Sunday, November 15, 2009

New Townhomes Coming to Congress Heights

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Residents of Ward 8's Congress Heights will be getting new affordable housing, this time from a private sector project beginning early 2010. The 4th Street Vistas are 94 single-family town homes designed by DC-based architect Atelier and being developed by Unidev on a currently vacant plot of land near the intersection of 4th and Mississippi Ave SE. The homes will offer 14 different floor plans for 2-, 3-, and 4-bedroom homes.

Unidev purchased the property in early 2007 and spent most of 2008 planning and designing the project, according to Project Manager Emmanuel Ogundipe. The units range in size from 2 bedrooms at 1,200-1,400 s.f., 3 bedrooms from 1,400-2,050 s.f. and 4 bedrooms at 2,050 to 2,100 s.f. The developers secured various permits in early 2009 and the initial 35 units will be built quickly, delivering in the first quarter of 2010.

Geared towards current Ward 8 residents who live in the community but rent their home, 4th Street Vista's offer workforce housing for the city's law enforcement, teachers and civil servants, according to Ogundipe. The units are priced from the $200's to the low $300s. According to Ogundipe, both Councilmembers Marion Barry and Kwame Brown had been aware and excited about the project, and the Ward 8 community supported it energetically.

The general contractor for the project is Harkins Builders.


Washington DC Real Estate News

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Work Begins on Downtown Church Site

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Washington DC real estate, Skanska, PN Hoffman, Cunningham QuillThe First Congregational United Church of Christ and development partner Skanska have begun developing a 10-story, 200,000 s.f. mixed use building in downtown Washington DC where a Church has sat since 1865, and which PN Hoffman had previously attempted first a condo then an office project. The enviably positioned site between Metro Center and Chinatown is accessible from all 5 metro lines. Blake Dickson Real Estate - Penn Quarter, Cunningham Quill architect The church will reclaim office space on part of the first and all of the second floor, and develop 5,000 s.f. of ground floor retail and eight floors of Class A office space where the church once stood, at 733 10th Street, NW (at G Street), a modern structure which had taken the place of yet another church. Designed by Cunningham | Quill to achieve LEED Gold certification, upward construction could begin as soon as this January with anticipated delivery in 18 to 20 months. The new building will be a huge improvement over a site that many a nighttime passerby used to scurry past, helped not at all by vagrant filled MLK Library next door. The church congregation began considering a new development over five years ago in light of the costly repairs needed for the old building. After an RFP, the church originally hired PNHoffman as the developer for what was then planned as a combined condominium, church office, and homeless shelter. According to Meg Maguire, a spokesperson for First Congregational, as the condo market slid into oblivion in the beginning of 2008, the church took their developer's advice and redesigned the plan for an office building. Shortly thereafter the market further deteriorated, and the project lost financing, making way for international developer Skanska to swoop in during the first quarter of 2009. Blake Dickson Real Estate for leaseAccording to Robert Ward, Executive Vice President at Skanska, the company, which only just entered the US market as a commercial developer in late 2008, sought out the project and stepped in to purchase the air rights above the church ground. The agreement between the new developer and the church is for $21 million to include the cost of construction of the 25,000 s.f. of new church space as well as 20 below-grade parking spaces. Skanska now acts as the developer, financier and general contractor with PNHoffman as non-financing partner. Ward estimated the total development cost at $85 million, including the church's $21 million. Blake Dickson Real Estate for saleThe building will feature six sides of glass facade and all sides of the offices from the fourth floor up will be glass walled and well lit, as there is no adjoining structure and the MLK Public Library rises only four stories. The floor plates on the office floors are 21,000 s.f. and consist of an outer ring of column-free window line offices and conference rooms, with an inner ring of interior offices, meeting spaces and common spaces. As part of the LEED Gold design, the building will feature a vegetated green roof. Depending on when tenants sign their leases, the new office spaces could see occupancy as early as 2012. PN Hoffman construction developmentSince demolition and excavation began in 2007, the church has made a temporary home at First Trinity Lutheran church. The congregation will have to wait another 20 months or so until the new church, designed by Todd Williams Billie Tsien Architects, is ready. Renderings were provided by Interface Multimedia. First Congregational UCC shared their former space with Thrive DC, which now has a permanent home in Adams Morgan. Keeping with their tradition of providing space for like minded groups, the church plans to find an "appropriate nonprofit" to lease approximately 2,300 s.f. of "flex space" in its new home. Ward described the neighborhood's reception of the project as "welcoming," adding that the ground floor retail space will be a "nice improvement" for the block. Maguire said the congregation is "excited about having a new home that is forward-looking and meets contemporary requirements for their outreach and mission." Look for signs of progress in the New Year. 

