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1. SITKA APARTMENTSGreenbuilding and Economic Decisions in Affordable Housing OHCS HOUSING CONFERENCEAPRIL 24, 2007
3. OPTIONS TO CUTTING COSTSWhole Systems Thinking
Before cutting costs, consider the whole financial structure of the project:
Equity Structure
Additional capital may be available
Debt Structure
Lower expenses can increase loan amount
Need reliable data before committing
Cash Flow
Increased future cash flow to reduce payback
But still need extra funds during development
4. SITKA APARTMENTSOVERVIEW 210 Apartments
72 @ 50% MFI
131 @ 60% MFI
6 @ Market
1 Guest Unit
Greenbuilding focus
Reduction in energy use
Reduction in water use
Indoor air quality
5. CASE STUDY - WATER SUBMETERS(3rd party reads, sends bills, and collects from tenants) Environmental Benefit
Studies show up to 25% reduction in water use when tenants pay their own water and sewer bills
Economic Problem
Cost $130-150 each plus related extra work
Need 2 per apt. with more efficient gas central hot water
Total cost at Sitka - $67,020
Analysis
Look at extra equity from LIHTC, other sources
Assess lower expenses, possible increase in bank loan
Evaluate potential for increased cash flow
Consider impacts of other variables
6. SYSTEM COMPONENTS
7. SUBMETER ROUGH-IN
8. ECONOMIC ANALYSISInitial Cost – Purchase, Install
9. ANALYSIS - Equity Structure Equity Structure – Options include:
LIHTC - Increased equity from increased basis
Automatic if using 4% LIHTC
May be limited if already at cap on 9% LIHTC
Energy Incentives – Clear eligibility, early decision
ETO and BETC for energy savings
Usually paid after completion
Grants – Eligibility limited, no certainty
OSD, OHCS, Enterprise, others
10. EQUITY STRUCTURELow Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC)
11. EQUITY STRUCTUREOther Financial Incentives
12. EQUITY STRUCTURESummary Of Impacts
13. ANALYSIS – Debt Structure Debt Structure – Changes in net operating income (NOI) affect loan amount
Can increase NOI – and loan amount - through:
Higher rents or other income
Lower expenses from energy savings
Lower repl. reserves from more durable material
16. DEBT STRUCTUREChanges in Expenses, NOI, and Loan Amount
17. ANALYSIS – Cash Flow Cash Flow – Can provide a payback for investment, but doesn’t supply the capital unless it is certain enough to include in loan sizing.
Higher rents
Lower vacancy
Less turnover
Less advertising
Less exposure to increases in energy and water costs
18. CASH FLOWChanges in Income
19. CASH FLOWChange in Expenses, Debt Service, Net Cash Flow
20. RECAP OF ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
21. OTHER VARIABLESItems that may lead to increased initial costs
22. OTHER VARIABLESFactors that may increase operating costs
23. OTHER VARIABLESFactors that may lead to lower operating costs
24. Actual Water Use
25. CONCLUDING THOUGHTS
Water submeters – by this analysis – seem to make sense for this building, in this location, and using this financing regardless of the environmental benefit.
Energy savings measures that reduce the owner’s expenses probably look even stronger because they qualify for ETO and BETC incentives and because there is no reason to lower rents.
Energy savings measures that benefit the tenants usually won’t produce the same measurable economic returns (because they don’t lower the owner’s operating expenses). But there are compelling reasons to do them anyway.