Monday, June 25, 2012
Bright and Bold: Shaw Apartments Nearly Complete
31
comments
Posted by
Travis M. Andrews on 6/25/2012 09:00:00 AM
Labels: McCullough Construction, Shaw, Suzane Reatig Architecture
Labels: McCullough Construction, Shaw, Suzane Reatig Architecture
McCullough Construction, LLC, will soon complete construction of one of the more colorful apartment buildings in Washington D.C. Bailey Park, located at 625 Rhode Island Avenue in Shaw, was designed by Suzane Reatig Architecture, and includes an unusual color scheme and Trespa panels, rare in American architecture.
The 32,125 s.f., 4-story apartment building will hold 16 units in place of the 4 townhouses torn down in advance of construction, and 2 will be reserved exclusively for tenants making less than 80% of the AMI (area median income), with 14 of those being rented at market rates.
More noticeable, however, is the now complete façade of background grey with three bright accent colors: carmine red, ochre and purple.
“They picked some very interesting façade colors,” said project manager Seamus McCullough. “We’ve gotten some complements. It definitely grabs your attention as you walk down Rhode Island, let’s put it that way.”
The building’s façade is made of aluminum windows, architectural concrete masonry and Trespa phenolic wall panels for screening rain.
“[The panels] are supposed to be extremely durable and hold up to weather and sun for a lifetime,” McCullough said. “There’s no caulk in the joints, so it’s an open system.”
“It has a roof deck with four individual patio areas,” McCullough said, as well as a green roof. “From the inside, one of the nicer features is the amount of natural light,” McCullough said. “in most of the units, you don’t even need the lights on during the day.”
Ground broke on the project on Sept. 26, 2011, and completion is expected at the end of July. “We expect to turn it over by July 15, at the very latest,” McCullough said.
Washington, D.C. real estate and development news
Your Next Place
This condo might be on the first floor, but it's nicely elevated above street level, so you can literally look down on the rest of the world, to match how you figuratively look down on the rest of the world. What, you think we didn't notice? You should see what we say about you on gchat.
This very large two bedroom/two baths unit has everything you could want in a house, much less a condo; a beautiful living room with exposed brick, a huge bay window and gas fireplace, a gourmet kitchen with granite counters, and island, and stainless steel appliances. The master bedroom suite boasts a huge walk-in closet to store all your clothes or hide in if an axe murderer breaks into the place. Recessed halogen lighting and hardwood floors throughout, and it comes with rental parking prepaid through 2015! (Man, I really am a commitment-phobe; even the thought of staying with the same parking space for three years gave me chills.)
And it's ideally situated just off 14th street, so you're a stone's throw from some of the best bars and restaurants in the entire city. From riding a bike full speed while vomiting to throwing an entire pizza onto the windshield of a taxi to jumping off a second story patio to impress a girl (surprise, she wasn't impressed), I don't think there's a block of 14th between O and W Streets on which I haven't engaged in some serious late-night foolishness. And if there's a better endorsement for a neighborhood, I certainly can't think of it.
1433 R Street NW #2
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$699,000
Washington D.C. real estate news
This very large two bedroom/two baths unit has everything you could want in a house, much less a condo; a beautiful living room with exposed brick, a huge bay window and gas fireplace, a gourmet kitchen with granite counters, and island, and stainless steel appliances. The master bedroom suite boasts a huge walk-in closet to store all your clothes or hide in if an axe murderer breaks into the place. Recessed halogen lighting and hardwood floors throughout, and it comes with rental parking prepaid through 2015! (Man, I really am a commitment-phobe; even the thought of staying with the same parking space for three years gave me chills.)
And it's ideally situated just off 14th street, so you're a stone's throw from some of the best bars and restaurants in the entire city. From riding a bike full speed while vomiting to throwing an entire pizza onto the windshield of a taxi to jumping off a second story patio to impress a girl (surprise, she wasn't impressed), I don't think there's a block of 14th between O and W Streets on which I haven't engaged in some serious late-night foolishness. And if there's a better endorsement for a neighborhood, I certainly can't think of it.
