

Received $686,306 in CCED funds to create a mixed-use building with 4 affordable housing units. Received $667,718 in CCED funds to create 9 affordable mixed-income units. Sisters in Christ Serenity House – 2604 Lockridge RoadĪwarded $678,268 in CCED funds toward the renovation of 5 transitional units.Flora Avenue Apartments and Childcare – 2103-2105 Flora AvenueĪwarded $573,743 in CCED funds toward developing 6 residential housing units, with 2 of those being affordable housing units.Jazz District III – South side of 18th and VineĪwarded $4 million in CCED funds toward developing a mixed-used building with 48 brand new affordable housing units.Received $3 million in CCED funds to go toward remodeling the 60-year-old building and creating 51 total residential housing units, with 15 of those being affordable housing units.

Sanford B Ladd School Redevelopment Project – 3640 Benton Boulevard.Received $836,049 in CCED funds to go toward the new construction of 24 residential housing units, 12 of those are affordable housing units. The funding will also prioritize the implementation of a blight and clearance initiative to redevelop formally blighted parcels into new housing. These funds are used for construction of mixed-income housing, preservation of existing rental housing and owner-occupied housing. A 1/8 percent sales tax generating revenue to fund economic development projects on the east side of Kansas City was approved by the voters citywide. The Central City Economic Development sales tax district started in 2017. Through the Central City Economic Development (CCED) fund, $11.9 million was allocated in 2023 to 10 projects, with over half of those projects adding affordable residential units across the funding district. Kansas City is committed to investing in housing opportunities to close affordability gaps, generate new forms of transitional services, rehabilitate and repurpose infrastructure, and revitalize neighborhoods.
