The operating group of the Columbus Crew soccer club has revised its site plans for a potential soccer stadium in Austin to include affordable housing. In its initial proposal to build a Major League Soccer stadium at 10414 McKalla Place, Austin, Precourt Sports Ventures proposed a $500,000 payment to fund the Waters Park Studio development from Foundation Communities, a local nonprofit dedicated to affordable housing. PSV also proposed an annual payment of $125,000 to the nonprofit for a total donation of $4.8 million. The McKalla Place proposal, released on June 1, also stated PSV would “discuss and examine the possibility of future onsite affordable housing with Foundation Communities at McKalla Place.” Tuesday, PSV released details on how the housing units would fit into the stadium plans. The revised site plans include a four-level structure containing up to 130 affordable housing units, along with a parking structure with up to 600 spaces. The two structures on the south end of the 24-acre property would replace an area that was initially slated to include 300 surface parking spaces when PSV released its initial site plan May 15. “We appreciate Precourt Sports Ventures' commitment to affordable housing in Austin and look forward to continued discussions,” said Foundation Communities Executive Director Walter Moreau in a statement released Tuesday. The housing and parking structures would increase the overall parking capacity at McKalla Place from 1,000 to 1,300 spaces. PSV has estimated the cost of the stadium project to be $200 million, and it did not release an updated cost figure on Tuesday. In its proposal to the city, the operating group has offered to be responsible for the cost of the project as well as any overruns. Austin City Council is set to vote on two items Thursday related to the stadium proposal. Item 60 on the June 28 agenda—sponsored by council members Leslie Pool, Alison Alter, Ora Houston and Ellen Troxclair—would direct City Manager Spencer Cronk to solicit plans to develop the McKalla Place site, including plans for professional sports stadiums as well as mixed-use developments. Item 130 on the agenda would direct Cronk to analyze the proposal from PSV, begin negotiations with the group and return to the council on Aug. 9 for a status update or contract approval. The item also calls for staff to solicit plans for “the development of affordable housing on another city-owned tract.”