








There's a very sunny mint green-walled living room (windows on three sides), with fireplace, a golden yellow-walled dining room, and a sumptuous master suite with a tangerine-walled master bath. I like the clean simplicity of white walls, especially in a bright room, but I found the colors in this house to be very soothing and pleasing to the eye. It's a nice change from the same old thing, and besides, if, like me, you're the type of person who occasionally (four times a week) comes home a little stumbly, white walls can equal a smeared-handprint visual diary of all your worst nights.
My favorite part of the house was the huge sunroom, with a wall of glass that opens onto a spacious deck. If I lived here I'd move all my stuff into the sunroom and spend all my time there, like a crazy person. The house is right up against the park, so from the deck you get a breathtaking view of the woods. Stare out there long enough and you might forget that you live in a society that forces you to repress almost every natural urge you feel. Though to be fair, it's also the society that brought you frozen waffles, which you have to admit is a pretty good consolation.
1719 HOBAN RD NW
Washington, DC 20007
4 Bdrms, 4.5 Baths
$1,699,000
With the support of city council member Jim Graham, and seeking pro-bono counsel from the firm of Arnold and Porter, Martinez and her two daughters, Eva Aurora and Anabel, believed low-income residents had the right to remain in their Mt. Pleasant neighborhood, filing suit against the owner for failure to comply with TOPA, or D.C.’s Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act. According to reports, a settlement was secured with an option to purchase the property at market value, with the National Housing Trust Enterprise Preservation Corporation (NHT/Enterprise) chosen to guide them in obtaining financing to acquire and renovate the property.
For Principal Michael Wiencek and project manager Maybell Laluna of Wiencek & Associates, veterans of housing revitalization and historic and adaptive reuse projects throughout the Mid-Atlantic region, the 1920s-era historic registry St. Dennis Apartments provided an opportunity to preserve history, and perhaps paramount to that, to restore dignity to its former residents, most of whom had left unaware of the means available to claim the 40-unit, five-story building for themselves (unit count was 32 following renovation).
“It had a nice presence and a very attractive front despite very significant issues of structural deterioration at the rear and within the building,” said Wiencek of the firm’s involvement beginning in 2008. Brought in during the continuing economic recession, the project percolated with the architects and planners but was placed on a slow burner, according to Wiencek, with monies filtering in from different sources on varied timetables.
Stabilizing history
Ultimately permitted in mid-2010, due to water penetration and other forms of neglect, the St. Dennis required a “complete gut” of all the interior walls, except for bearing partitions, all the way down to the shell of the building.
“The only things we were required to save were the corridor walls and existing unit entry door frames because they were historical,” Laluna said. Receiving historical tax credits as part of its extensive funding package, an historic consultant was hired to develop the project’s scope and documents which helped navigate D.C.’s copious historic review protocol.
Discovering a litany of problems that mounted almost exponentially during demolition, Wiencek said the rear wall was essentially just crumbling brick. To demolish and rebuild it, however, would have resulted in considerable construction waste and added an additional $600,000 to $700,000 to the project, making it “undoable.” In a bold effort to stabilize it, a patented limestone parging system consisting of limestone, Portland cement and polymers, and involving the scraping of loose mortar and brick material down to a hard material and embedding of a fiberglass mesh for tensile strength, was undertaken. “It’s a hard structural finish that holds all of the existing masonry together,” Wiencek said. Because it’s a 1920s-era structure, masonry walls are 16 inches thick at the ground floor and about 12 at the top, consequently much time was invested with engineers and contractors to ensure the safety and viability of the process.
Targeting sustainable elements, Wiencek said unlike the Wheeler Terrace renovation, geothermal heating and cooling was not an option due to the site’s narrow dimensions and additional budget constraints, though a mechanical system with a higher SEER rating was ultimately used. The owners had to be very creative in the way they put this project together, Wiencek and Laluna recalled, noting low-VOC paint, formaldehyde-free cabinets, Energy Star appliances, a low-albedo roofing system and low-flow fixtures were mandated.
Revealing that prior to the renovation, the St. Dennis apartments were “moldy, filthy and rat-infested,” though people needed to live there because of its prime location, bus lines, and affordable housing aspects, Wiencek talked about the emotional toll of having to call a place like that “home."
“The big idea is that we’re saving this building that would otherwise have gone to relatively high-end condos and displaced a lot of affordable housing tenants,” Wiencek said. “Through a lot of hard work by the owners and contractor, Hamel Builders, we’re getting to build an amazing new building within the historic shell so that the residents can afford to come back and live there. It gives residents a much broader and more positive outlook and really changes people’s lives,” he said, noting construction should be completed this summer.
This story is dedicated to the memory of Eva Martinez.
Located on land owned by the District, the project was realized due to the coordination between: the Dept. of Human Services (DHS); the Dept. of Housing and Community Development (DHCD); and the DC Housing Authority (DCHA). William C. Smith + Co. and DC-based non-profit Community of Hope (COH) submitted a response to a "consolidated" request for proposals that was put into motion in 2008. Moving relatively quickly, all parties met with Ward 8 ANC groups to ease misconceptions that the unit would be a shelter - which the community opposed - and WCS broke ground on construction for the $3.8 million project at the end of last fall. The project is currently on track to be completed in early fall. A project that caters to a "vulnerable" part of the population is not new in the building's surrounding area, which has seen its share of socially minded projects including an attempt by the now defunct Peaceaholics - a non-profit that aimed to reform troubled youths and stop gang violence - to develop a halfway house that did not pan out.
Yet this project is unique in that it will cater to families, and tenants will be determined by a Vulnerability Assessment Survey (as is procedure under the guidelines of DHS's Permanent Supportive Housing Program) and Community of Hope will provide on-going case management services to the families on site. Having support services on site is a hallmark of COH's approach to combating homelessness; however, it will be the first time on-site services are incorporated into a DHS-owned project. Because the families will be responsible for lease payments there is an expectation of responsibility that Community of Hope believes will be well-received by the neighborhood. In other words: it's not a homeless shelter. Judging by past successes - last year COH placed 113 homeless families in subsidized housing and 111 made good on rent payments, remaining stably housed - executive director of COH, Kelly Sweeney McShane, says that she hopes for similar results here.
Washington D.C. real estate development news