Wilmington's $4.2M Affordable Housing Bet Hinges on Unknowns
The Wilmington Land Bank is pressing ahead with one of the city's most ambitious affordable housing initiatives, even as uncertainty clouds the project's core promise. In December 2024, the Christina School District transferred the Elbert-Palmer property in Southbridge to the Land Bank. The state then allocated $1.2 million for demolition and sitework, followed by $3 million in American Rescue Plan Act funding—more than $2 million of which will subsidize the homes.
Bud Freel, director of the Wilmington Land Bank, estimates construction costs at more than $300,000 per unit for the 30 three-bedroom, one-and-a-half-bath townhomes planned for the site. Each will span 1,500 square feet with a porch, backyard, and driveway. Freel said government dollars will allow the Land Bank to undercut development costs, but the final listing price hinges on factors beyond the organization's control: the number of subsidies secured, construction cost savings through the forthcoming building contract, and whether the city can attract additional funding.
"As we sit here today, I cannot give you a number on what we're going to be able to list these houses for," Freel told Spotlight Delaware. Caroline Klinger, spokeswoman for Mayor John Carney, echoed that caution, saying affordability will be determined by individual buyers' incomes. "It would be premature to put out a number that would not apply to all buyers, considering the different makeup of household income when determining affordability," Klinger said. The federal government defines affordable housing as properties where occupants pay no more than 30 percent of gross income on housing costs.
The project emerged from direct community input. The initial plan called for 20 townhomes and a neighborhood park, but members of the Southbridge Civic Association preferred more housing over green space, prompting the Land Bank to expand to 30 units. Freel is also pursuing an additional $500,000 from New Castle County—funds originally designated for the Land Bank's West Side work—to further bolster subsidies. The question now is whether those dollars will be enough to keep Southbridge affordable for the residents who call it home.
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