Washington DC real estate construction images courtesy of First Congregational.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Clarendon Condos Close Out

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Phoenix Condos, Arlington Virginia, Turner Construction, Keating Group, Clarendon Metro, Dorsky Hodgson Yue, Arlington commercial real estate brokerThe Keating Group has closed its Clarendon sales center for the Phoenix Condos. Another developer gone out of business? You might think so, with gloom over real estate this year's bumper crop, but that would be incorrect. Keating sold the last of its 181 condos last week, and will now focus on selling its commercial remaining commercial space in the project it began building in 2005. The Pennsylvania-based developer renovated and expanded the historic Post Office on Washington St., now on the Federal Register of Historic Places, adding 52,000 s.f. of office space, retail, and of course the 11-story condominium on what had been a surface parking lot. Located 2 blocks south of the Clarendon Metro, the Phoenix was built by Turner Construction, Arlington Virginia, Turner Construction, Keating Group, Clarendon Metro, Dorsky Hodgson Yue, Arlington commercial real estate agentand began selling more than 4 years ago, with prices originally running from the low $300's to the $700's. Construction completed in the summer of 2007. The project received approval by the Smart Growth Alliance - a mix of various smart growth and environmental groups, for its transit-oriented historic adaptation. The Phoenix condominium was designed by Dorksy Hodgson Partners, the main architects, with Oehrlein & Associates as the preservation architects. Keating will be going postal again, next time in Bethesda, where it plans another post office conversion with adjacent condo project. No timeline has been offered for that. 

Arlington Virginia real estate news

Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Changing View on 14th Street

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After two years of construction and $90 million spent, the SK&I-designed View 14 started accepting leases this month as the building prepares for its first tenants to move in by the end of the month. A joint project of Level 2 Development and Centrum Properties, View14 sits at the intersection of 14th Street NW and Florida Avenue, on a site that once held the Petrovitch body shop and a dozen two-story Comcast satellite dishes - few neighbors were sad to see them go. The project will soon lose the remaining 14 story antenna tower; that alone is a welcome change for neighbors. View 14 stretches U Street northward, where half a dozen projects are in either the planning or construction stage within a single block of the new apartment building. Though originally planned as a condominium endeavor, View 14 now offers 185 rental studio, one and two bedroom units with floor to ceiling glass windows and outdoor spaces on 80% of the apartments. David Franco, a Principal at Level 2 Development, boasted of the building's rooftop views, ranging "from the Potomac River to the Wilson Bridge." Not too shabby. Franco described the building as initially looking like a "solid sheet of glass window wall," which upon closer review "responds to the bend in the road" by breaking up the western facade into "varying volumes of glass wall." He added that the goal was always to create a "stunning piece of architecture" that acts as a "gateway to and from the U Street Corridor and Columbia Heights." The general contractor is Clark Construction, interior architecture is by Studio Architecture and interior modeling by 14th Street neighbor Vastu. Washington DC real estate news

