Low-Income Condo Residents Say D.C.'s Demand That They Pay for Restoring Historic Balconies Will Force Them Out of Their Homes
The $1.5 million that it would cost to fully replace balconies at the historic Kenesaw apartment building could end up tripling the condo fees of some low-income residents.

Historical preservation officials in Washington, D.C., are demanding that expensive aesthetic renovations be done to a condo building over the objections of the buildings' residents, some of whom are low-income and say the expense of the work will force them to move.
At issue are 25 crumbling balconies sprouting from the third floor of the 115-year-old Kenesaw building in the city's Mount Pleasant neighborhood that currently pose a safety hazard and need to be either replaced or removed entirely.
Replacing the balconies would cost a full $1.5 million, and require applying special assessments on residents ranging from $10,000 to $28,000. That could end up tripling the condo fees of some of the building's 15 low-income households who currently pay below-market rates for their homes, and who say they won't be able to afford the increase.
"The only way they could afford the repairs is to leave," said Neha Desai, president of the building's Renaissance Condominium Association, to DCist, which first reported on the story earlier this week.
The Renaissance Condominium Association and the Kenesaw Phoenix Cooperative, which owns 29 of the building's 87 units, have thus proposed a number of more affordable repair options. That includes a $750,000 plan to replace the 25 balconies with decorative railing.
The idea seems reasonable enough.
Complicating things is the fact that the Kenesaw apartment building is located in not one, but two, of D.C.'s historic districts. That means applications for building permits typically must undergo special review by the city's Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) to ensure the proposed work is "compatible" with the historic character of the district.
Those requirements give government officials and neighborhood preservationists an opportunity to butt into Kenesaw residents' own plans for their buildings. Both groups are dead set on preventing the removal of the Kenesaw's balconies.
Doing so "would significantly degrade the architectural integrity of the building as well as the character of the two historic districts to which it contributes," wrote Fay Armstrong, president of Historic Mount Pleasant, in testimony to HPRB.
HPRB staff also recommended that the board reject Kenesaw's plans to remove and replace those 25 balconies, writing in a staff report that "the balconies are an original, distinctive feature. Removing them would not enhance the property, and the loss of the balconies would degrade, rather than retain, its character."
Kenesaw residents made their own pleas to the board to show some flexibility.
"As an owner and senior on a fixed income, I am [concerned] that this project would impact low-income residents greatly and cause a financial burden," wrote one resident in a letter to the HPRB.
"Forcing long-term residents out of the building due to financial hardship in order to preserve the balconies would destroy the spirit of the building. I love the balconies, but not at that cost," said another. "It would be best if DC could subsidize the repair instead of making residents pay an enormous cost. But if the cost can't be subsidized, please allow the removal."
These pleas failed to move the HPRB, which voted unanimously in September to reject plans to remove those 25 balconies.
The board is only supposed to consider the interests of preservation and functional necessity, and if necessary, find some balance between the two. Kenesaw apartment residents have therefore appealed to the mayor's agent, an official who can reverse the HPRB's recommendations if they find that denying a permit would result in "unreasonable economic hardship."
A public hearing where building residents can make their case is scheduled for late January.
Emergency legislation passed by the D.C. City Council also makes the Kenesaw building eligible for $250,000 in grants to help cover the renovation costs.
DCist reports that even with the grant, low-income households would still be facing unaffordable fee increases, which are based on a unit's square footage, not its owner's income.
Special assessments of the kind that Kenesaw residents are being asked to pay are often imposed by governments to cover the costs of infrastructure or a public project.
Typically, these assessments are for projects that provide a particular benefit to the property owners being charged—say a new sidewalk in front of someone's house. Even then, owners can chafe at being charged for a benefit they didn't necessarily ask for.
The inflated special assessments that Kenesaw residents are being hit with are arguably more offensive. The benefits of the $1.5 million balcony replacement are purely aesthetic and accrue mostly to a narrow segment of city residents that like looking at the building.
The people who live inside the building, meanwhile, might not be able to afford to stay there much longer.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Historical preservation officials could pay for it out of their own pockets.
Chumby beat me to it.
Chumby beats it to me.
Historically, they try to preserve what's in their own pockets.
An accidental fire would fix everything. You could then build new condos on site.
New affordable condos!
