West Hollywood Community Housing Corporation’s first affordable housing project in Palm Springs, Aloe Palm Canyon, on track to break ground in 2022

WEST HOLLYWOOD  — West Hollywood Community Housing Corporation (WHCHC) has been awarded $6.4 million in funding from the California Department of Housing and Community Development’s No Place Like Home Program (NPLH). This highly competitive funding supports the development of Aloe Palm Canyon, a 71-unit affordable housing project for seniors located on North Palm Canyon Drive at Stevens Road in Palm Springs.

The NPLH funding reserves 25 units as permanent supportive housing for seniors experiencing homelessness.

Following an open RFP process, the City of Palm Springs had selected WHCHC’s proposal for the city-owned property in the Old Las Palmas neighborhood in May 2020. The Palm Springs City Council unanimously approved the project in January of this year, and included a city investment of $3.8 million.

West Hollywood Community Housing Corporation is a non-profit community housing development organization. It has been building homes and providing services that move community members from insecurity to stability since 1986. WHCHC currently houses more than 1,185 residents in 702 units in 20 affordable apartment communities in three cities. WHCHC has six projects in development.

“This is a much-needed project that will look great,” said Councilmember Geoff Kors, who lives in the neighborhood.

Aloe Palm Canyon Receives Vital Funding

Aloe Palm Canyon, Aerial View

Designed to honor the neighborhood’s midcentury modern heritage, Aloe Palm Canyon will be a dramatic two-story structure with lush, desert-friendly landscaping. Plans call for an amenity-rich environment and include a bright community room with a demonstration kitchen, a computer room, a fitness room, laundry room and central outdoor open space. Offices and resident amenities will be located along Palm Canyon Drive designed to activate the streetscape and to allow passive interaction between residents and the activity along the street. WHCHC added a dog-friendly pit-stop following community input. Aloe Palm Canyon was designed by 64North.

“What a great opportunity for the city,” said Councilmember Dennis Woods. “What we’re getting is really something extraordinary and outstanding, on a vacant lot, in a part of town that needs a little boost.”

As at all WHCHC affordable apartment communities, voluntary comprehensive supportive services will be available on-site and free of charge to all residents. WHCHC is pleased to partner with DAP Health (formerly Desert AIDS Project) to provide these critical services that keep people housed.

“DAP Health and WHCHC’s alliance will enable residents’ access to medical care, mental health services and multiple support programs resulting in a quality of life everyone deserves,” said David Brinkman, CEO of DAP Health.

The Riverside County Health Department will also provide specialized case management services that focus on support for those with special needs unique to people who experienced homelessness and those with physical and mental health challenges. These services support the residents of the 25 NPLH units.

“We’ve long identified Palm Springs as an opportunity area,” WHCHC Board Vice Chair and part-time Palm Springs resident, Ryan Leaderman said in a prepared statement. “There is such synergy between Palm Springs and our home base of West Hollywood, we knew that it would be a great fit for all.”

 

 

 

Image Sources

  • Aloe Palm Canyon, Aerial View: City of Palm Springs
  • Aloe Palm Canyon: City of Palm Springs