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Transfiguration Place Apartments Gains Its Third Life as Affordable Housing in Detroit’s Banglatown

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Transfiguration Place Apartments Gains Its Third Life as Affordable Housing in Detroit’s Banglatown

Photograph of the front façade of a two-story brick building with limestone accents. A Catholic school building in Detroit’s Banglatown neighborhood was transformed into Transfiguration Place Apartments, a 19-unit affordable development. Photo credit: O’Brien Construction

Opened in January 2022 after an adaptive reuse project to convert the historic school building to residential use, Transfiguration Place Apartments is a 19-unit affordable development in Detroit’s Banglatown neighborhood. The building, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2019, served for decades as a Catholic school but had been vacant for some years until the Archdiocese of Detroit partnered with the city to transform the disused building into affordable housing. In 2017, the city selected Ethos Development Partners and Cinnaire Solutions to restore the historic building and modernize its systems. The $7.2 million development was funded through a combination of tax credits, funds from the city’s payment in lieu of taxes program, and other sources.

A 96-Year Journey

Transfiguration Place Apartments is a two-story, rectangular, flat-roofed building in multitone red brick accented with limestone. The building began its life in 1926 as the combination church and school of the Transfiguration Roman Catholic Church Parish — now the Saint John Paul II Parish, which maintains a campus of five buildings around the apartments. In 1950, the church moved to a purpose-built structure next door. Transfiguration School remained in the original structure until its closure in 2005, after which the parish leased the building to a charter school. The charter school, too, closed in 2014.

By 2017, Transfiguration School had been vacant for 3 years. The Archdiocese of Detroit, which wanted to put the disused property to use as affordable housing, partnered with the city to bring this vision to life. Banglatown, a neighborhood on the border of the city of Hamtramck, is one of Detroit’s most demographically diverse areas, with significant African-American, Bangladeshi, Bosnian, Polish, and Yemeni populations. Many residents are immigrants, and approximately two-thirds live at or below the federal poverty level.

The city of Detroit issued a request for proposals for the adaptive reuse project, and, in 2018, selected Ethos Development Partners, a developer specializing in affordable housing and adaptive reuse, and Cinnaire Solutions, a subsidiary of Cinnaire, a nonprofit community development financial institution, to take on the project. Ethos Development Partners handled most of the development functions, while Cinnaire Solutions acted as a tax-credit guarantor and a technical assistance provider; Cinnaire also coordinated the effort to add Transfiguration School to the National Register of Historic Places. The archdiocese ultimately sold the property to this development partnership for $250,000, and the developers began work on the 23,743-square-foot building in 2021.

Transfiguration Place Apartments opened in January 2022. The apartments — 17 one-bedroom and 2 two-bedroom units — are available to tenants earning no more than 50 percent of the area median income. In March 2022, this worked out to $28,000 annually for individuals (based on 2021’s income limits) and up to $40,000 annually for a household of four. All units are supported by project-based housing choice vouchers provided by the Detroit Housing Commission.

Photograph of the back and side façades of a brick building, with original historic windows.  As part of the process of converting the historic school building into residential use, developers replaced the original exterior windows, updated the building’s ventilation and electrical systems, and remediated lead and asbestos. Photo credit: O’Brien Construction

Preserving Details of Transfiguration School

Joseph Heaphy, president of Ethos Development Partners, characterized the building as having been “remarkably well-kept” by the local parish despite its period of vacancy. Even so, the structure’s age — and the fact that it was not originally intended for residential use — meant that the adaptive reuse project was a substantial undertaking. The team replaced the building’s electrical systems; installed modern heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems; and remediated the lead and asbestos present in the structure. The developers replaced the school’s original exterior windows, which were short, with each pair of windows topped with a span of glass block. To admit more light and reduce heat loss, the rehabilitation team replaced the windows and the glass block with large loft windows.

The developers converted the school’s classrooms into apartments, a process that Heaphy says was relatively straightforward after the building’s systems were updated to accommodate residential use. Although the apartment interiors are now largely modern in appearance, some units feature the school’s original wooden chalkboard frames, which are built into their walls to function as an attractive border. Hallways in the building retained some of the original classroom doors for decorative purposes, and to meet the standards of the National Park Service, the body that governs the National Register of Historic Places. The result is that, while unit interiors are contemporary, walking Transfiguration Place Apartments’ hallways feels like walking back in time: the building’s halls are wider than those of a typical apartment complex and feature child-sized drinking fountains as well as original interior-facing windows that once looked in on classrooms but now face interior walls for tenant privacy. “The halls make you feel very much like you’re in a school,” said Heaphy.

