港澳天下彩

漏 2024 WLRN
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Miami hopes to 'right the wrongs of the past,' using $40 million federal grant for Overtown housing

A rendering of a housing development with a pool in Miami, with favorable quotes from Miami's Urban Development Review Board members.
Photo courtesy of Atlantic Pacific Companies
Renderings of the new Culmer affordable housing developments in Miami's Overtown neighborhood, now partially funded with a $40 million federal grant.

More than $39 million in new federal grant funding will help develop public and affordable housing in Miami鈥檚 historic Overtown neighborhood, officials announced Friday.

It will make Miami-Dade County the first community to get two consecutive Choice Neighborhoods Implementation (CNI) grants from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).

The latest round of funding will go towards redeveloping the Culmer Place and Culmer Gardens public housing properties in Overtown 鈥 supplementing a $332 million commitment from the county and the City of Miami towards a larger "Transformation Plan" for the area around the developments, according to a .

Last year, the county already received a $40 million CNI grant to redevelop and the Goulds neighborhood in South Dade.

Overtown is a historically-Black neighborhood near downtown Miami that was once known as 鈥淭he Harlem of the South鈥 for its thriving business and arts community. The community was fractured in the 1960s by the building of Interstates 95 and 395, which split Overtown and drove out many businesses, leaving the neighborhood in neglect for many decades.

READ MORE: Overtown residents got a shot at homeownership 50 years ago. Now it's falling apart

鈥淭he Choice Neighborhoods program goes way beyond housing, way beyond brick and mortar,鈥 HUD executive Richard J. Monocchio said at a joint press conference with Miami-Dade officials on Friday. 鈥淟ook at the interstates that have disconnected us for so long. This grant is going to remediate that. It鈥檚 going to reconnect Overtown to the entire city.鈥

The HUD grant is part of a larger push by the Biden-Harris administration to increase the nation鈥檚 affordable housing stock 鈥 demonstrated by the of $325 million in affordable housing funds going to seven cities around the U.S., including Miami.

U.S. Rep. Frederica Wilson, D-Miami Gardens, in accepting the CNI grant on Friday alongside Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava and other local government officials, echoed Miami is at the forefront of the affordable housing crisis.

鈥淲e鈥檙e at the epicenter,鈥 Wilson said.

A group of people hold an oversized check.
Photo by Joshua Ceballos
/
港澳天下彩
Miami-Dade County housing officials received a check for close to $40 million from HUD for affordable housing development and services in Overtown.

and are existing low-income housing projects built in the 1970s and 80s. They will be redeveloped by developer , which pledges to more than quintuple the number of available units from 226 to 1,056.

Only the existing 226 units will remain public low-income housing. The rest of the units will target a range of household incomes. There will be 621 affordable units for households that make up to 80% of Miami-Dade County鈥檚 ($79,400 for one person), and 212 workforce housing units for households that make up to 120% of the Area Median Income. A total of ten new units will be put up for sale.

People who live in the existing 226 public housing units are allowed to return to their apartments once the redevelopment is complete, according to Mayor Levine Cava. She said the county is working with the City of Miami to put more attention to revitalizing Overtown after years of decline.

鈥淭his kind of investment is exactly what we need to do to right the wrongs of the past and revitalize communities that were torn apart,鈥 Levine Cava said.

A table of values showing the breakdown of housing units for Culmer Gardens and Culmer Place
Atlantic Pacific Companies
A breakdown of units to be developed at Culmer Gardens and Culmer Place showing how many will be replacement low-income housing and how many will be affordable and workforce units.

The $40 million CNI grant will be supplemented by a $332 million investment from Miami-Dade County鈥檚 Public Housing and Community Development office and the City of Miami.

Additional funds will go towards pedestrian enhancements to improve mobility around Overtown, as well as wraparound services provided by homeless assistance nonprofit Camillus House like job training and education for residents. All of these segments make up what the county and HUD call the 鈥淭ransformation Plan.鈥

This will also go hand-in-hand with the plan to build a park beneath I-395 and connect Overtown to surrounding neighborhoods.

Joshua Ceballos is WLRN's Local Government Accountability Reporter and a member of the investigations team. Reach Joshua Ceballos at jceballos@wlrnnews.org
More On This Topic