1433 R Street NW #2
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$699,000
Washington D.C. real estate news
Thursday, June 21, 2012
Douglas announces first tenant for Wonder Bread Building
Douglas Development announced its first tenant in the historic Wonder Bread building at 641 S St NW: WorkSpaces, LLC. The company will take residence immediately following the completion of construction, which is planned for January 2013.
Douglas leased 20,817 s.f. to WorkSpaces, a “strategic furniture solutions consulting agency,” according to a press release, which will be the property’s first tenant since 1988, occupying the entire third floor.
Douglas recently began construction on the Wonder Bread building, which it purchased in 1997. Douglas also applied for landmark status this past year with support from the D.C. Preservation League, which supported its plans.
The Wonder Bread building sits next door to Progression Place, also under construction. Progression Place will have 100,000 s.f. office space and 205 apartments above the Metro entrance.
Washington, DC real estate and development news
Douglas leased 20,817 s.f. to WorkSpaces, a “strategic furniture solutions consulting agency,” according to a press release, which will be the property’s first tenant since 1988, occupying the entire third floor.
Douglas recently began construction on the Wonder Bread building, which it purchased in 1997. Douglas also applied for landmark status this past year with support from the D.C. Preservation League, which supported its plans.
The Wonder Bread building sits next door to Progression Place, also under construction. Progression Place will have 100,000 s.f. office space and 205 apartments above the Metro entrance.
Washington, DC real estate and development news
Your Next Place
I have to say, these huge loft-style units might be my favorite type of place, and not just because you could potentially lie in wait up on the top elevated level and dump a trashcan full of water down onto your significant other as soon as they walked in the door, after you hacked their email and found the "missed connection" they posted on Craigslist. Though you have to admit that would be extremely satisfying, potentially. (As an alternative, you could just act normal but then email them, pretending to be the missed connection. Which is what I did.)
With a 20-plus foot peaked ceiling, this penthouse loft has an epic feel to it that you could never get in a place with boring old "rooms." As soon as you enter through the private entrance, you can tell you're in a place in which the designers paid great attention to every last detail. The kitchen, tucked discreetly under the loft, features high-end Bosch appliances, fantastic lighting, and there are really cool cutout panels of exposed brick throughout the place. Upstairs, there's a low wall of translucent glass partitioning off the loft, and both baths feature five-star hotel style finishes. (Check out the showers.)
It's also close to everything and right next to Chinatown, where I'm convinced you can buy literally anything, from an Ann Taylor Loft flower-print bucket hat to one of those canes that unscrews into a sword. (Not even kidding - those two items are sold within a block of each other. And yes, I bought a sword cane.)
1002 M Street NW #4
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$659,900
Washington D.C. real estate news
With a 20-plus foot peaked ceiling, this penthouse loft has an epic feel to it that you could never get in a place with boring old "rooms." As soon as you enter through the private entrance, you can tell you're in a place in which the designers paid great attention to every last detail. The kitchen, tucked discreetly under the loft, features high-end Bosch appliances, fantastic lighting, and there are really cool cutout panels of exposed brick throughout the place. Upstairs, there's a low wall of translucent glass partitioning off the loft, and both baths feature five-star hotel style finishes. (Check out the showers.)
It's also close to everything and right next to Chinatown, where I'm convinced you can buy literally anything, from an Ann Taylor Loft flower-print bucket hat to one of those canes that unscrews into a sword. (Not even kidding - those two items are sold within a block of each other. And yes, I bought a sword cane.)
1002 M Street NW #4
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$659,900
Washington D.C. real estate news
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Falkland Apartments Plan Up for Review, Again
14
comments
Posted by
Travis M. Andrews on 6/20/2012 04:58:00 PM
Labels: Home Properties, Montgomery County
Labels: Home Properties, Montgomery County
Today, Home Properties of New York, owner of the Falkand Apartments, finds itself once again before the Montgomery County Planning Department concerning the site plan for a multi-building, mixed-use development at the northeast quadrant of the intersection of 16th Street and East-West Highway near the Silver Spring CBD. The 9.7-acre site, split into three parcels, is within walking distance of the Silver Spring Metro and the MARC station.
