Affordable Housing

Helping to provide affordable homes 

Renewing our Land Bank preserves the 0.5% real estate excise tax (REET) paid by buyers to create and preserve affordable homes in our communities. 

Only counties with a 1% Conservation Area REET can adopt the 0.5% housing REET, and since 2018 our housing REET has helped raise $13M for the Home Fund, helping to provide 132 affordable homes for islanders.  

Voting YES to renew our Land Bank’s 1% Conservation Area REET is the most powerful way you can support affordable housing! 

A rendering of the new homes scheduled to be built on Argyle Ave. in Friday Harbor

Housing Affordability FAQs

Supporters of Our Land Bank

"The Home Trust's mission is to create permanently affordable housing for low-and moderate-income island residents, promoting economic diversity and a sustainable community. Our work benefits from the San Juan County Conservation Land Bank and the real estate excise tax (REET). The housing-only REET, enabled by the Land Bank, funds stable housing, impacting employers and neighbors. Join us in voting Yes for the renewal of the Land Bank to support island health, well-being, and our Housing Fund."

— Amanda Lynn, Executive Director,
San Juan Community Home Trust, San Juan Island

Why I Support the Land Bank

Partnering with Affordable Housing

The Land Bank protected and resold the Argyle lots to the county with a historic preservation easement. Once completed, the project will conform to historic design standards and create up to 40 single- and multi-family affordable homes, funded in part by the Home Fund. 

Image: Conceptual rendering of future homes on Argyle Ave. to be developed by San Juan Community Home Trust

The Heart of Friday Harbor

In 2020, the Lopez Community Land Trust (LCLT) purchased 118 acres next to Lopez Hill and then sold 75 acres of it to the Land Bank. The Land Bank’s purchase  expands Lopez Hill Preserve and helps fund affordable farming opportunities on LCLT’s remaining acreage.

Photo: Lopez Sound Farm at Lopez Hill addition  

Lopez Hill Preserve Addition 

On Orcas, the Land Bank helped OPAL Community Land Trust meet its mitigation needs for a new project by enhancing wetland habitat on Stonebridge-Terrill Preserve. 

Photo: Stonebridge-Terrill Preserve

OPAL Wetland Mitigation 

Home Fund Projects

Funded in part by a $1.75m grant from the San Juan County Home Fund, April’s Grove provides 45 affordable rental homes for a range of household sizes, ages and incomes. The neighborhood is adjacent to schools, day care, senior center and within a quarter mile of Eastsound village. 

Photo: Developed by OPAL, April’s Grove is the county’s largest affordable housing project to date

April’s Grove, Orcas 

Winner of the 2021 Housing Innovation Award from the U.S Department of Energy in the affordable category, these innovative homes are designed to be net zero energy and feature passive solar elements, community solar, heat pump hot water and space heating, induction stoves and rainwater catchment. 

Photo: A project of Lopez Community Land Trust (LCLT), Salish Way III, consists of four net-zero energy single-family homes

Salish Way III, Lopez