The redevelopment added a laundry room and a small community room on the first floor. No onsite parking exists at Transfiguration Place Apartments, although street parking is available immediately adjacent to the building, and the development offers bicycle racks.

Development costs for Transfiguration Place Apartments totaled $7.2 million. A substantial portion of the development’s funding came from equity from tax credit awards, including nearly $2 million in low-income housing tax credits and $1.1 million in historic preservation tax credits. The remaining sum consisted of city of Detroit HOME Investment Partnerships Program funds and community development block grants, a loan from the Michigan State Housing Development Authority, a deferred developer fee, and other sources.

A Tradition of Faith Communities

As of March 2022, Transfiguration Place Apartments is fully leased. Heaphy reports that Ethos Development Partners has partnered with Catholic Charities of Southeast Michigan to perform a similar adaptive reuse project to convert the former St. Matthew School in Detroit into 46 units of affordable housing. Faith communities like Transfiguration Parish frequently own unused properties in dense urban areas, because their congregations’ needs have changed over the decades. It is common for a parish to require less space or to no longer need a school, convent, orphanage, or other building. Projects utilizing these unused buildings are valuable because they simultaneously avert the problems associated with vacant buildings and contribute the benefits of affordable housing to the community.

Source:

Candice Williams. 2022. “Detroit's Transfiguration School set to reopen as affordable housing complex.” Detroit News, 24 January. Accessed 3 March 2022; City of Detroit. 2022. “Mayor Duggan helps open former Transfiguration School after $7.2 million conversion to affordable housing,” news, 24 January. Accessed 14 March 2022. ×

Source:

Documents from Joseph Heaphy, president, Ethos Development Partners, 11 March 2022; City of Detroit. 2022. “Mayor Duggan helps open former Transfiguration School after $7.2 million conversion to affordable housing,” news, 24 January. Accessed 14 March 2022; Detroit Church Blog. 2013. “Transfiguration Church (Blessed John Paul II Parish),” blog, 30 December. Accessed 6 April 2022; Interview with Joseph Heaphy, president, Ethos Development Partners, 11 March 2022. ×

Source:

City of Detroit. 2022. “Mayor Duggan helps open former Transfiguration School after $7.2 million conversion to affordable housing,” news, 24 January. Accessed 14 March 2022; Kat Stafford. 2017. “$6M project to transform Catholic school into housing in Detroit's Banglatown.” Detroit Free Press, 21 September. Accessed 3 March 2022. ×

Source:

City of Detroit. 2022. “Mayor Duggan helps open former Transfiguration School after $7.2 million conversion to affordable housing,” news, 24 January. Accessed 14 March 2022; Ethos Development Partners. n.d. “About us.” Accessed 3 March 2022; Cinnaire. n.d. “History.” Accessed 3 March 2022; Interview with Joseph Heaphy, president, Ethos Development Partners, 11 March 2022.×

Source:

Interview with Joseph Heaphy, president, Ethos Development Partners, 11 March 2022; City of Detroit. 2022. “Mayor Duggan helps open former Transfiguration School after $7.2 million conversion to affordable housing,” news, 24 January. Accessed 14 March 2022; U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 2021. “FY 2021 Median Family Income and Income Limits for Detroit-Warren-Livonia, MI HUD Metro FMR Area." Accessed 22 March 2021. ×

Source:

Interview with Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022; Documents from Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022; Correspondence from Joseph Heaphy, 15 March 2022.×

Source:

Interview with Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022; Max Ortiz. 2022. “Transfiguration Place Apartments,” Detroit News, 24 January. Accessed 3 March 2022; Correspondence from Joseph Heaphy, 11 and 15 March 2022.  ×

Source:

Interview with Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022. ×

Source:

Candice Williams. 2022. “Detroit's Transfiguration School set to reopen as affordable housing complex.” Detroit News, 24 January. Accessed 3 March 2022; Correspondence from Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022. ×

Source:

Catholic Charities USA. 2022. “Update from Detroit: St. Matthew Project a Reflection of Parish Partnership,” news, 11 February. Accessed 14 March 2022; Correspondence from Joseph Heaphy, 15 March 2022; Catholic Charities USA. 2020. “Converting Surplus Church Property into Affordable Housing.” Accessed 30 March 2022; Interview with Joseph Heaphy, 11 March 2022. ×

 
 
Published Date: 28 June 2022


The contents of this article are the views of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development or the U.S. Government.