In 1985, the area was denied eligibility for the designation in the Master Plan for Historic Preservation, but in 2007 all three parcels were found eligible and the Board “directed the Planning staff to initiate an amendment to that Master Plan,” according to the MCPD report on today’s hearing to approve the site plan. In 2008, the south and west parcels were added to the plan, but the north parcel was added to the Locational Atlas, which was created in 1976 and identifies potential historic sites.
That particular restriction called for the removal of the north parcel from the Atlas upon approval of the site plan.
"Faced with the challenge of weighing the benefits of historic preservation with those related to other planning objectives, the Board found that greater public benefit would be achieved through the redevelopment of the north parcel than by the parcel's designation in the Master Plan," according to the Staff report.
Being part of the Master Plan comes with eligibility for financial incentives for qualified rehabilitation and maintenance projects as well as certain protections.
The designation led Home Properties to revise their development plan and follow a few provisions, including 4.72 percent of the dwelling units to be subject to the County’s Workforce housing law for 20 years and the same amount provided for off-site Workforce housing. Home Properties must beautify the stream on the South parcel, and all buildings must be rated LEED-Silver.
The proposed plan is for a 1.2 million s.f., mixed-use development that includes 70,000 s.f. of retail and 1,250 townhouse units with 12.5 percent MPDUs and 4.73 percent Workforce Housing units.
The project consists of four buildings, oriented to a perimeter public street or a proposed private internal street. The buildings on the East-West Highway include ground-floor retail.
The proposed development provides 65,091 s.f. of public use space, 20 percent of the lot area. This includes a public plaza, garden and pedestrian area.
Staff recommends approval of the proposed plan today.
Maryland real estate and development news
In 1985, the area was denied eligibility for the designation in the Master Plan for Historic Preservation, but in 2007 all three parcels were found eligible and the Board “directed the Planning staff to initiate an amendment to that Master Plan,” according to the MCPD report on today’s hearing to approve the site plan. In 2008, the south and west parcels were added to the plan, but the north parcel was added to the Locational Atlas, which was created in 1976 and identifies potential historic sites.
That particular restriction called for the removal of the north parcel from the Atlas upon approval of the site plan.
"Faced with the challenge of weighing the benefits of historic preservation with those related to other planning objectives, the Board found that greater public benefit would be achieved through the redevelopment of the north parcel than by the parcel's designation in the Master Plan," according to the Staff report.
Being part of the Master Plan comes with eligibility for financial incentives for qualified rehabilitation and maintenance projects as well as certain protections.
The designation led Home Properties to revise their development plan and follow a few provisions, including 4.72 percent of the dwelling units to be subject to the County’s Workforce housing law for 20 years and the same amount provided for off-site Workforce housing. Home Properties must beautify the stream on the South parcel, and all buildings must be rated LEED-Silver.
The proposed plan is for a 1.2 million s.f., mixed-use development that includes 70,000 s.f. of retail and 1,250 townhouse units with 12.5 percent MPDUs and 4.73 percent Workforce Housing units.
The project consists of four buildings, oriented to a perimeter public street or a proposed private internal street. The buildings on the East-West Highway include ground-floor retail.
The proposed development provides 65,091 s.f. of public use space, 20 percent of the lot area. This includes a public plaza, garden and pedestrian area.
Staff recommends approval of the proposed plan today.
Maryland real estate and development news
Lumber Shed Construction at the Yards Begins this Week
5
comments
Posted by
Travis M. Andrews on 6/20/2012 11:42:00 AM
Labels: Forest City, Southeast, Yards
Labels: Forest City, Southeast, Yards
Construction begins this week on the Lumber Shed, an adaptive reuse component that will become the retail centerpiece of the Yards, a Forest City project. The Shed is set to be completed in the third quarter of 2013, according to a press release.
The Yards, which is one of the largest projects in Southeast D.C., has been named the best new public space by City Paper. Seven restaurants and a Harris Teeter were announced this past year in the boilermaker shops, and recently, the Alatmarea Restaurant Group of New York City announced a new Osteria Morini restaurant to open in The Yards in summer 2013.
The area was formerly the Navy Yard Annex then the Naval Gun Factory. Forest City Washington received the chance to redevelop the 42-acre riverfront property site in 2004, and construction began on several parcels within the yards in 2007.
