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Crescent Growth Capital, LLC

Crescent Growth Capital, LLC

Structuring project financing to incorporate tax credit equity.

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CitySquare

June 28, 2013 by

In 1988, Dallas businessman Jim Sowell was moved by his concern for the problems associated with homelessness and poverty. He took action in response to the human suffering he observed by working with friends to launch the Central Dallas Food Pantry in a strip shopping center at Henderson and Central Expressway.

In 1990, the organization received status as a 501 (c) 3 non-profit corporation and, due to its growth, relocated to larger quarters at 801 N. Peak in East Dallas. In August 1994, current President and CEO, Larry James, joined the organization. Shortly afterwards, Central Dallas Food Pantry began doing business as Central Dallas Ministries and the organization acquired an additional building at 409 N. Haskell, the current location of its food pantry.

On Monday, October 25, 2010 Central Dallas Ministries officially launched under the new name CitySquare.  CitySquare offers a variety of poverty-fighting programs throughout Dallas as well as in Houston, San Antonio and Austin, based on four core values: Community, Faith, Justice and Stewardship.

In February, 2012, CitySquare partnered with Crescent Growth Capital (“CGC”) to develop a financing package for a comprehensive “Opportunity Center” at the Southeast corner of I-30 and Malcolm X Blvd.  The Opportunity Center, a joint effort between CitySquare, PepsiCo, Inc., and Workforce Solutions of Greater Dallas, is a $14MM multi-service 52,000 square foot facility.  It will provide a food distribution center, a new state of the art wellness center, a comprehensive employment training center that will house new offices for Work Force Solutions of Greater Dallas and CitySquare’s WorkPaths employment training division, CitySquare’s AmeriCorps headquarters/offices, and staging areas for CitySquare’s growing Summer and After-School Feeding Program funded by the Texas Department of Agriculture.

In addition, the Center will place key services and economic opportunities in one central location. Currently, our Resource Center/Food Pantry, wellness activities and WorkPaths employment program are located in three separate facilities. Centralizing these key services will create greater economies of scale in staff and resources, and allow us to serve more of our neighbors. Moreover, the Center will leverage our existing partnerships to promote greater stability in the workforce, the programs at the Center, and the overall community.

In June, 2013, CGC helped CitySquare and its partners close and fund a $12.5MM Federal Qualified Equity Investment, utilizing a $12.5MM allocation of Federal New Markets Tax Credits, provided by the Dallas Development Fund, and leveraging $4.1MM of NMTC equity provided by AT&T Corp.

University of the Incarnate Word – Eastside Vision Clinic

September 14, 2012 by

San Antonio’s Eastside neighbohood has long struggled economically, with metro San Antonio income growth and investment largely occuring at the urban periphery. San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro’s administration has pledged to focus attention and resources on the Eastside, an area familiar to Crescent Growth Capital through its involvement in structuring the Healy-Murphy transaction, which closed in April 2011. More recently CGC was able to recommence catalyzing needed investment on the Eastside, thanks to an invitation received from its past client, the University of the Incarnate Word, to execute a $10 million NMTC financing to help fund the Eastside Center for Vision Science & Health Care.

The Eastside Center promises to remedy an acute need for eyecare, as well as support better targeting of social services.  Currently, there is only one eye care specialist maintaining a practice on the Eastside, a sprawling neighborhood of 170,000 residents.  Partnerships with other Eastside social service providers and educational institutions will be implemented, such that activities ranging from literacy assessments to internships for students at a nearby community college, St. Philip’s, will transpire within the new facility.

The Eastside Center itself will be a 30,000 square-foot, new-build public health facility dedicated to bringing badly-needed vision care to the disadvantaged population of the Eastside. Approximately 50,000 patients will be treated annually, with all insurances accepted, including Medicare and Medicaid, and with a sliding fee schedule in place to permit treatment for even the uninsured. The vision clinic will build upon UIW’s pre-existing expertise in providing optometry services to impoverished minority populations, employ 50 permanent staff and generate the additional pedestrian and vehicular traffic essential to bolstering aggregate market demand for new retail establishments on the Eastside.