Groundbreaking for Georgia Avenue CVS

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Georgia Avenue real estate development, retailCVS, Georgia Avenue, Washington DC, Park Place, PetworthGroundbreakings are never quite as exciting as officials or the press want them to be. Really they are an opportunity to get dress shoes dirty, make a few speeches and wait months for something to replace the ceremonious dirt. Today's groundbreaking at a CVS in Parkview/Petworth Community met all the aforementioned expectations, but DCMud attended, just in case something unexpected happened. Nothing did. That said, the fulfillment of promised retail for a community long underserved is certainly something to note and a welcome sign of progress for neighbors. The CVS is the first step in a line of promised retail on the Georgia Avenue Corridor. The lot in question is at the intersection of Georgia Avenue and New Hampshire Avenue NW, across from Donatelli's Park Place and diagonal from the Georgia Avenue Metro. The space sits just on the border of Wards 1 and 4 and will serve the communities there. Lakritz Adler, Park Place, Donatelli, Georgia Avenue, groundbreakingThe site once was home to a gas station that closed in the early 90's and the lot sat vacant until 2000 when a real estate developer proposed a plan for a 10-story residential tower. According to Robb LaKritz, the community and the city disliked the project so much that it eventually died. In 2007 LaKritz Adler purchased the property and began the long process of working with the community, where Principal and Managing Partner Robb LaKritz lives, to pursue the type of retail the area needed. There was one major obstacle the developer had to work through with the city - the soil of the former gas station was deemed contaminated by health officials. But with some finessing and consideration for the type of tenant the developer was pursuing, LaKritz Adler and city officials were able to obtain approval for development and secure CVS as the tenant. The 11,000 s.f. site is smaller than a typical CVS, which are usually 14,000 to 15,00 s.f. The Georgia Avenue CVS will also include a mezzanine to accommodate more space on a second floor. Construction, not yet begun, is expected to wrap up mid-2010. The project was made possible partly through a $2 million Georgia Avenue Great Streets Grant from the District, which spends approximately one-fifth of its $10 million budget for the area. The grant will be financed through TIF bonds, which make the District a development partner of sorts creating an added value for the lot in order to secure additional private financing. The TIF bond will be financed through the sales tax revenue generated by the new CVS and will expire after 25 years or when the taxes revenue fulfill the financial obligations. So, the Mayor shoveled some rocks as he lead Councilmembers Graham and Bowser with the cheer of "1-2-3, New CVS!" Get excited.

Washington DC commercial property news

Brookland and Abdo Getting Closer to New Development

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Maurice Walters architect, Torti Gallas, Catholic University, retail for lease, Brookland construction, Washington DCAbdo Development's plans for a section of the Catholic University of America (CUA) were given a hearing this week, following up on its October review before the Zoning Commission for amendment to CUA's campus plan. The sizable mixed-use project is planned for 8.9 acres of land on the CUA South Campus, on either side of Monroe Street between Michigan Avenue and the Brookland Metro. The hearing set the stage for final approval come December, and, assuming PUD approval, the developer expects to begin construction in 2011. In May of 2008 Abdo beat out a group of competitors including EYA, Monument Realty and Trammell Crow for the right to purchase the land from CUA and develop it. Though the purchase is not finalized, Abdo is under contract to purchase the property prior to the start of construction. The development team is seeking a flexibile approval for a residential development that would constitute anywhere from 725 to 825 units in what is proposed as 4 multi-family buildings with room for 80,000 s.f. of ground floor retail space with an FAR of 2.37. Of that 8%, or 63,000 s.f., will be affordable at 80% AMI. The plans also include 45 single-family homes, ranging between 3 and 4 stories with 2 to 4 bedrooms. The PUD application also contemplates a 3,000 s.f. "Arts Flex" building to serve as a community meeting area with space for art shows, recitals, and well, any other artsy undertaking. The development team plans to build for some type of LEED certification. Washington DC commercial real estate brokerThe Arts feature of the Abdo project will likely be the first phase executed once construction begins. The plan includes an arts walk to serve as a pedestrian connection from Monroe Street to the metro station. On either side of the arts walk will be one multi-family building split into two wings, joined below grade by a parking garage. The ground floor of the building will include 27 artists studios to frame the pedestrian walkway. Work space will feature glass roll-up doors that artists can open during fair weather and weekends to engage the public and invite them into the studios. The feel, according to Abdo Vice President Toby Millman, will be something of a mix between Alexandria's Torpedo Factory and DC's Eastern Market. In addition to the ground floor work spaces, the nearby Arts Flex building was designed to reflect an "old warehouse style," given its proximity to the railroad tracks. The multi-family homes will be built with a mixture of masonry and pre-cast stone and, though originally planned at eight stories each, the buildings will reach only six stories in order to comply with the Brookland/CUA Small Area Plan developed during Abdo's planning process. One structure will only reach four stories in response to requests for reduced height or scale from community members living in neighboring single family homes on Lawrence Street. Maurice Walters architect, Torti Gallas, Catholic University, retail for lease, Brookland construction, Washington DC Millman described the architecture, a combination of designs from both Torti Gallas and Maurice Walters, as bridging the styles between the 100-year old CUA collegiate gothic and Brookland neighborhood's arts and crafts style. During one Commission meeting, Commissioner May critiqued the design saying the design "doesn't need to be so overtly historic" and that "it just seems a little odd." In the end, though, the overall design did not run into many hiccups with the community, largely due to adherence with initial recommendations for use, size and design in the small area plan. Maurice Walters architect, Torti Gallas, Catholic University, retail for lease, Brookland construction, Washington DCMillman said one of the goals of the design was to take Monroe Street - which he described as "not very active or interesting right now" and to turn it into "a vibrant retail main street." Developers were adamant during their hearing and in conversations with this publication that the retail they seek is community-serving; big boxes need not apply. Millman envisions a "vibrant, eclectic college town type atmosphere" with bike shops, sidewalk cafes and bookshops to serve both the college and neighborhood. 

