The Kelsey Groundbreaking

San Francisco’s First Disability-Forward Housing Community Breaks Ground at Civic Center

Media contact: Rosalyn Sternberg, regional communications manager, Rosalyn.Sternberg@mercyhousing.org

Media contact: Annie Lascoe, director of development and communications, annie@thekelsey.org, 415-237-1883

The Kelsey and Mercy Housing California celebrate milestone with Mayor London Breed; accessible, affordable, inclusive community fills critical need and provides model that can be scaled nationwide

San Francisco (June 8, 2023)—Disability-forward housing is becoming a reality in the heart of San Francisco. Today, San Francisco Mayor London Breed and disability community leaders joined The Kelsey, a San Francisco–based nonprofit that co-develops accessible, affordable, inclusive housing, and its co-developer, Mercy Housing California, to celebrate the groundbreaking for The Kelsey Civic Center.

The development, unique in San Francisco, provides a model for multifamily housing across the country: The Kelsey Civic Center will be affordable to people with and without disabilities making 20% to 80% of the median area income; accessible to people with a spectrum of support, mobility, sensory, and cognitive access needs; and inclusive for all residents, with a resident services program designed to support thriving, connected community life.

“This housing has been a long time coming. About 24% of Californians live with a disability—we’re your neighbors, your family, your friends. And we experience the highest rates of homelessness, housing discrimination, and housing insecurity not just in the state, but across the entire country,” said Elizabeth Grigsby, a board member at The Kelsey and a consumer rights advocate for the Golden Gate Regional Center. “As a disabled person, a San Franciscan, and an advocate for disability rights, I know from personal experience that The Kelsey Civic Center is going to change a lot of lives for the better. We deserve the opportunity to be part of the community, and The Kelsey is making that right a reality.”

The Kelsey Civic Center is located at 240 Van Ness Avenue, a site chosen for its proximity to transit, jobs, community, arts and entertainment, and additional services. The eight-story building will include 112 studio and two-bedroom apartments, with 25% of units reserved for people with disabilities. Two full-time Inclusion Concierges™ will help residents navigate their neighborhood, engage with their city, connect to programs and activities, and build community among disabled and nondisabled residents across access needs.

“Disability-forward features like these are among the reasons why The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation helped fund The Kelsey San Francisco Civic Center,” said Amy Kleine, the foundation’s senior program director. “The foundation supports developments that combine affordable quality housing with services that residents need to thrive in their homes. The Kelsey Civic Center will offer housing that fosters the well-being of people with disabilities and ensures they are fully part of the community.”

The Kelsey Civic Center’s ground floor will house another first: the Disability Cultural Community Center, which will serve as a gathering place for people with and without disabilities to connect and create community. Anticipated resources include a gallery, a space for pop-up disability-forward businesses, and a co-working area. The community also includes an outdoor public art installation by JD Green, an artist at Creativity Explored, a San Francisco–based organization that supports artists with disabilities. In addition, The Kelsey Civic Center was a 2020 winning project in the C40 Reinventing Cities Competition, earning praise for its disability-forward design and sustainability features, which include a large courtyard garden and efficient units with shared community spaces that will minimize resource waste.

“With creative thinking and a commitment to designing affordable housing that works for everyone, there’s no reason this kind of success can’t be replicated all over the country,” said Doug Shoemaker, president of affordable housing nonprofit Mercy Housing California.

The Kelsey Civic Center was designed by WRNS Studio, an architecture and planning firm specializing in high-quality sustainable design, and Santos Prescott and Associates, an architecture and urban design practice acclaimed for the spatial inventiveness and social responsibility of its work. San Francisco–based Cahill Contractors is the construction partner.

Public funders for this project include:

  • State of California Department of Housing and Community Development Affordable Housing and Sustainable Communities Program
  • State of California Department of Housing and Community Development Housing Accelerator Program
  • San Francisco Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development
  • California Department of Developmental Services
  • S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Section 811 Program

Financing partners for this project include:

  • Golden Gate Regional Center
  • The Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation
  • Chase
  • Housing Trust Silicon Valley
  • Many generous individuals

The Civic Center development is the second execution of The Kelsey’s industry-defining model for disability-forward housing. The first, The Kelsey Ayer Station in San Jose, California, broke ground last June.

“We could not be more proud to support the development of the accessible, sustainable, and inclusive Kelsey Civic Center,” said James Vossoughi, executive director of community development banking for Chase. “This community with 112 homes will serve our neighbors who need it most and comes at a time when affordable housing is in limited supply in San Francisco and across the U.S. We cannot wait to see the doors open.”

About The Kelsey

The Kelsey is the nation’s only organization focused on addressing the intersection of housing and disability by producing homes and changing systems at scale. The San Francisco–based nonprofit innovates in three areas: designing a disability-forward housing model, developing tools needed to make that model the standard for cities and housing developers, and advocating for policy changes that will accelerate the model’s adoption. The Kelsey is co-developing multifamily buildings in San Francisco and San Jose; has created Housing Design Standards for Accessibility and Inclusion, the first replicable and widely accepted model for disability-forward housing; and designed Inclusion Concierge™ services to promote connections among residents living in The Kelsey housing.

 

About Mercy Housing California

Mercy Housing California is the largest regional branch of Mercy Housing Inc., a leading national affordable housing nonprofit headquartered in Denver and founded in 1981. MHC’s mission is to create stable, vibrant, and healthy communities by developing, financing, and operating affordable, program-enriched housing for families, seniors, and people with special needs who lack the economic resources to access quality, safe housing opportunities. MHC owns 160 rental properties across 26 California counties, serving low- and very-low-income working families, seniors, people who have experienced homelessness, people living with HIV/AIDS, and people with disabilities. To learn more about MHC, please visit mercyhousing.org/california.

###