Public Radio for the Piedmont and High Country
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Winston-Salem housing initiative faces delay as funding gap continues

This map shows the location of Cleveland Avenue Homes, where a five-phase project looks to revitalize the area. Image courtesy City of Winston-Salem.

This map shows the location of Cleveland Avenue Homes, where a five-phase project looks to revitalize the area. Image courtesy City of Winston-Salem.

The next step in a housing project that aims to transform the northeast community of Winston-Salem could face a significant delay as officials work to close a funding gap.

The Choice Neighborhood Initiative is a five-phase project that looks to revitalize the Cleveland Avenue neighborhood, creating more than 400 new, mixed-income housing units.

The development was sparked by a $30 million grant from the federal government, but it has continued to face a multimillion-dollar funding gap.

City officials celebrated the opening of the first phase of the project earlier this year, which consisted of an 81-unit apartment complex.

Housing Authority of Winston-Salem Executive Director Kevin Cheshire says demolition for the second phase will start in the coming weeks, but further construction will be halted until they close a $2 million deficit. This affects 72 units.

"We applied for this grant and were awarded the grant pre-COVID when these grants were $30 million, but now we're having to build it post-COVID, and in the post-COVID environment if we were to receive the same grant award today, it would be $50 million," he says.

Cheshire says Forsyth County declined to provide funding for the project.

He says HAWS is now working with the federal government to see if there are any additional supplemental grants.

Support quality journalism, like the story above,
with your gift right now.

Donate