Roseland Boys and Girls Club

A new boys and girls club provides children with after school enrichment.

Investment

  • NMTC Amount: $17,600,000
  • Total Project Cost: $18,370,426

IMPACT

  • 22 FTE jobs
  • 257 construction jobs
  • 25,000 sq. ft. of real estate

Investor

Project Description

The Boys & Girls Clubs of Sonoma-Marin (“BGCSM”) has been serving youth in the North Bay area of California since 1946 and currently operates 30 clubhouses in Sonoma County. For the past 13 years, the BGCSM has served the Roseland neighborhood, a severely distressed community, in Santa Rosa, CA. BGCSM currently serves 900 youth annually in shared space with community partners and public schools. Due to space constraints and the high demand in the community, approximately 69% of the current school-aged children in the Roseland neighborhood do not have access to the programs provided by the BGCSM. BGCSM is constructing a new 25,000-square-foot clubhouse that will increase capacity to serve 2,500 youth in grades K-12 each year (the “Project”). The Project will include a STEM and tech lab, commercial kitchen, arts and dance studios, a full-size gym, and will also serve as a community center for the Roseland neighborhood. The Project will provide a safe and supportive place to learn and play outside of school hours, with the aim of significantly decreasing truancy, increasing graduation rates, promoting healthy lifestyles, and empowering youth to support their community.

MAP

Address: 1400 North Dutton Avenue, Roseland, CA 95407

Census Tract: 6097153104

Other California Projects

NMTC financing helped expand the facilities of AADAP, a social service provider.
The purchase of the new building will allow SuprMarkt LA to move to a permanent brick and mortar location that will provide them additional space to offer education and healthy
NMTC financing to construct a new, 48,000 square foot facility - The Otis Booth Campus.
The construction of a 67,732 sq. ft. four-story mixed-use project in Pasadena, California that includes 22 low-income, 13 moderate-income, and 11 workforce housing units, 6,167 SF of commercial space, 3,850