The Courtyards In Long Beach
1027 Redondo Avenue, Long Beach, California | Google Map
1045 Redondo Avenue, Long Beach, California | Google Map
350 E. Esther Street, Long Beach, California | Google Map
1134 Stanley Avenue, Long Beach, California | Google Map
Last Updated: 5/30/23

46
Total Units
23
Permanent Supportive Units
TBD
Tenant Satisfaction
23
General Affordable units
TBD
-
Acquired: 2008
Construction: 2010
Live: 2010/2011
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44 studio units
2 manager units
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23 general affordable units
23 permanent supportive housing units
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Trillium Property Management
Mental Health America of Los Angeles
Egan | Simon Architecture
Westport
City of Long Beach: HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME)
California Housing and Finance Agency (CalHFA): Department of Mental Health Mental Health Services Act (MHSA)
CA Tax Credit Allocation Committee (TCAC): American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, 2009) Section 1602, CA Dept. of Housing and Community Development (HCD) Supplemental Backfill
First Citizens Bank: Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco's Affordable Housing Program (FHLB-SF AHP)
To view our operations partners, construction team, and capital funders, visit our Partners page.
Interested in Leasing? Apply directly in our Leasing page.
Named for the style of each site, The Courtyards in Long Beach is a substantial rehabilitation of four single-story apartment buildings originally constructed in the 1920s. Each building features a central courtyard surrounded by 10 to 12 studio apartments, each with its own kitchen and bathroom. Together, the four sites provide 44 studio apartments in a mixed-population, multi-site model. The design complements the surrounding historic homes and incorporates sustainable practices based on Enterprise’s Green Communities criteria.
The Courtyards in Long Beach was one of Holos Communities’ first non-LIHTC developments and among the first Mental Health Services Act-funded projects supported through the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA).
The Stanley Avenue and Redondo Avenue sites are located near Food 4 Less, public transportation on Anaheim Street, and local schools including Bryant Elementary, Willard Elementary, and Woodrow Wilson High School. The Esther Street site is close to the Pacific Coast Highway Blue Line light rail station, El Paisano Supermarket, Kim Long Market, Roosevelt Elementary, and Long Beach Poly High School.