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NDC Public- Private Partnership - National Development Council

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On the cover: The Center for Urban Waters<br />

University of Washington<br />

Biomedical Research Facility<br />

nationaldevelopmentcouncil.org<br />

Seattle, WA 98101<br />

1218 3rd Avenue, Suite 1403<br />

S e a t t l e O f f i c e<br />

NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT<br />

AbouT<br />

<strong>NDC</strong><br />

<strong>NDC</strong> was founded in 1969 with a simple<br />

but powerful mission: increase the flow<br />

of capital for investment, jobs and<br />

community development to distressed<br />

communities throughout the country.<br />

Since then, we have become one of<br />

the leading national non-profit<br />

community and economic development<br />

organizations in the U.S.<br />

We provide a unique combination of<br />

development finance and capacity building<br />

services to our community partners:<br />

development assistance, training and<br />

professional certification, financing and<br />

direct development services.<br />

Nordheim Housing<br />

<strong>NDC</strong>’s <strong>Public</strong>-<strong>Private</strong><br />

<strong>Partnership</strong><br />

Finance Model<br />

The Best of Both Worlds<br />

<strong>NDC</strong> employs a talented and dedicated<br />

group of development finance experts<br />

including former bankers, developers,<br />

entrepreneurs, community and economic<br />

development officials, and government<br />

agency lenders who partner with<br />

governments and non-profit organizations<br />

to create jobs, develop affordable housing<br />

and generate investment in underserved<br />

urban and rural communities across<br />

the country.<br />

Ninth and Jefferson Building


<strong>NDC</strong> <strong>Public</strong>-<strong>Private</strong><br />

<strong>Partnership</strong> Financing<br />

The Center for Urban Waters Interior<br />

With decades of successful experience in<br />

financing and community development,<br />

<strong>NDC</strong> has forged a unique form of publicprivate<br />

partnerships that has resulted in over<br />

$2.0 billion in projects for local governments<br />

and non-profit and public institutions.<br />

<strong>NDC</strong>’s public-private partnerships marry<br />

a rigorous public selection and oversight<br />

process with tax-exempt financing vehicles,<br />

501(c)(3) bonds and 63-20 bonds, named<br />

for the IRS rulings which permit them. The result?<br />

The efficiency and speed of private development in<br />

combination with public accountability in building,<br />

owning and operating public and municipal facilities<br />

including city halls, office and research facilities,<br />

parking garages, infrastructure and student housing.<br />

“The public-private partnership<br />

successfully delivered the project.<br />

Leveraging the private sector expertise<br />

of the developer and contractor<br />

delivered a 13% reduction in overall<br />

cost per square foot over initial project<br />

estimates, savings which funded project<br />

enhancements and improved building<br />

efficiency for tenants.“<br />

- King County Final Oversight Report on the<br />

Ninth and Jefferson Building<br />

By creating special purpose non-profit corporations<br />

through <strong>NDC</strong>’s development arm, <strong>NDC</strong> Housing<br />

and Economic <strong>Development</strong> Corporation (HEDC),<br />

<strong>NDC</strong> is able to issue 501(c)(3) and 63-20 bonds on<br />

behalf of a local government or non-profit or public<br />

institution. Once built, the project is leased to the<br />

public or non-profit entity until the bonds are retired,<br />

when the building is transferred at little or no<br />

cost to that entity. Add to that the streamlined<br />

and collaborative development process, which<br />

preserves the public input and oversight<br />

components characteristic of public sector<br />

development, and the result is a facility that can<br />

cost between 10 and 30 percent less than one built<br />

through typical public sector processes.<br />

<strong>NDC</strong>’S model<br />

provides that:<br />

• All facilities are transferred to public<br />

ownership at no additional cost to<br />

the public<br />

• All excess income after operating<br />

costs and appropriate reserves, is<br />

used for public purposes<br />

• Construction and development risk<br />

are transferred from the public<br />

entity to the developer, who<br />

oversees the architect and contractor<br />

• <strong>Public</strong> interest in the asset is<br />

preserved through a structure that<br />

gives the public a decisive role in<br />

key decisions affecting the property<br />

Chinook Building<br />

Redmond City Hall<br />

King Street Center

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