When finished, the Yards will be a 5.5 million s.f. development, completed during three phases during the next 10 to 20 years.
The Lumber Shed - formerly owning up to its name - is located on the edge of the Yards park overlooking the Anacostia River. The Shed will be a 30,000 s.f., two-level, retail, glass pavilion, which will temporarily house Forest City’s offices on the second floor and include five restaurants.
The inclusion of Osteria Morini and Forest City’s offices means the building is 60 percent leased.
Washington D.C. real estate development news
The Yards, which is one of the largest projects in Southeast D.C., has been named the best new public space by City Paper. Seven restaurants and a Harris Teeter were announced this past year in the boilermaker shops, and recently, the Alatmarea Restaurant Group of New York City announced a new Osteria Morini restaurant to open in The Yards in summer 2013.
The area was formerly the Navy Yard Annex then the Naval Gun Factory. Forest City Washington received the chance to redevelop the 42-acre riverfront property site in 2004, and construction began on several parcels within the yards in 2007.
When finished, the Yards will be a 5.5 million s.f. development, completed during three phases during the next 10 to 20 years.
The Lumber Shed - formerly owning up to its name - is located on the edge of the Yards park overlooking the Anacostia River. The Shed will be a 30,000 s.f., two-level, retail, glass pavilion, which will temporarily house Forest City’s offices on the second floor and include five restaurants.
The inclusion of Osteria Morini and Forest City’s offices means the building is 60 percent leased.
Washington D.C. real estate development news
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Wesley Seminary Residence Hall to Break Ground Next Month
The first new housing in over fifty years for the Wesley Theological Seminary is set to break ground next month, after an almost six-year planning and approval process.
"We just went in for permits a couple weeks ago," said Paul Taylor of general contractor Vantage Construction. "We hope to break ground in July, if everything goes through as planned. Construction should take about a year, so they'll be finished by next summer, and ready for the fall semester. Right now it looks like the final building will encompass 74 beds in about 56 units."
Back in 2006, the Zoning Commission approved an ambitious Wesley Seminary Campus Plan that would've added over seventy thousand square feet of residential, academic, and chapel space to the campus. But the economic downturn forced a reevaulation of this plan, and in the end, this residence was the only new planned structure that survived the process.
The three-story thirty thousand square foot residence hall, designed by Falls Church-based MGMA, will feature a facade of brick veneer and contrasting concrete panels, to match the rest of the campus, and will house plant facilities for the entire campus on the lower levels. The design has evolved over the past year, after consultations with citizens groups, to produce a more visually dynamic, varied structure. Designers pulled out stairwells, added elements to the roof, stepped back precast elements, and "reduced the institutional feel" by strategically adding window, to create a "more interesting and more residential" building.
Wesley Seminary was founded in 1882 in Westminster, MD, and has been at its present Spring Valley location since 1958; according to the latest Campus Plan, the campus, though "outwardly tranquil and relaxed is, in reality, a place of great energy and excitement."
Washington, D.C. real estate development news
Monday, June 18, 2012
WPC Breaking Ground on Wheaton Residential Project
4
comments
Posted by
Ken on 6/18/2012 11:36:00 AM
Labels: Clark Builders Group, Preston Partnership, Washington Property Company, Wheaton
Labels: Clark Builders Group, Preston Partnership, Washington Property Company, Wheaton
Washington Property Company breaks ground on the Solaire, a 232-unit residential building at 10194 Georgia Avenue, next week. Located on the former site of the First Baptist Church, WPC acquired the 1.65-acre parcel in 2005 and, as part of the deal, relocated the church to Olney, adding to the long list of projects approved in a quickly developing Wheaton town center.
Montgomery County approved the site plan last October for a Preston Partnership-designed six-story, u-shaped structure, opening to the south, with a swimming pool and greenspace in the interior courtyard. Designers used a "variety of masonry and glazing" as well as "small parapets and height variations ... to minimize the sense of building mass." Beneath, developers will build a two-level parking garage with 230 spaces. A public statement notes such ubiquitous amenities as "granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, fine cabinetry, wood laminate flooring."
