See the Work

Randolph Place Apartments

An 1896 school building renovated for low-income seniors

“This is where I started my education. I never thought I’d come back again, I never dreamed of it.”

— Dorothy Tyler Allen, resident, Randolph Place Apartments

Listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register, Randolph Place is a 50-unit senior housing community in the heart of Randolph, a historic Richmond neighborhood. Formerly a public school, the original building was constructed in 1896 and added onto in 1946. After several years of vacancy the building was converted from a school into senior housing in 1986. And several of the current residents once attended school in this building where they now live.

The building anchors a corner in a redeveloped community of single-family homes. An adjacent community center opens to a six-acre public park with recreational facilities and open play spaces. With a bus stop less than a block away and a shops and restaurants three blocks away, Randolph Place embodies the essence of urban living.

The existing unit floor plans remained the same and current residents were able to stay in the building as the renovations were done a few at a time. The building envelope was repaired and upgraded, with a new roof, repaired windows and new exterior storm windows. With residents earning below 50% of area median income, it was imperative to lower monthly utility costs to ensure long-term affordability for the residents. In response to this need, the units were updated with new kitchens, Energy Star appliances, new HVAC systems and Energy Star light fixtures and bath fans.

Joshua managed the EarthCraft and Green Communities green building programs. These programs ensured that the renovations increased the health and comfort of the apartments for the residents and conserved local and regional resources. Joshua was also the Landscape Architect for the project, designing a productive landscape with a community garden, gathering spaces and native plants. The Rose Fellowship has helped BHC advance their green building efforts by using third-party certified green building programs in their development work.

Project Summary

Location:
Richmond, Virginia
Randolph Neighborhood
Program Scope
Affordable rental housing units
Child-care facilities
Common residential amenity room (2,000 sq ft)
Common courtyards/terraces
Community garden (60 sq ft)
Retail units
Structured parking units
Project Status
Completed, October 2007
Location:
Richmond, Virginia
Randolph Neighborhood
Project Scope
30,209 sq ft gross site area
Rehabilitation
3 stories
46,697 sq ft gross project area
Program Scope
Affordable rental housing units
Child-care facilities
Common residential amenity room (2,000 sq ft)
Common courtyards/terraces
Community garden (60 sq ft)
Retail units
Structured parking units
Residential Unit Profile

Affordable units serve very low income households.

2Studio807-807 sq ft
481 BR940-940 sq ft
50TOTAL
Green Benchmarks
EarthCraft House
Green Communities
Cost
917,440Acquisition (land)
1,792,124Hard (construction)
2,270,280Soft (all other)
4,979,844TOTAL
Project Status
Completed, October 2007

Enterprise Community Partners