Washington DC commercial real estate news

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Metro West - Urbanity on Hold

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It has been heralded by green organizations across the country as "the answer to urban sprawl" - an urban village complete with more than 2200 new residences, fountains, cafes and over 100,000 s.f. of the all-important, ground-floor retail, concentrated around a Metro station as an outlet to relieve pressure for expansion outside of Washington DC.

When Pulte Homes' 56-acre Metro West development is finally completed, it will concentrate residences and offices south of the Vienna-Fairfax-GMU Metro Station, north of Route 29, and usher in a new era of "smart growth." That is, if it ever gets built.

The idea for Metro West first debuted in 2001, but it was March of 2006 before Fairfax County approved plans for up to 2,248 residential units and 300,000 s.f. of office space between Lee Highway and Saintsbury Drive; outside the beltway but still on a metro line.

"It took too many years trying to get it approved," laments Stewart Schwartz, Executive Director for the Coalition for Smarter Growth. In 2003, Schwartz's group began lending support to the project as it passed through Fairfax County's Proffer System. He credits green organizations like the Sierra Club, FairGrowth and his own for spurring a "turning point" with the Board of Supervisors, who began to see "a transit-oriented development as a green solution" that would help to make Fairfax and other Northern Virginia neighborhoods feel more connected to one another.

In light of the 2006 zoning approvals, an announcement appeared on the Metro West web site declaring that construction would begin in 2007. The bulletin still adds that "the first townhouse and condominium units could be ready for occupancy by the middle of 2008."

But three years after making that announcement, Pulte Homes Corporate Communications Manager, Eric Younan, tells DCMud that no sale dates have been set, and his office "doesn't have a date for when they're going to build [Metro West] at this time." There is nothing new to report "that's not on our web site," reiterates Younan.

So, will Metro West ever come to achieve its potential?

Mike Wing from the Fairfax County Department of Planning Zoning is optimistic, assuring that Metro West "is moving forward with the permitting process and working with the VDOT," but that these discussions "take time."

Pulte Homes' former Northern Virginia land acquisitions head, Stan Settle, takes a different perspective. In 2005, Settle battled with everyone from angry neighbors to then-US Congressman Thomas M. Davis of Virginia to win the right to raze 69 single-family homes so that Metro West could be realized.

But Settle says a lot has changed since then. In 2009, Pulte merged with Centex Corporation, becoming the largest home builder in America. Settle was let go from the company after the merger, and has since formed his own land company. Although no longer involved in Metro West decisions, Settle holds fast to the opinion that Pulte "projects like Metro West have gotten shelved until the market improves."

"They have a great land position," but he speculates that Pulte "is just sitting on the land," adding that in this market "it could be a while before Pulte has to worry about high rise construction again."

Despite Settle's foreboding, there have been signs that Metro West is still on Pulte's agenda. Just last June, the company began looking for Fairfax County approval to swap out 700,000 s.f. of residential space for office space, a move green organizations are supportive of because it still translates into increased density near a Virginia Metro station. But building anything close to 2200 housing units seems presently unimaginable, and Stan Settle remains the contact person on Pulte's website, which also lists a timeline that hasn't seen an update since 2004.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

