Developer hopes to ignite change in city’s core with Washington Square housing project
BY ALGIS J. LAUKAITIS / Lincoln Journal Star
Even before the first spade of dirt was turned for Washington Square, the community reaped some benefits from the housing development project.
People went to the run-down apartments that would eventually be razed to make room for new townhomes and hauled away water heaters, stoves, air conditioners and furnaces, refrigerators, and washers and dryers for their own use.
The Lincoln Police Department’s SWAT team used the apartments for training. So did the city’s Fire and Rescue Department, which set fires inside to train not only firefighters but also a group of teens who someday might join its ranks.
Katie Halperin, developer of Washington Square, and Matt Carlson, general contractor for the townhouse project, recycled appliances, metal, brick and concrete debris from 18 apartments before they were bulldozed. It’s called “deconstruction,” and it’s becoming more commonplace as people try to find uses for construction materials instead of burying them in a landfill. Here’s what was recycled:
* Appliances:
11 water heaters
10 refrigerators
6 stoves
6 furnace/AC units
2 washer/dryer sets
* More than 2 million pounds of concrete ” footings, walls, floor slabs, parking and drive areas ” was sorted and removed to be crushed for aggregate on other construction projects.
* There was enough crushed brick to create several driveways; some of the brick will be used in landscaping projects.
* Most metal products were stripped and taken to a recycler.
* Little wood was salvaged due to the age of the apartments, which were built in the 1960s. “There was no pretty woodwork,” Halperin said.
The 1960s-era apartments are gone now, bulldozed months ago, and Sawhorse Construction, the general contractor, is pouring foundations for the 16-townhome project at 19th and Washington streets. The walls will go up soon and, if everything goes according to schedule, the $3 million project should be completed by next spring.
Developer Katie Halperin and Teri Ernst, her Realtor, hope buyers will start knocking on their doors. In a depressed housing market, it might be a hard sell, but the two women and their partners believe they have something people want: affordable contemporary housing in an established neighborhood in the heart of the city.
Washington Square, they say, should appeal to people who no longer wish to live on Lincoln’s edges and drive long distances.
Grocery and drug stores, restaurants, unique shops, a health food store and coffeehouse, a bus line, schools and even a small park are within walking distance.
“What surprised us was the neighborhood,” Halperin said. “Neighbors actually care. They’ve been watching the progress. They want improvements. They like their neighborhood … They like living here.”
Washington Square is in the Near South Neighborhood, an area comprised of mostly large homes — many of them historic — and smaller homes. Halperin said her development gives people who are interested in living close to downtown something in the middle.
“It gives them the option to start with something new — new housing in a well-established neighborhood,” said Mary Gerdes, president of Community Bank of Lincoln.
The bank got involved in Washington Square because it wants to help first-time homebuyers and revitalize the neighborhood, Gerdes said. The housing development project is the first one of its type for the bank, which opened in December 2007.
The three-story townhomes will start at $154,900. Some of the features: three bedrooms, two-car garage, maple floors, private balcony, fenced-in courtyard and a personal garden area. Square footage ranges from 1,500 to nearly 1,800. A graduate class taught by Kim Todd at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln will design the interior courtyard and all of the green space.
A $40,000 grant from the federal government can be used to help first-time homebuyers with the down payment, Ernst said, if they meet guidelines. The townhomes are also FHA-approved.
“Well, if it lives up to its promise of owner-occupied, I think it would be very beneficial to the neighborhood,” said Chuck deVries, who represents the area on the 19-member neighborhood association board.
The tough economic times could have an impact on owner-occupancy, deVries said, but overall people who live in the neighborhood are pleased with the development. The only concern they had was the proximity of the townhomes to the street.
“They pushed the envelope of the building area,” deVries said, adding that the townhomes are closer to the street than any other frontage in the neighborhood.
This is not Halperin’s first attempt to develop a housing project close to downtown. In 2006, she and a partner abandoned their plans to develop the old K Street power plant into loft-style condominiums after they rejected the City Council's counteroffer to buy the building for $5 million. After the council tacked on amendments, they said the project was no longer financially feasible.
Washington Square proved to be a difficult project to sell to the city, too, Halperin said. She had to get approval from the neighborhood association and variances from the Planning Commission. She also got the impression that some people wanted to see two homes built on the property instead of 16 townhomes.
The biggest problem: “Lincoln does not know how to handle urban development projects,” Gerdes said. “There hasn’t been enough of it happening here.”
Said Carlson: Most of the city’s housing construction rules are geared toward traditional housing being built around its perimeter — not in the inner city.
