Seattle.gov Home Page
Seattle.gov This Department
Link to OED Home Page Link to OED Home Page Link to OED About Us Page Link to OED Contact Us Page
Start, Grow, or Green Your Business Stephen H. Johnson, Director
Business Owners Business Districts Key Industries News and Resources
Support for Business Districts
Tools for Business Districts
Only in Seattle Marketing Campaign
Business Improvement Areas
Create a Thriving Business District
Demographic Data
Funding
Only in Seattle Initiative
Community Development Corporations
City of Seattle Funding
Private Funders
Technical Assistance & Training for NBDs
OED Support
Non-Profit Training
Farmers Markets
Real Estate Financing
Real Estate Products
Examples
Rainier Valley Community Development Fund
SODO Action Agenda
South Park Action Agenda
Pioneer Square Action Agenda
University District Commercial Revitalization Plan
Map of Neighborhoods
Map
Alphabetical List of Neighborhoods

Real Estate Financing

The Office of Economic Development provides low interest loans for mid-sized and large mixed-use and commercial projects. Both for-profit and non-profit developers or community developers may be eligible.

OED funds projects that achieve significant public benefits including:

  • Creation of jobs;
  • Affordable housing that will support neighborhood businesses while helping to preserve a diverse economic base of residents; and
  • Redevelopment of abandoned or underutilized property that will contribute to the revitalization of the City’s business districts.

For additional funding assistance contact:
Ken Takahashi, Business Development Finance Manager
ken.takahashi@seattle.gov
206-684-8378

Back to Top

Real Estate Products

OED provides both short-term and long-term loans. Loans may be available for acquisition financing, construction bridge financing, and permanent financing. A summary of OED’s real estate products is described below:

 

Section 108 Loan

Float Loan

Fund Source

HUD funds

Community Development Block Grant Funds (CDBG)

Eligible Uses

  • Site acquisition
  • Development soft costs
  • Construction costs (prevailing Davis/Bacon wage rates apply)
  • Site acquisition
  • Development soft costs
  • Construction costs
    (prevailing Davis/Bacon wage rates apply)

Goals

  • To create jobs benefiting low/moderate income individuals
  • Affordable housing
  • Revitalize business districts
  • To create jobs benefiting low/moderate income individuals
  • Affordable housing
  • Revitalize business districts

Interest Rate

  • Fixed via HUD public offering; or
  • Floating (20 basis points above 90 day LIBOR, adjusted monthly: 5.56% as of December 2006)

1-2% fixed

Origination Fee

1% fee paid at closing

1% fee paid at closing

Security

Deed of trust and/or other security from borrower, with loan to value ratio not to exceed 80%.

Bank issued, on-demand, irrevocable letter of credit

Term

Up to 20 years

30 months

Back to Top

Examples of Real Estate Financing Projects

1. Rainier Court3700 Rainier Ave S (Southeast Seattle)

   

OED provided a $2.5 million CDBG Float Loan to Southeast Effective Development (SEED), for acquisition of Phase 1 of the Rainier Court project. Phase 1 of the project (completed) includes 208 units of affordable senior housing and 9,000 square feet of ground floor commercial. Phase 1 is part of an overall 7 acre project that will revitalize an environmentally contaminated, underutilized area into a vibrant mixed use development, creating affordable housing (rental and home ownership) and jobs.

More information on the Rainier Court Project is available at SouthEast Effective Development (SEED).

2. Cadillac Hotel – 2 nd and Jackson Street (Pioneer Square)

 

OED provided a $2.04 million Section 108 Loan to Historic Seattle, for acquisition of the Cadillac Hotel. The historic Cadillac Hotel suffered serious damage during the 2001 Nisqually Earthquake and needed significant repair. Upon completion of rehabilitation, the Cadillac Hotel became the new home of the Klondike Gold Rush National Historic Museum and also contains the regional headquarters of the National Park Service.   The project received a National Trust for Historic Preservation Award in November, 2006.

More information on this project is available on the Historic Seattle website at
http://www.historicseattle.org/projects/cadillachotelbriefh.aspx

Back to Top