Lighthouse for the Blind – Multi-Purpose Facility

August 10, 2012 by

Lighthouse for the Blind has been helping low-vision citizens of San Antonio find productive and purposeful vocations since 1933. Every year over 5,000 blind individuals receive assistance from San Antonio Lighthouse, and 250 blind individuals are directly employed in Lighthouse’s manufacturing operation.

Crescent Growth Capital was retained by San Antonio Lighthouse to structure and close a $12.7 million NMTC financing to help fund a new multi-purpose facility. The 60,000 square-foot Southside facility will allow for a significant expansion of Lighthouse’s rehabilitation services and manufacturing operation. The new facility will aid the continued growth of Lighthouse operations, address current facility exhaustion, enable Lighthouse to provide rehabilitation services to an additional 2,000 individuals annually, allow for the creation of 100 additional manufacturing jobs by 2016 – the majority of which will be filled by people who are blind – provide a boost to the local Southside San Antonio economy and position Lighthouse to be financially independent and self-sustaining.

St. Margaret’s Daughters Home

September 8, 2011 by

Mercy Hospital New Orleans was founded in 1924 and relocated to the Mid-City neighborhood in 1953 (pictured above is the original main facade of the 1953 hospital building).  For over fifty years this facility was a principal institutional actor and employment center within both the Museum-City Park Cultural District and the Mid-City National Register Historic District.

Subsequent to the Katrina-induced levee failures in 2005, Tenet Healthcare – which had been operating the facility as Lindy Boggs Medical Center – opted not to reopen it.

In 2007, a demolition permit was secured by the hospital’s new owners; however, their plans for a mixed-use town center stalled.  Three years later, in May of 2010, Crescent Growth Capital arranged an NMTC financing on behalf of St. Margaret’s Daughters Home to purchase the entire blighted, abandoned facility.

The redevelopment of the former Mercy Hospital/Lindy Boggs Medical Center in New Orleans by St. Margaret’s Daughters Home is a multi-phase project whose first manifestation will be the adaptive re-use of the hospital’s medical office buildings to accommodate a new permanent nursing home facility for St. Margaret’s.

Crescent Growth Capital structured and closed a $21.3 million New Markets Tax Credit qualified equity investment to fund both St. Margaret’s acquisition of the entire former hospital and a portion of the construction cost of its new nursing home within the facility.  Subsequent phases will rehabilitate the remainder of the former Mercy facility for medical uses.

In addition to structuring the initial financial closing in 2010, Crescent Growth Capital, in conjunction with its consultants, secured Louisiana State Historic Tax Credit eligibility for the entire former Mercy/Lindy Boggs complex, garnering millions in historic tax credit equity for the project.  The first state historic tax credit financing for the project was accomplished in September of 2011, generating $4 million for St. Margaret’s and enabling the definitive start of construction on Phase I.

CGC, in conjunction with its consultants, also secured for St. Margaret’s $3 million in CDBG funding, in the wake of a successful application to the State of Louisiana’s Project-Based Recovery Opportunity Program (“PROP”).  Financial closing on these funds was achieved in July of 2011.

Belleville Assisted Living Facility

May 18, 2011 by

Restoring job growth to the nation’s economy is the primary objective of policymakers today, and most economists believe that the most significant opportunities for new employment will be found within the healthcare industry. The boomer generation is aging, and the percentage of the nation’s population that is over age 65 is anticipated to increase appreciably in the coming 50 years, generating steady growth in demand for healthcare. Furthermore, ever-increasing longevity on the part of the nation’s elderly, coupled with the geographical fragmentation of the extended family has meant that demand for assisted living services is growing at an even faster rate than demand for healthcare overall.

