Health-Minded Affordable Housing Design Boosts Tenant Well-Being: Developer
BROOKLYN – A developer in an asthma-ridden section of the South Bronx noticed something unusual about one of their smoke-free, eco-friendly affordable housing buildings in the area.
The Eltona, Blue Sea Development’s first LEED Platinum building, had a lower rate of rent delinquency than other buildings in the company’s portfolio, according to firm co-founder Les Bluestone, who has been upping the ante when it comes to design features focusing on physical, social and mental health since constructing that building in 2009.
“Rent delinquencies are still not uncommon in our buildings, but we did notice that as a percentage, our first LEED Platinum building,” he said, “had a lower rate of delinquency because of medical reasons.”
Blue Sea hopes its latest project, Ocean Hill-Brownsville’s Prospect Plaza, will provide a model for affordable housing, showing that healthier buildings lead to healthier residents and better financial outcomes for developers — and the firm invited researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai to gather evidence.
“It is common knowledge that low-income populations are the most vulnerable to medical issues for a host of reasons and that it doesn’t take much to put a family into arrears when it comes to medical expenses,” Bluestone said. “Paid [sick] leave in New York City now helps, but actual doctor and medication expenses are still out of reach for many low-income or formerly homeless families.”
Prospect Plaza — part of which opened this summer — will eventually have 400 units spanning five buildings across three blocks is the first building to be certified as part of the Active Design Verified initiative, created by the New York-based nonprofit Center for Active Design and the the Washington, D.C.-based Partnership for a Healthier America (whose honorary chair is Michelle Obama).
The initiative calls for design elements that encourage physical activity in everyday use, through on-site exercise facilities and well-designed stairs to get people moving, along with incorporating free or low-cost programming in the building to support health and social well-being, like gardening classes. In exchange, affordable housing developers receive training and technical assistance.
The program’s creators say an emphasis on wellness is especially important in neighborhoods where access to safe streets, healthy food and well-maintained playgrounds are harder to come by.
At Prospect Plaza, there’s a community garden with raised beds for tenants to tend. The strawberries, blueberries and raspberries the building planted in the area are part of the overall landscaping design, “adding to the fresh, pesticide-free produce available,” Bluestone said.
Stairwells are well-lit, with plenty of sunlight coming in and speaker systems piping in music to encourage more residents to use the stairs instead of the elevator. There are outdoor bike racks and long-term bike storage indoors. A 24,000-square-foot supermarket is part of the complex.
There’s also an indoor fitness center across the street at the second of three sites in the development that will be open in a few weeks to all residents, at no charge, giving tenants the chance to exercise in all weather conditions.
Two separate outdoor recreational areas, totaling roughly 8,000 square feet, have fitness and playground equipment for children and adults to use side-by-side.
“It’s important for parents to have the opportunity to exercise or play alongside their children to set an example — and maybe, more accurately, for the children to inspire or cajole their parents to join in,” Bluestone said. “We also installed barbecue grills and tables so that there would be yet another opportunity for a family to be active. If we could figure out a way to block cellphone service, it would be a home run.”