The Waiting Game in Mt. Vernon

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Mt. Vernon Triangle Development, Quadrangle Development, Wilkes Companies, Davis Carter Scott, Phil Esocoff, Paramount DevelopmentMt. Vernon Triangle, on Penn Quarter's northern fringe, could be a poster child for the glaciated development world. Developers now play the waiting game for Mt. Vernon to become an "extension" of the downtown corridor, land occupied by supposedly temporary parking lots remains asphalted, and the unfinished lots seem to symbolize the unrealized potential of a downtown revitalization. Here are a few of the buildings that are thisclose to adding chapters to the Mt. Vernon book. At Mount Vernon Place, Quadrangle Development and their co-developers, the Wilkes Company, are shopping with their Mt. Vernon Triangle Development, Quadrangle Development, Wilkes Companies, Davis Carter Scott, Phil Esocoff, Paramount Development, Smith Groupbroker, Meany&Oliver, for tenants of two planned commercial buildings at 300 and 400 K Street. Originally designed by Hartman Cox with a masonry shell reflective of the surrounding condos, 400 K's 421,677 s.f. and 300 K's 223,869 s.f. have new designs by Davis Carter Scott, now with floor-to-ceiling glass. The larger of the two, 400 K, has a dual-core that can be built in two phases of 210,839 s.f. each with over 23,000 s.f. allotted for retail. 300 K offers over 10,000 s.f. for ground floor retail and the average floors above ground have approximately 21,644 s.f. But even once a lease is secured, estimated delivery time is 24 months - meaning parking will remain.AIA DC, Mt. Vernon Triangle Development, Quadrangle Development, Wilkes Companies, Davis Carter Scott, Phil Esocoff, Paramount Development, Washington DC Down 3rd Street from 300 K lies another Quadrangle empty lot at 3rd Street and H Street NW, abutting the 100,000 s.f. office building whose use (AIPAC headquarters) remains a closely guarded secret. A planned residential building, the Cantata, will someday offer 351 units, joining the neighboring Madrigal Lofts and Sonata Condominiums; the developer's unfinished residential symphony. Passersby on Massachusetts Avenue will Washington DC real estate agentsurely have noticed the blank walls of the AIPAC building at 251 Massachusetts Ave. (above, right), where architects at the Smith Group have left space for the development in waiting. Neighboring 400 K is 425 Eye Street, where Paramount Development and their architects at SmithGroup are performing a full-body makeover on one of the few projects actively moving forward - the former home of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Agency (rendering below left). The Washington DC commercial real estate broker370,000 s.f. building will offer 30,000 s.f. of ground floor retail/ restaurant space. Construction began summer 2009 and the building should deliver by June. On both the office and retail fronts, brokers indicate they have no contracts "in hand," but a few tenants have been "kicking the tires." Bill Miller, a broker at Transwestern Property Co., is putting stock in the recently secured Buddha Bar coming to nearby 455 Massachusetts. Miller sees the bar as a way to change people's perceptions of Mount Vernon and to connect it in their minds to the 7th Street corridor of nearby Chinatown/Verizon Center. DMV commercial real estate brokerOn residential front, the Esocoff & Associates-designed Dumont has been in a bad way for quite some time, coming to a peak with its December 2008 foreclosure and now Ideal Realty Group (IRG), which specializes in multifamily and distressed/bank owned properties, is representing the Lender as a selling agent for the property. Lender PB Capital issued a foreclosure notice in December 2008 when the New York-based developer, The Broadway Group, failed to secure enough deposits to meet the lender's demand. Fully built and starkly empty, the Dumont and its perfectly manicured lawns and shrubbery frame Massachusetts Avenue, promising luxury condos, but most developers that have eyed the project have been more keen on conversion to apartments or even a hotel. Farther down Massachusetts Avenue sits another vacant lot, the future home of the Arts at 5th and I, which Donohoe Companies won the right to Donohoe Companies, Washington DC commercial real estate, Holland Developmentdevelop in September of 2008, promising a high-end hotel, retail outlets and jazz club. According to Memphis Holland of Holland Development, co-developer with Donohoe, the group is still "waiting on the city to finalize our deal with them so we can move forward with the design and with neighboring property owners." More waiting. The lots adjoining 5th and I, 443-459 Eye Street were also the planned site of the now-defunct Walnut Street Development (WSD) Eye Street Lofts project. Though rumored to have sold the property to JBG in Walnut Street Development, Washington Dc2008 when the shakedown on Arts at 5th and I was about to happen, Walnut Street retained the land. Without the Arts project in hand, JBG opted not to purchase the neighboring lots. Bill McLeod, Executive Director of the Mt. Vernon Triangle CID, indicated it was unlikely that Donohoe would absorb the neighboring properties on Eye Street. Demers Real Estate represents the lots that encompass 443 through 455 Eye street. According to Jon Wilson of Demers, Walnut Street never actually purchased the properties from 443 through 455, though they had been an integral element of the planned residential development, leaving them un-aggregated and, incidentally, some of the rare space actually being converted to use as artists' lofts in place of the old autobody shop, Gold Leaf Studios, the brainchild of Mike Abrams. The property at 459 Eye Street remains under Walnut Street's ownership, according to public records, though the property currently has a Mechanics lien placed on it by the former project architects Eric Colbert and Associates. Mt. Vernon Triangle retail for lease Still, Jeff Miller, a Managing Principal at Prospect Diversified and board member of the Mt. Vernon Triangle CID, said that though development to date has largely "been multi-family in nature" he expects that "given the dynamics of that market, it will continue to improve." Miller added that the commercial development in Mt. Vernon, given the access to multiple metro lines, will "make the area a natural progression as downtown and the east end get fully leased." We don't expect to be writing about that any time soon. Update 11/11/09 As several readers and developers involved in the area have mentioned the new David Black sculpture installed in front of the Bus Boys and Poets at the corner of 5th and K Streets NW, we decided to include an image as Exhibit A that not everything is stalled in the area. It's a stretch, we know. Mt. Vernon Triangle retail for leaseThe DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities, in collaboration with the Office of Planning, CityVista, Mount Vernon Triangle Community Improvement District selected Black, with the Commission allocating $250,000 to sponsor this project through it Public Art Building Communities grant.

