Concept rendering of the proposed 100‑unit Ramona Senior Housing at 280 Ramona St., showing courtyard and covered paratransit area.
Pasadena, California, September 8, 2025
The Pasadena City Council will consider an amended development and 99‑year lease for Ramona Senior Housing, a proposed five‑story, 100‑unit affordable building at 280 Ramona St. The $83.1 million project would provide 99 units for low‑income seniors and one manager unit. The Council is asked to recognize $5 million in State Local Housing Trust Fund support and account for roughly $19.24 million in city support (including a ground lease value and state construction loans). The project was previously CEQA in‑fill exempt; design approval is complete and the developer is seeking additional financing to close a reported funding gap.
The Pasadena City Council will consider a set of administrative actions on Monday that would advance a five‑story, 100‑unit senior affordable housing project at 280 Ramona St. in the Civic Center. The council is scheduled to vote on amended business terms of a development and lease agreement with National Community Renaissance of California and to recognize $5 million in State Local Housing Trust Fund dollars in the Housing Department’s FY2026 operating budget.
The proposed development, called Ramona Senior Housing, is an $83.1 million project featuring 100 units—99 units set aside for low‑income seniors and one unit for an on‑site resident manager. The building was approved by the city’s Design Commission in 2024 and will include a community room, a courtyard and on‑site management offices. Several units are reserved for seniors experiencing homelessness.
City support for the project totals about $19.24 million, composed of a $14.49 million ground lease value and the proposed $4.75 million construction loan portion of the State Local Housing Trust Fund award. The full state allocation also includes $250,000 for administrative support.
Other identified funding sources include $2.76 million in federal HOME program allocations and $8.19 million in loans from Los Angeles County’s No Place Like Home program. That county program will also provide rental vouchers for 48 units. The developer has applied for state Multifamily Finance funds, Low Income Housing Tax Credits and support from the Federal Home Loan Bank. Despite these sources, the developer estimates a funding gap of nearly $50.7 million.
Under the proposed terms, the developer would lease the city‑owned site for 99 years at a rate of $1 per year, and an accompanying regulatory agreement would ensure affordability for the same 99‑year term. The project would be subject to Pasadena’s minimum wage and local hiring rules. City officials characterize the budget and lease amendments as administrative actions not subject to CEQA review; the development itself was previously deemed exempt under the CEQA in‑fill housing category.
The five‑story building will not provide on‑site parking. Instead, it will include a covered loading zone and a dedicated paratransit pickup area along Ramona Street. Amenities are designed to support resident services and community space, but staff noted final operational details remain tied to funding and regulatory approvals.
Along with the Ramona project, the council will consider a range of municipal actions that affect streets, transit, public safety, utilities and homelessness services:
The Ramona project follows recent local seniors housing efforts that combined public land, public funding and supportive services in order to deliver permanent housing for older adults, including examples completed in the last year. Multiple city commissions and committees reviewed related items earlier in the year, and staff reports tie many actions to the city’s General Plan housing goals.
The council will vote on amended business terms of a development and lease agreement with the developer and on recognizing $5 million in State Local Housing Trust Fund dollars in the Housing Department’s FY2026 operating budget.
The project would include 100 units: 99 for low‑income seniors and one for a resident manager, with some units reserved for seniors experiencing homelessness.
Total project cost is about $83.1 million. Identified funding includes city support of roughly $19.24 million, federal HOME funds, county loans and vouchers, state trust fund loans and other financing applications. The developer reports a funding gap near $50.7 million.
No. The design does not include on‑site parking. The project will provide a covered loading zone and a paratransit pickup area along Ramona Street.
The developer would lease the site for 99 years at $1 per year, and a regulatory agreement would require long‑term affordability for the same 99‑year term.
The budget and lease amendments are treated as administrative and not subject to CEQA. The development itself was previously found exempt under the CEQA in‑fill exemption.
Construction timing depends on final financing and permitting. The project has completed design review approval; further scheduling will follow funding and permit clearances.
Feature | Detail |
---|---|
Project site | 280 Ramona St., Pasadena Civic Center |
Units | 100 total (99 low‑income senior units + 1 manager unit) |
Project cost | $83.1 million |
City support | $19.24 million (ground lease value + state construction loan) |
State funding | $4.75 million construction loan + $250,000 admin (State Local Housing Trust Fund) |
Parking | No on‑site parking; covered loading zone and paratransit pickup area |
Lease term | 99 years at $1 per year; affordability covenants for 99 years |
CEQA status | Budget and lease amendments administrative (not CEQA); project previously in‑fill exempt |
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