“We’re essentially trying to shoehorn this project into rules that do not fit very well,” he said. “We need a process to deal with urban blight other than throwing TIF (tax increment financing) at it.”
Halperin obtained more than $200,000 in TIF for Washington Square, said Dave Landis, director of the city’s Urban Development Department. TIF is a common redevelopment financing tool that allows the higher tax value created by a private project to be captured to finance associated public improvements, such as streets.
Landis agreed that variances were an issue in the project but they were mostly caused by the density of the project.
“We’re replacing about 18 apartments with 16 townhouses and they don’t lay out the same way,” he said. “In the apartments, you get that high-rise effect so the setbacks are easily met. Because you are building on top of each other, you have more space for traffic flow. When you spread that out and you use the same space for townhouses, it winds up having a more intense use of the footprint of land.”
Landis said variances would not have been a problem if the project only had six or eight townhouses.
“It’s not because it’s a townhome. It’s not because it’s a core neighborhood. It’s not because we’re using TIF. It is an outgrowth of the density of this project. The density is related to the need for making an appropriate return on investment for the land,” Landis said.
Halperin said she had to fight the city on impact fees, reducing the initial $41,000 estimate by the city to $6,000. Halperin’s and Carlson’s argument was that many of the public improvements that would be covered by the impact fees already existed in the neighborhood.
“We had to re-engineer (the project) to lower the impact fees,” Carlson said.
Halperin said she did get some help from City Hall, though. She and others credited Planning Department Director Marvin Krout and staff member Christy Eichorn, City Council members Robin Eschliman, Dan Marvin and Jonathan Cook, as well as Landis and NeighborWorks, a nonprofit, community-based housing organization dedicated to community revitalization.
Despite the obstacles, Halperin, Carlson and Ernst view Washington Square as a model for other developers to follow — and they hope that they do.
“A lot of people are watching this to see how it goes,” Halperin said.
Reach Algis J. Laukaitis at 402-473-7243 or alaukaitis@journalstar.com.

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to be the period of the city, made of brick or stone facade, have basements.
Make it a beautification project people want to see, not downtown project housing. "
Chris wrote on November 30, 2008 11:43 am:
Lincoln Journal Star, Please stop calling this neighborhood THE CORE. It has enough negative stigma without you helping out. In urban studies, core neighborhoods are notorious for social problems. I live here, and this neighborhood is not bad at all compared with other cities. You stigmatizing it as THE CORE can be a self fulfilling prophesy b/c investment such as in this article will dry up. Take some responsibility. "
pac wrote on November 30, 2008 12:12 pm:
Perplexed wrote on November 30, 2008 12:23 pm:
Chris wrote on November 30, 2008 12:50 pm:
tom issaquah wrote on November 30, 2008 2:58 pm:
Bob wrote on November 30, 2008 5:12 pm:
Good Luck wrote on November 30, 2008 5:23 pm:
whatever wrote on November 30, 2008 5:23 pm:
Depends on who lives there wrote on November 30, 2008 6:52 pm:
Core Resident wrote on November 30, 2008 7:22 pm:
Wake up wrote on November 30, 2008 7:31 pm:
Cole wrote on November 30, 2008 9:26 pm:
And to me the word 'core' does not have a negative connotation. It simply means 'older', 'hub', 'densely populated' or 'center of activity'. "
Mike in DC wrote on November 30, 2008 10:26 pm:
So, you KEEP the value of your cars high, you don't spend $ on yard upkeep, and new construction stuff should last at least 5-10 years at the very very least. For those of you that are old fogeys and haven't bought a house in 10 years or more; house prices generally double every 10-15 years (on average). The house makes a lot of sense in terms of maintenence and location for first-timers.
As far as the hood goes, if gas prices spike again, the outer suburbs will shrink in land value, while the core goes up for land value (even if the buildings are old and rel worthless). It's a crap shoot when paradigms shift. But, when the neighbors move in to new construction, there is a shift, houses across the street go up, neighboring rents go up... and hopefully, eventually, Lincoln gets better-paying jobs so that the tax revenue goes up and tax rates can go down... "
Dear Mike wrote on December 1, 2008 10:04 am:
You are dead on with the need for better jobs. The amount of property that is not taxable as state property also is a hit for Lincoln. The jobs are unfortunately in Omaha, not Lincoln. With the loss of significant locally owned businesses like NBC and LJS with established community leadership Lincoln has become more of a southern most suburb of Omaha. "
whatever wrote on December 1, 2008 11:01 am:
Downtown jobs wrote on December 1, 2008 11:37 am:
Terminology wrote on December 1, 2008 1:42 pm: