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Habitat for Humanity to begin Danvers, Lynn projects

Habitat for Humanity has been converting three buildings on Park Street in Peabody.

habitat for humanity - North Shore

Habitat for Humanity has been converting three buildings on Park Street in Peabody.

Habitat for Humanity – North Shore is preparing to launch two projects that will provide affordable homes to five families in Danvers and Lynn.

The new ventures come as the nonprofit is nearing completion of eight affordable units in downtown Peabody, and shortly after it collaborated in a successful effort to restore a Beverly home and keep it affordable.

The Peabody-based 27-year affiliate of Habitat for Humanity has also expanded its geographic reach through a merger with the international Christian ministry’s Cape Ann affiliate.

“It’s a particularly busy time,” said Donald Preston, president of the North Shore nonprofit.

Preston said with the Danvers and Lynn projects set to start soon, it will mark the first time that his nearly all-volunteer group will be working in two communities at the same time.

“We’ll be staggering the work at each of these properties so that our tools will be able to move with the stages of the projects. But it will be a challenge,” he said.

The first Habitat project in Danvers involves constructing a two-family condominium on Mill Street behind a former school building the Housing Authority maintains as an eight-unit family housing site. The authority will shortly be conveying the 15,000- square-foot site to Habitat for $1.

“It’s a beautiful location, a perfectly flat piece of land, in a nice neighborhood,” Preston said.

Both units will be 1,200 square feet, with three bedrooms, according to Preston, who estimates the units will each sell for $125,000. The house is being built to meet energy efficiency standards.

For all Habitat projects, buyers must meet income requirements and invest about 300 hours of sweat equity in the project, joining with Habitat volunteers on the construction of their house.

When the Housing Authority received its permits in the 1980s to use the site, it agreed to develop no more than 12 units, all in the former school. But because of site issues, not all 12 were built.

Town Meeting in May eased the restriction to permit two units to be built outside the old school, allowing the project to go forward, according to Selectman Gardner S. Trask III.

“We are excited about the opportunity to have Habitat for Humanity building its first project in Danvers,” said Trask, who is also chairman of the town’s new Affordable Housing Trust.

“It has a lot of support in town,” Trask said. “I’m sure when they get here they will find we are a community that embraces the social need and they’ll have a lot of volunteers from people in town, including our town officials and board members.”

Preston said Habitat expects to lay the foundation for the house later this month.

In Lynn, Habitat is partnering with the city’s Housing Authority and Neighborhood Development agency to restore a three-story house at 6 Grover St. and convert it to an affordable three-family condominium for income-qualifying veterans and their families.

The housing authority is providing Habitat with $136,000 in federal funds to cover most of the $142,000 cost of purchasing the house from Fannie Mae, which took ownership in foreclosure.

The Habitat renovation will create three units, each with three bedrooms. Preston said the prices have not been set, but each unit may sell for less than $100,000.

Habitat hopes to begin gutting the interior in September, and if it secures permits, could begin constructing the units this winter.

“We are very happy to be working with Habitat. It will really have a positive impact on the neighborhood,” said Norman Cole, the housing authority’s director of planning and development. He noted that the authority has already invested $3 million in projects to improve the neighborhood and “this really cleans up the last property.”

In Peabody, Habitat has been working since 2010 to convert three vacant, foreclosed apartment buildings on Park Street to eight affordable condominium units.

The project, Habitat’s first in Peabody, involves razing one of the buildings and replacing it with two duplexes, and converting the other two to duplexes in a historic restoration. Four of the units are completed and occupied, and the other four are expected to be completed by September.

“The city has been tremendous working with us,” Preston said, citing the help of the Historical Commission, the Community Preservation Committee, “and the community itself. This is our first project in Peabody and I think it’s met everybody’s expectations. It’s helped stabilize a neighborhood and brought two historic homes back to their original glory.”

For the Beverly project, Habitat teamed with the city and a local nonprofit, Harborlight Community Partners.

The single-family home, on Chase Street, was rehabilitated and sold as an affordable unit in 2005. The property fell into foreclosure, but with funding from Harborlight and the city, Habitat rehabilitated the house in a 45-day project that concluded in June. Harborlight is offering the three-bedroom home through a lottery at $183,500.

Habitat is now accepting applications for prospective owners of the future Danvers and Lynn units. Go to www.habitatforhumanity-northshore.com. For applications to purchase the Beverly home, go to www.harborlightcp.org.
John Laidler can be reached at laidler@globe.com.