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Anchorage staff propose resident-owned communities, modular cottages to help South Park Estates residents

Anchorage Municipality Special Meeting (Housing Committee) · April 30, 2026

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Summary

Facing contamination, aging infrastructure and a planned closure, staff outlined two pilot solutions—resident-owned communities and modular cottage developments—and noted an owner’s $9,000 relocation offer; residents told the committee they had not yet received promised payments and urged clearer, guaranteed assistance.

Anchorage municipal staff told a special committee on April 29 they are exploring two pilot approaches to preserve affordable mobile-home housing and ease displacement for residents of South Park Estates, a Midtown mobile-home park slated for closure.

Bob Dole, director of Community and Economic Development, said the park faces fuel contamination documented by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation and ongoing boil-water notices. The municipality lacks an easy technical fix because replacing underground galvanized pipes would require moving units, and many older mobile homes cannot be safely relocated.

Staff presented two primary options: a resident-owned community (ROC) model in which the municipality could transfer a parcel to a community entity that would use the land as collateral to finance infrastructure upgrades and allow residents to buy shares in a common lot; and a modular cottage development model to produce factory-built homes locally for rental or condominium ownership. Dole said a ROC generally needs roughly 50% initial occupancy to be financially viable and, if built on municipal land without zoning changes, infrastructure work could start as early as next summer.

The committee heard that the South Park Estates owner has offered $9,000 per household as relocation assistance. Resident Verena Fabric testified during public comment that residents were told they would receive an updated relocation payment and paperwork on the prior Friday but had not received any payment, which she said is causing stress and uncertainty.

Planning staff (Neliza Baff) and the planning department said they are updating definitions that distinguish manufactured housing, modular housing and older mobile homes, and a manufactured-housing-community study is underway; staff expect to share initial material in about 3–4 months. Tiffany Briggs, the municipality’s real estate director, and Dole said seed funding and a land commitment would be necessary to jump-start modular production or a ROC, and AR 2026-74 (a proposed housing rehab fund of $692,000) could expand tools to help displaced residents but remains income-restricted.

No formal action or vote was recorded during the special meeting. Staff said they will continue working with residents, owners and industry partners and return with refined proposals and clearer metrics for any land transfers or pilot programs.