A corner parcel along Venice Boulevard in Harvard Heights is being eyed for a new affordable housing development that would replace an existing auto repair use with a six-story residential building constructed using modular methods. Plans filed with the Los Angeles Department of City Planning in March outline a proposal at 2150 Venice Boulevard for a 69-unit apartment building developed by 2150 MSB Capital, LLC. The project, branded Venice Gardens, would occupy a prominent intersection site and introduce income-restricted housing without providing on-site vehicle parking.
Project materials describe a residential program composed almost entirely of one-bedroom apartments, all reserved for low- and moderate-income households, with the exception of a single manager’s unit. The absence of parking reflects the project’s affordable housing focus and its location along a major transit corridor.
Architecture for the proposal is being handled by KFA Architecture, with plans calling for a contemporary building assembled from prefabricated modular components. The modular approach is intended to streamline construction while maintaining a uniform building mass across the six-story structure.
The Venice Boulevard proposal sits within a growing cluster of affordable housing developments in the area. A separate low-income residential project has also been proposed a short distance east at 2225 Venice Boulevard, signaling continued interest in leveraging underutilized commercial parcels for income-restricted housing along the corridor.
If approved, the project would contribute nearly 70 deed-restricted apartments to a neighborhood where new residential construction has remained limited, while continuing the citywide shift toward higher-density, transit-oriented affordable housing development.
Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail
Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews






Be the first to comment on "Modular Affordable Housing Proposed at 2150 Venice Boulevard in Harvard Heights"