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� Diversity: <br />3 Senior apartments (ownership)ha�e the leastracial diversity of the various ownership <br />$ types. They ha�e nearly 97 percentwhite residents,just over 1 percent Asian American <br />i residents, and just under 1 percent African Americans. The senior complexes ha�e no <br />� minorityrepresentationabove5percentacrossallracialminoritycategories. <br />r <br />I 1] <br />lk <br />Lx <br />13 <br />L4 <br />i� <br />1 fi <br />i� <br />I$ <br />1� <br />�� <br />�] <br />�2 <br />�3 <br />�� <br />�� <br />�� <br />�� <br />�� <br />?� <br />3Q <br />3] <br />�� <br />33 <br />34 <br />35 <br />3fi <br />3� <br />�� <br />�� <br />��E <br />�i <br />�� <br />43 <br />� <br />�� <br />Condo units are the most diverse of the ownership types, with about 13 percent of the <br />residents being people of color. African Americans comprise nearly 8 percent of condo <br />owners, and Asian Americans representnearly 3 percent. Townhomes in Roseville are <br />owned by nearly 90 percent white residents. Minority townhome owners are more likely <br />to be Asian American (over 5 percent), than African American (under 2 percent). <br />Rental Unit Summarv: <br />Units Designated for Seniors: <br />There are over 700 senior residents living in four rental apartmentcomplexes that are <br />designated for seniors. Most of them live alone; the a�erage number of persons per <br />household in these units is 1.11. The residents are predominantlyover the age of 85, <br />though many are between ages 75 and 84. <br />Tenure and Moving Trends: <br />About a quarter of the seniors who moved into senior rental units in the past few years <br />(between 1999 and 2002) moved from other residences in Roseville. About 16 percent of <br />the seniors moved from elsewhere in the 11-county area, and just a handful moved from <br />other addresses in the I-35W Corridorcities. The majorityof the seniorrenters moved <br />from single-family dwellings or else from other senior housing. Seniors tend to ha�e <br />lived in their units between 2 and 4 years. <br />Of those seniors who moved out of Roseville multifamilyhousing units in the past few <br />years, about half of them stayed in Roseville and half moved to other parts of the 11- <br />county metro. There was little indication that seniors were relocating to other Corridor <br />cities. As may be expected, older residents moving out of senior housing in Roseville <br />chose other senior-designateddwellings for their next residences. <br />Building Characteristics: <br />The majority of the senior apartments are 1-bedroom residences, and nearly a third of the <br />senior units ha�e 2-bedrooms. The a�erage value of senior buildings per unit is in the mid <br />$SO,OOOs, higher than the a�erage value of general occupancy apartments. This is <br />probably true because most of the senior housing is Roseville has been built in the last 10 <br />years and they generally include more amenities than the older general occupancy <br />apartments. <br />Income and Diversity: <br />MULTIFAMILY HOUSING REPORT FOR ROSEVILLE - DRAFI' 8/16/04 P$� 9 <br />