According to a WPC press release, the developer owns more than eight million square feet of commercial space in the Washington, DC metropolitan area and currently has over 1.6 million residential square feet under development.Clark Builders Group is the General Contractor, Gables Residential will provide property management and leasing services. Leasing is expected to begin in September of 2013.
Wheaton, Maryland real estate development news
Montgomery County approved the site plan last October for a Preston Partnership-designed six-story, u-shaped structure, opening to the south, with a swimming pool and greenspace in the interior courtyard. Designers used a "variety of masonry and glazing" as well as "small parapets and height variations ... to minimize the sense of building mass." Beneath, developers will build a two-level parking garage with 230 spaces. A public statement notes such ubiquitous amenities as "granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, fine cabinetry, wood laminate flooring."
According to a WPC press release, the developer owns more than eight million square feet of commercial space in the Washington, DC metropolitan area and currently has over 1.6 million residential square feet under development.Clark Builders Group is the General Contractor, Gables Residential will provide property management and leasing services. Leasing is expected to begin in September of 2013.
Akridge Applies for Permit to Demolish 1200 17th St.
11
comments
Posted by
Travis M. Andrews on 6/18/2012 09:30:00 AM
Labels: Akridge, First Potomac Realty Trust, Golden Triangle
Labels: Akridge, First Potomac Realty Trust, Golden Triangle
Akridge has applied for a permit to raze the 8-story office building it recently purchased at 1200 17th St. NW, and replace it with a greener office building. Architectural firm ZGF will design the new structure.
The development company bought the property from the National Restaurant Association with partner First Potomac for $39.6 million last October, and plans to spend $100 million to build a 170,000 s.f. office building on the site. Developers hope to achieve a LEED rating on the new building.
According to the Business Journal, the companies hope to open a new building by 2014, a date that would require demolition to begin soon.
Don Morris, senior project manager of Balfour Beatty Construction, says the developer will scrape the site and erect an entirely new building in its place. The current building dates to 1964.
Washington, D.C. real estate development news
The development company bought the property from the National Restaurant Association with partner First Potomac for $39.6 million last October, and plans to spend $100 million to build a 170,000 s.f. office building on the site. Developers hope to achieve a LEED rating on the new building.
According to the Business Journal, the companies hope to open a new building by 2014, a date that would require demolition to begin soon.
Don Morris, senior project manager of Balfour Beatty Construction, says the developer will scrape the site and erect an entirely new building in its place. The current building dates to 1964.
Washington, D.C. real estate development news
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Your Next Place
This fantastic 1920s-era home has all the subtle charm and panache of that simpler era - note how coyly it seems to peek out from behind the beautiful garden and fence, like a silent film actress or something. But inside it has all the modern cutting-edge finishes - fully remodeled everything, central air, etc. - that you could ask for. I didn't know whether to put in an offer or propose to it. (Doesn't matter - either way, the answer would've been contemptuous laughter.)
If you like natural light - and who doesn't, aside from, like, hoarders - this is the house for you. Everyplace claims to be "bright!" but this place actually is. Extremely bright. I was a little hungover the day I saw this place and when I walked into the family room, with its wall of windows, I felt like I was actually melting, vampire-style. (I mean that in the most complimentary way possible.)
There's a beautiful parlor for all your parlorin', a huge living room, and a spacious family room with fireplace. From there you go through french doors out to the gold standard for all screened-in porches; the perfect place to sleep during the summer, or sit late at night and "think" (i.e. sneak a cigarette).
Out back is a flagstone patio and a standalone brick garage that's nicer than many actual houses. There's also a vibrant perennial garden featuring all sorts of flowers and shrubbery, etc. I'm not really into gardening so I didn't really know what a "perennial" garden was, so I asked a couple who was standing nearby. The husband explained it was a garden that grew back every spring by itself, without any planting required. The wife nodded and then said, "what it really means is that you don't have to do any work." We all nodded in silent agreement: this was the best kind of garden.
1410 Manchester Lane NW
5 Bedrooms, 4 Baths
$875,000
Washington D.C. real estate news
If you like natural light - and who doesn't, aside from, like, hoarders - this is the house for you. Everyplace claims to be "bright!" but this place actually is. Extremely bright. I was a little hungover the day I saw this place and when I walked into the family room, with its wall of windows, I felt like I was actually melting, vampire-style. (I mean that in the most complimentary way possible.)
