional information, please contact:

        Clare Fletcher • Community Development Manager • Anaheim Redevelopment Agency • (714) 765-4337
                                         cfletcher@anaheim.net
Brownfields Region 9 Success Story
Vineyard Town Homes, Anaheim, CA
                                        April 2011
                             www.epa.gov/brownfields

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