Washington DC commercial real estate news

Monday, November 09, 2009

The Dirt on... Capitol Hill (East)

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Capitol Hill commercial real estateNeighborhood Vibe:
I live in a 1-bedroom condo with my husband. Let's call it cozy. Our condo building is home to law students, Hill staffers and long-time residents. My downstairs neighbor is a retired woman who has lived at our intersection for so long, she remembers when the new condo around the corner was a crack house (no joke). My condo could be a microcosm for the area: an odd mix of young professionals, young families, long-time residents, and active older people.

Capitol Hill commercial real estate, Capitol Hill retail for leaseThere are slight tensions in the neighborhood as Hill East continues to grow and change. When I was writing freelance from home I used to joke that as the underemployed political wonk next door, I was personally killing the street cred of the kids around the corner. Joking aside, my husband and I have had a couple unfortunate incidents with people in the neighborhood: first, he was mugged last September, then he and a friend were both shot with a pellet gun one night, and recently we had fruit catapulted at us as we walked home. The upside is that the police are incredibly responsive and very good about following up on reported incidents. (Both the mugger and the shooter were later caught, we decided not to report the fruit pummeling.) And since the perpetrators are at least creative; their entrepreneurial spirit gives us great stories for cocktail parties.

Capitol Hill commercial real estate, Capitol Hill retail for lease, Washington DCRetail and Restaurants
The occasional un-neighborly conduct does not overshadow the positive parts of living in Hill East. I love living in a neighborhood within a large city and having almost anything I want within walking distance. I have a new grocery store with the Jenkins Row Harris Teeter. I can walk to Eastern Market for not only fresh local produce, meats and fantastic cheeses but how convenient is it to be able to buy handmade jewelry, Indian pottery and a gently used couch all within 20 feet of each other? I even bought my "room-defining" painting from an artist at the Market.

Capitol Hill commercial real estate, Capitol Hill retail for leaseThe area is home to tons of thriving small businesses. Hills Kitchen is among my favorite shops in DC, not just my neighborhood. The independent gourmet kitchenware store is a great place for unique gifts or for an aspiring chef to stock up on the newest Staub dutch oven - and, they even offer cooking lessons. Owner Leah Daniels cares about her neighborhood and clearly loves her job; she spent several hours (after the shop had closed) working on my wedding registry and walking through the store, debating the pros and cons of various items. Who does that anymore? Nearby, Remix is one of the best vintage clothing shops around - with new items coming in all the time and reasonable prices, I love to stop in to browse, and rarely leave empty-handed. On the more practical side of retail is Frager’s Hardware. No matter what you need for home repair, Fragers will have it - along with other surprises like camping gear, bocce balls and bubble machine rentals. They also have a great garden section, where I have bought my Festivus (for the rest of us) Fern the past several years.

Capitol Hill commercial real estate, Capitol Hill retail for leaseHill East proper doesn't really offer much in the way of restaurants or bars. There are a few, such as Trusty's and Wisdom, but for the most part I need to go elsewhere for dinner or drinks. Luckily I don’t have to go too far. Barracks row/8th street is becoming a thriving restaurant and bar corridor. One of my favorite locations is Belga Cafe for their amazing Belgian beer list. A more recent arrival and family-friendly food establishment is Matchbox. Down the street two new bars, Molly Malone’s and Lola’s, offer comfortable locations to hang out, watch the game and get late night bar food (Lola’s serves food until 1 AM on the weekend). If I am looking for a more intimate and upscale setting, Sonoma Restaurant and Wine Bar has a fantastic wine list as well as good food, cheeses and charcuterie (though you might want save this for special occasions and pass on the $16 cheeseburger).