Like the nation as a whole, New Orleans is in need of additional assisted living capacity, and, in the wake of Katrina, there is an insufficient supply of entry-level job opportunities available to disadvantaged individuals. Crescent Growth Capital was able to help address both challenges by structuring and closing the financing to fund the construction of the new Belleville Assisted Living Facility. The Belleville ALF will provide 53 badly-needed assisted living units in a 55,000 square-foot facility, while simultaneously creating nearly 50 jobs and returning to commerce a historic but blighted school building in New Orleans’ Algiers Point National Register Historic District.

The Belleville ALF is located on New Orleans’ West Bank, across the Mississippi River from the city’s historic core. Extensive development on the West Bank did not begin until the late 1950s, with the completion of the Greater New Orleans Bridge linking downtown to Algiers. For the next thirty years, the West Bank offered middle-income families new, affordable housing, extensive employment opportunities, and plentiful shopping. Conditions began to sour, however, in the wake of the mid-1980s Oil Bust. In a matter of months, the West Bank suffered tens of thousands of job losses; in the succeeding twenty years, poverty, crime and disinvestment increasingly characterized what had been a stereotypically prosperous American suburb.

Belleville ALF constitutes a significant and visible investment on the West Bank. A former elementary school that had lain dormant for over thirty years will be rehabilitated and restored to commerce. The historic fabric extant on the property will be adaptively re-used, embodying the highest aspirations of the green building movement – as there is no greener building than a re-used building. The region’s shortage of assisted living capacity, acutely felt on the West Bank, will be meaningfully eased by Belleville’s 53-unit facility. Most significantly, nearly fifty new jobs will be created, over half of which will be entry-level positions ideal for the West Bank’s disadvantaged low-income population.

Despite demonstrable demand for additional assisted living units, the New Orleans West Bank is considered a challenging location for market rate investment; conventional lenders had been unwilling to underwrite the entire cost of the Belleville facility. In response, Crescent Growth Capital and the principals of the Belleville ALF project devised a capital stack that took advantage of the location’s existing historic fabric as well as the highly-distressed character of the contemplated investment to integrate federal and state historic tax credit equity with the New Markets Tax Credit financing structure.

The tax credit equity generated by this structure lowered the project’s borrowing requirements and enabled the successful underwriting of a smaller conventional loan. Without the use of tax credit equity, it would have been impossible to secure funding sufficient to complete the project.

Healy-Murphy Center

April 11, 2011 by

Founded in 1888 as St. Peter Claver Academy, a school for African-Americans, the Healy-Murphy Center of San Antonio has for the last four decades focused upon at-risk youth of all races and backgrounds. Believing firmly that “change is possible” and that “the traditional way is not the only way”, Healy-Murphy ministers to young parents and parents-to-be. The school was the first accredited alternative high school in Texas and employs self-paced curricula tailored to the individual’s needs. Vocational and mental health counseling as well as early childhood education are offered.

By the turn of the 21st century, Healy-Murphy’s facilities were straining to accommodate the demands of its mission. Crescent Growth Capital was retained to structure a $4.65 million New Markets Tax Credit qualified equity investment to fund a comprehensive renovation of the Healy-Murphy Center.

A pledge from the Sisters of the Holy Spirit and Mary Immaculate was teamed with a portion of Healy-Murphy’s endowment, proceeds from a sale and capital campaign donations to generate a significant additional subsidy of tax credit equity. With sufficient funding finally in hand, Healy-Murphy Center will, in the near future, be operating at last out of updated, modern facilities.

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NEW ORLEANS OFFICE
201 St. Charles Avenue
Suite 4205
New Orleans, LA 70170
504.378.3470

DALLAS OFFICE
13355 Noel Road
Suite 1100
Dallas, TX 75240
214.746.5065

KNOXVILLE OFFICE
1400 Kenesaw Avenue
Unit 11R
Knoxville, TN 37919
504.495.4060

SAN ANTONIO OFFICE
100 W. El Prado Drive
Unit 301
San Antonio, TX 78212
210.355.3313

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