There's a beautiful parlor for all your parlorin', a huge living room, and a spacious family room with fireplace. From there you go through french doors out to the gold standard for all screened-in porches; the perfect place to sleep during the summer, or sit late at night and "think" (i.e. sneak a cigarette).
Out back is a flagstone patio and a standalone brick garage that's nicer than many actual houses. There's also a vibrant perennial garden featuring all sorts of flowers and shrubbery, etc. I'm not really into gardening so I didn't really know what a "perennial" garden was, so I asked a couple who was standing nearby. The husband explained it was a garden that grew back every spring by itself, without any planting required. The wife nodded and then said, "what it really means is that you don't have to do any work." We all nodded in silent agreement: this was the best kind of garden.
1410 Manchester Lane NW
5 Bedrooms, 4 Baths
$875,000
Washington D.C. real estate news
Friday, June 15, 2012
Bethesda Industrial Site to Be Remade as Residential Complex
8
comments
Posted by
Franklin Schneider on 6/15/2012 10:00:00 AM
Labels: Bethesda, EYA, Lessard Group
Labels: Bethesda, EYA, Lessard Group
A moribund, paved-over industrial site just off of Little Falls Parkway in Bethesda is slated to be replaced with a 30-townhome housing development.
The 1.8 acre property at 5400 Butler Road is bracketed by Little Falls Parkway and Butler Road, between River Road and Massachusetts Avenue, and surrounded on three sides by parkland. Presently the site of the BETCO complex of buildings and surface parking lots, plans call for the site to be razed, the pavement removed, and replaced with a Lessard Group-designed "scale-appropriate residential community" of 30 single-family garage-centered homes.
"We actually just got our planning board approval last week for the site plan and preliminary plan," said Stephanie Marcus of lead developer EYA Development. "We hope to start construction at very end of this year or early in 2013."
Five of the townhouses (16.67%) will be moderately-priced units, and just under forty percent of the new site will be green space, up from basically zero percent at the current site. Plans also call for about 2 parking spaces per market rate unit and one per MPDU, totaling approximately 64 spaces.
The developers have made several optional concessions, including
removing the existing pavement at their own cost, throwing in an extra MPDU (they're only required to include four), installing stormwater management at their own cost, and setting the amount of green space at 38%, 8% above the requirement. The project will also remedy the BETCO plant debris' encroachment onto nearby parkland.
The plan itself is somewhat unremarkable - let's face it, a development of townhomes excites pretty much no one - but it's essentially making something from nothing, and in the big picture the removal of the pavement, remediation of parkland encroachment, and significant addition of greenspace, more than makes up for what may be lacking aesthetically.
Bethesda, Maryland real estate development news
The 1.8 acre property at 5400 Butler Road is bracketed by Little Falls Parkway and Butler Road, between River Road and Massachusetts Avenue, and surrounded on three sides by parkland. Presently the site of the BETCO complex of buildings and surface parking lots, plans call for the site to be razed, the pavement removed, and replaced with a Lessard Group-designed "scale-appropriate residential community" of 30 single-family garage-centered homes.
"We actually just got our planning board approval last week for the site plan and preliminary plan," said Stephanie Marcus of lead developer EYA Development. "We hope to start construction at very end of this year or early in 2013."
Five of the townhouses (16.67%) will be moderately-priced units, and just under forty percent of the new site will be green space, up from basically zero percent at the current site. Plans also call for about 2 parking spaces per market rate unit and one per MPDU, totaling approximately 64 spaces.
The developers have made several optional concessions, including
removing the existing pavement at their own cost, throwing in an extra MPDU (they're only required to include four), installing stormwater management at their own cost, and setting the amount of green space at 38%, 8% above the requirement. The project will also remedy the BETCO plant debris' encroachment onto nearby parkland.
The plan itself is somewhat unremarkable - let's face it, a development of townhomes excites pretty much no one - but it's essentially making something from nothing, and in the big picture the removal of the pavement, remediation of parkland encroachment, and significant addition of greenspace, more than makes up for what may be lacking aesthetically.
Bethesda, Maryland real estate development news
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