One exception to the walking distance rule is the National's Stadium, but no fear! The Circulator bus picks up on 8th street and takes me right to the Navy Yard Station--the bus is probably one of my favorite parts of going to the Nat's games.

Capitol Hill commercial real estate, Capitol Hill retail for leaseComing Soon
There are also some new additions planned for Pennsylvania Ave near Potomac Ave metro. Annie and Teddy's Po Boys, a New Orleans style cafe with inside and outside seating, is Joe Englert's newest project; Englert is the man behind DC9, The Big Hunt, The Pug, Rock and Roll Hotel, etc. The new cafe would feature live jazz music 4 days a week (Thurs-Sat night and Sat-Sun brunch). I wouldn't quite call Hill East "on the verge," but I would definitely say it's getting there.

TransportationThe closest metro stations to Hill East are Potomac Avenue and Stadium Armory and Eastern Market. The 34 and 36 buses, which can take you to downtown, Georgetown and all the way to Friendship heights, stop at the Potomac Avenue Metro station, as does the B2 bus, which is your round trip ticket to H St. NE. There are lots of other buses, but honestly, I don't take them that much. There are also tons of ZipCars nearby several right across from the metro and lots stashed in residential areas.

Capitol Hill commercial real estateIs it for you?
For some people my age (20-something), the Hill doesn't offer enough of the urban bustle they want. No, it doesn't have the edginess of U Street (we've got the crime, just not the trendy bars) or the nightlife of Dupont or Adams Morgan (we have a jumbo slice, but it's never crowded). Most lights are out by 10 PM - both bars and houses. And the tree-lined streets of Eastern Market are frequented by families with strollers. Call me old beyond my years, but I'd rather have to cab, bus or metro somewhere to go out for a rowdy evening, than have that kind of noise and crowd near my home. So I'll continue to love the bar crawl scene on H Street with a cab ride back to my generally quiet neighborhood (barring any fruit attacks).

I moved to Washington for a school, for a job, and for a lifestyle no other city can provide. I choose to call Hill East home because when I walk to the metro, crossing Pennsylvania Avenue, the Capitol Dome view gets me every time. Washington is my city and Hill East is my neighborhood.

Washington DC real estate news

Saturday, November 07, 2009

Buzzard Point Gets Attention

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A little-known area in the southwest waterfront will get a lot of attention when the American Planning Association (APA) spends four days this month analyzing Buzzard Point, the southern promontory of southwest DC, where the Anacostia and Potomac converge. The Planning Assistance Team (PAT) intends to produce a series of recommendations for further study and suggested visions for the future of the area between South Capitol Street and Fort McNair. The PAT will speak with stakeholders and property owners, and a Buzzard Point, Anacostia and Potomac Rivers, Washington DC, Akridge, Douglas Development construction, southwestpublic meeting to review the recommendations will likely be held on Saturday, November 21st at the Police Building on M Street SW. Details will follow as the event approaches. The area is zoned within the Capitol Gateway Overlay for mixed use of commercial and residential; the APA's review is significant because the area currently has no master plan. A hodgepodge of industrial buildings, Buzzard Point will continue to be the home of the U.S. Coast Guard Head Quarters until its move to St. Elizabeths in Anacostia. It will also be the terminus point for two of the planned DDOT street car lines.During the four-day period the PAT team will speak with area property owners such as Monday Properties, Akridge and Douglas Development as well as representatives from the War College, Fort McNair and other area civic associations. After the four day evaluation, the PAT will make recommendations available at a public meeting, which will be an opportunity for feedback and further suggestions from the community. Michael Stevens, AICP and Executive Director of the Capitol Riverfront BID, said a final report could be expected within two months of the APA evaluation. From that point the report will go to the Office of Planning, Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, and to the District Department of Transportation for review and consideration. Stevens hopes the Office of Planning will ultimately develop a Small Area Neighborhood Plan setting out Washington DC commercial real estate for salezoning changes and offering a broad vision for the community, which until now has consisted of a few large development firms on an interesting but largely unknown spit land, with only hopeful ambitions of what it some day may become. 

Washington DC commercial property news  Top image from the Capitol Riverfront BID.
 

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