15 Tipping Point”
Houses Rescued, Rehabbed

Allan Appel Photo

Tracey and Troy Hie open the door to their first house, 212 Dover St.

Tracey Hie lives so close to the McDonald’s near Ferry and Exchange Streets that when he comes home from work, he can hear each and every order shouted out from the drive-thru. Not for long, though. Within two weeks he and his family will be moving into a splendidly gut-rehabbed 1900s house that completes a group of 15 home the city bought and sold to non-profit developers to diminish the effects of the foreclosure crisis.

194 Dover St.

Tuesday afternoon 212 and 194 Dover St. in Fair Haven were part of a double ribbon-cutting ceremony. The event drew the soon-to-be owners like the Hies and Curtis Rhodes, who is moving into 194, along with city and state officials and non-profit developer NeighborWorks New Horizons, which developed the property.

They were there to mark a red-letter moment for the city’s use of $3.2 million obtained in 2008 via the Housing Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (aka the Stimulus” law).

The city leveraged that money, with the help of partners like the Greater New Haven Community Loan Fund, into $5.2 million to pay for its Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP). Its aim: to purchase tipping point” properties, foreclosed houses whose rescue might keep a block from falling into dereliction.

Click here for a story on the launching of the city’s NSP program at 194 Dover in September 2009.

And here for the story of another house on Perkins Street, also part of the NSP program that rescues foreclosed properties in fragile areas of the city.

Curtis Rhodes admiring the original banister and steps at his 194 Dover St. home.

Rhodes’s house at 194, with its original stairs and banister, and the Hies’s at 212, with two sun rooms, are the 14th and 15th properties whose redevelopment has been completed with the funds.

A retired corrections officer, Rhodes hopes to move into the three-bedroom and one-and-a-half bathroom house with his 19-year-old daughter.

He said he loves the banister and appreciates the hook-up for washer and dryer, which will come in handy when his first granddaughter, two-month-old Jaylae, comes over to visit.

I plan to do a lot of laundry,” he said.

The Hies, who with their two teenage daughters will be moving into 212 after the upcoming closing, have a rental unit in their house. Their upstairs and the downstairs units both have sun rooms.

Using the NSP funds, the city, through the Economic Development Corporation (EDC), bought 194 Dover out of foreclosure for $34,000. It sold the house to to NeighborWorks New Horizons for $39,000. The sale price to Rhodes is $129,000.

Abel Chaparro of Bridgeport-based Villa Gesell points out the 1x3 inch red oak floor design that echoes the original at 194 Dover .

The cost to gut-rehab the house, performed by Abel Chaparro and his Villa Gesell builders of Bridgeport, was $300,000. The difference in the construction financing came through the Greater New Haven Community Loan Fund.

212 Dover was also a victim of foreclosure when the EDC purchased it for $75,000. Neighborworks bought it for $85,000 and is poised to sell to the Hies for $147,000.

To be eligible for purchase, buyers must fall into an income level at 50 to 120 percent of the area median income or AMI. For four people in New Haven, that would be $89,000, according to NeighborWorks New Horizon officials at the event.

Troy Hie by the kitchen countertop.

Troy Hie, who works for Metro North, is handy with kitchen countertops and plans to replace the formica. But that’s down the road.

NeighborWorks New Horizons Executive Director Seila Mosquera-Bruno called Dover Street the perfect street” for this intervention.

Carla Weil of the Greater New Haven Community Loan Fund said, The real impact is to see these folks move in here today.”

Tracey and Troy Hie, Carla Weil, Mayor DeStefano in front of 194 Dover .

Mayor DeStefano said the city had done so well with NSP money that it has attracted an additional $1.86 million, which will be used in the same manner.

The last word Tuesday was left to Troy Hie, and echoed by Rhodes: We got a house. Now we’re going to make it a home.”

The festive proceedings ended in tours and lunch. Lee Cruz of the Chatham Square Neighborhood Association briefed the new neighbors on the organization and its many activities, including a community dinner supporting a local restaurant tonight.

Mayor DeStefano, before departing, turned to the about-to-be homeowners assembled on the porch and reminded them to be sure to be registered and to vote in the mayoral election on Nov. 8.

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