Close Icon

September 17, 2025


Groundbreaking: 59 Affordable Apartments in Pacific Beach for People with Low Income and Veterans Experiencing Homelessness


The San Diego Housing Commission awarded a loan and rental housing vouchers to support the Rose Creek Village development


SAN DIEGO, CA — Located about two miles from the beach and a mile from a transit center in one of San Diego’s high-opportunity communities, the Rose Creek Village development celebrated its groundbreaking today, commemorating the start of construction that will produce 59 new studio apartments with rents affordable to households with low income.

“Projects this extraordinary only happen when we come together as a community and work together to get this done,” San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria said. “I think this is really exciting, and it’s a template for what we ought to be doing more of in our community.”

The City of San Diego awarded a $4 million loan to Rose Creek Village through the City’s Bridge to Home program. Additionally, permits were processed through the City’s Affordable Housing Permit Now program, which Mayor Gloria said averages eight days to review projects like Rose Creek Village, and the development received a density bonus from the City.

“Every community in San Diego deserves to have housing that is affordable for residents to live in,” said City Council President Pro Tem Kent Lee, Chair of the Council’s Land Use and Housing Committee. “We’re going to continue to fight for that to ensure that we continue to place housing next to the great jobs, the great schools, and the good transit that we have in our region.”

San Diego Community Housing Corporation (SDCHC) and National Community Renaissance of California (National CORE) are developing Rose Creek Village in collaboration with the City of San Diego, the County of San Diego, the San Diego Housing Commission (SDHC) and additional partners.

“It takes a lot of work just to get to this point in the development process and a lot more work will be done in the coming months as Rose Creek Village takes shape,” SDHC Senior Vice President of Real Estate Development Colin Miller said. “We know that breaking ground today brings us that much closer to at least 59 more people in our community, including 18 veterans, having a place to call home that they can afford.”

SDHC awarded a $2 million loan to support the development. SDHC’s loan consists of funds SDHC administers, including HOME Investment Partnerships Program funds that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development awards to the City of San Diego and the City of San Diego’s Affordable Housing Fund.

SDHC also awarded 47 housing vouchers to help Rose Creek Village residents pay rent. Of those, 18 are Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) vouchers for veterans experiencing homelessness. These vouchers are tied directly to this development, so when a household moves on, the voucher remains to help another household with low income.

“This development will remain affordable for 55 years and it’ll be situated in the community designated as a high-resource area by the State of California,” said David Estrella, Director of the County of San Diego’s Health and Human Services Agency’s Housing and Community Development Services department. “By assisting with the creation of affordable housing and pairing that with much-needed services, we’re improving the health of future residents, creating a safe and livable environment for them and cultivating opportunities for these future residents to thrive.”

The County awarded a loan of more than $4 million to Rose Creek Village through the No Place Like Home program.

Veterans residing at Rose Creek Village with VASH vouchers will be identified through the Regional Task Force on Homelessness’ Coordinated Entry System. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) San Diego Healthcare System will provide supportive services for these residents.

“When we look at last year’s Point-in-Time Count, we dropped overall the total number of sheltered and unsheltered veterans by 26 percent,” said Dr. Frank Pearson, Director of the VA San Diego Healthcare System. “I want to acknowledge how that’s all happened, and it’s teamwork. It’s this collaboration that we talk about.”

Rose Creek Village will remain affordable for 55 years for households with incomes up to 60 percent of San Diego’s Area Median Income (AMI), currently $69,480 per year for a one-person household. There will be one unrestricted manager’s unit in addition to the 59 affordable apartments.

“We believe it’s the right project here—at the right time, in the right place. It addresses the housing, the infrastructure, and the revitalization needs of Garnet (Avenue) and does so in a way that at least the developers and many of the community people living here today believe is in character and is in scale with the surrounding neighborhood,” said John Seymour, National CORE’s Vice President of Acquisitions and Forward Planning for San Diego.

“We felt strongly that this was a community that needed housing,” said John Wurster, SDCHC’s Senior Vice President of Development. “I think when this is built, not just the people in this room who are real believers and easy to convince, but the public is going to see what a community good and benefit that this project is going to be.”

The Hope Through Housing Foundation, a nonprofit affiliate of National CORE, will be the property’s lead service provider, offering a variety of services to residents, such as financial literacy, computer training, home-buyer education, GED classes, resume building classes, ESL, nutrition class, exercise class, health information/awareness, art class, parenting class, on-site food cultivation and preparation classes, and smoking cessation classes.

“I have no doubt Rose Creek will change lives,” said AJ Galka, Assistant Vice President of Operations and Supportive Housing for the Hope Through Housing Foundation. “It’s going to give people more than just a roof. It will give them roots, established roots, and from those roots, incredible things will grow.”

Rose Creek Village is being constructed west of Interstate 5 and north of Mission Bay, in San Diego’s Pacific Beach neighborhood. Three San Diego Metropolitan Transit System bus stops are within a mile of the property, and it is approximately one mile from the Balboa Avenue Transit Station where trolley service is available on the Blue Line.

The site is adjacent to the Rose Creek walking and biking trail. It is also within walking distance of grocery stores, schools, restaurants and parks. The property will be entirely powered by electricity, and will use rooftop and façade solar panels.

Connect with SDHC on social media:

###

Media Contact:
Scott Marshall,
Vice President of Communications
San Diego Housing Commission
619-578-7138
scottm@sdhc.org

Let's get you there…

I am looking for…