"New affordable condos!"
Do not exist in DC.
It would be best if DC could subsidize the repair instead of making residents pay an enormous cost.
Everyone like free stuff.
Yup. Free is the best most motivating price.
Couldn't DC's historical preservation officials focus on preserving something useful instead, like the Bill of Rights?
The perils of below market rents. Not enough money for maintenance.
Yep.
110 tips for learn English(s)
Feature, not a bug.
I'm at the point in my life where i believe if you vote for progressives you forfeit your rights. If these asshole didn't want to be displaced from their home then they should vote for the cancer cells that are progressives
I am not sympathetic. This is a known drawback of buying a condo. There can be unpredictable maintenance expenses on a large building, especially on older buildings. Condo members have little control over condo fees. Unlike mortgages, condo fees typically go up and up. Adults know this, but they gamble.
Lesson #1 in buying a residence; own the land. Thanks, husband #1!
Lesson #1 in buying a residence; own the land
own? hah..i think you mean perpetually rent the land from the local/county/state gov by paying property taxes 🙁
Sincerely,
a land "owner"
Valid point! Thanks!
There are unpredictable expenses in your own land too. You have more choice in how to deal with them, but you also have more hassle.
November Oscar's gets clearance to 28R over Novembe Juliet.
I'm guessing the "low-income" condo residents voted for this, one way or another.
FYI, this is how we keep property values in check. Just sayin'
Well I wouldn't want to piss off of a balcony that's in disrepair. It would just be a scandal in the social pages.
So why do sixty-four residents who don’t have balconies have to pay for balconies for the twenty-five who do?
Or are the balconies “common areas” available for all residents to use?
And to all of those fighting this I say “Move now, even if you win this round, the next time you’ll more than likely lose.”
Short answer: that’s what the CCRs say. Rationale: the whole HOA gets to decide what they look like and how they are maintained, so the whole HOA needs to pay.
These differences are priced into the different purchase prices of the units. If you don’t like the arrangement, don’t buy.
I never knew, until now, a crumbling balcony had historical value.
Oh, the most amazing things have "historical value." We had an example here in Atlanta. A homeowner in a historic district wanted to replace an ugly semicircular concrete stoop on his '30s-era house.
The historic district said no.
He pointed out that the porch he wanted to substitute was in the original plans, but the stoop was substituted when the original owner ran out of money (the thirties, remember.)
That cut no ice with the historic district.
All right, said the owner, do you have any regulations on what color I can paint the house?
The historic district shuffled its feet and said no, it didn't.
So he painted it white with big purple polka dots.
The historic district caved.
Ok, I like this guy.
You'll like this owner even more:
"‘Flintstone House' Owner Wins $125K Settlement From Town of Hillsborough"
[...]
"A four-year community dispute ended this spring when the town of Hillsborough quietly agreed to pay a $125,000 settlement to the owner of the "Flintstone House" in a clash over the homeowner's yard display..."
https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/flintstone-house-owner-wins-125k-settlement-from-town-of-hillsborough/2581122/
Apparently, the DC government has priced the poor out of the Kenesaw before.
http://househistoryman.blogspot.com/2012/03/kenesaw-apartment-building-at-16th-and.html?m=1
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: we'd only need to tar and feather a handful of these scumbag apparatchiki every year to make the rest of them clean up their act.
-jcr
Tar and lit matches would be more effective.
I believe this is what you call a "built-in feature".
I'm finding it hard to muster up any pity for people who would voluntarily live in DC.
Historical preservation or not, if you live in an aging condo building, you have to be able to pay substantial special assessments; such unpredictable expenses come up the same way for any property you own. The only way to avoid them is to rent.
Forcing them out may be the whole point. Former residents can then be replaced with tax collection bureaucrats and asset-forfeiture narc squads to prey on the productive without needing to commute.
Historic Districts - more whiny liberals telling other people what they can do with their own property. They are just Home Owner Associations foisted upon people who never agreed to be part of an HOA.
They always seem to have a brother in law or best friend with a landscape or contractor business.
Why the decorative railing- 750k is insane? Remove and demolish the balconies. Stucco in the attachments. Locksmith the French doors so that kids cannot open them. I just saved the HOA around 600k. If a market rate owner wants decorate railings, owner pays out of pocket.
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