Arlington, VA real estate development news
Monday, September 24, 2012
Today in Pictures - 800 N. Glebe
Arlington, VA real estate development news
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Your Next Place
Look how cute this little building is, nestled cozily between two much-larger buildings, and yet with an undeniable appeal all its own. (Insert your own "size doesn't matter" joke here. It sounds too autobiographical if I do it.)
This beautiful unit is one of 22 in this boutique building, which means it's just big enough that there's probably at least one other person in the building you can have an ill-advised romance of convenience with, but not so small that you won't be able to avoid them after it crashes and burns. It's a corner unit too, so it's a bit bigger and brighter than the other units, a fact you should bring up constantly when you run into other building occupants. ("You look depressed, is it because your apartment is slightly smaller than mine?") The main area is open and gets a ton of light; it features glowing hardwood floors and recessed lighting. The kitchen comes with the granite countertops/stainless steel appliances one-two punch, and there are a ton of built-ins for your collectible plate collection. The master bedroom is spacious and wide, and boasts a world-class walk-in closet. It got me thinking, "wait, why doesn't my bedroom have a walk-in closet?" And then I realized, my bedroom IS a walk-in closet. Explains all the built-ins, and why my twin mattress takes up 90% of the floor space.
This building also comes with concierge service, extra storage, rental parking, and even a gym. Imagine how much guiltier you'll feel about not working out when there's a gym right downstairs! It's located in Penn Quarter, so it's close to Chinatown, downtown, NoMa, and other neighborhoods people go to, look around, and say, "wait, is this it? Really?" (I kid, I kid; aside from that horrible intersection where they have the huge tvs, I actually really like Chinatown.) Also, it's equidistant from two metro stations, turning each morning into an agonized internal debate over where exactly you want to go to get the back of your neck breathed on by total strangers.
675 E Street NW #500
1 Bedrooms, 1.5 Baths
$509,000
Washington DC real estate news
This building also comes with concierge service, extra storage, rental parking, and even a gym. Imagine how much guiltier you'll feel about not working out when there's a gym right downstairs! It's located in Penn Quarter, so it's close to Chinatown, downtown, NoMa, and other neighborhoods people go to, look around, and say, "wait, is this it? Really?" (I kid, I kid; aside from that horrible intersection where they have the huge tvs, I actually really like Chinatown.) Also, it's equidistant from two metro stations, turning each morning into an agonized internal debate over where exactly you want to go to get the back of your neck breathed on by total strangers.
675 E Street NW #500
1 Bedrooms, 1.5 Baths
$509,000
Washington DC real estate news
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Georgia Ave. Housing Overhaul Moving Forward
5
comments
Posted by
Unknown on 9/20/2012 05:46:00 PM
Labels: Hamel Builders, Park View, Petworth, Warrenton Group, Wiencek + Associates
Labels: Hamel Builders, Park View, Petworth, Warrenton Group, Wiencek + Associates

Workers put finishing touches on The Avenue on Thursday |
Completion of the building is a mile-marker for "The Park Morton New Communities Initiative", which has realized only a small part of its potential. The $170 million initiative was established under then DC mayor Anthony Williams to replace an aging public housing complex on Georgia Avenue. The initiative is a collaboration between the District's Housing Authority (DCHA), which owns and manages the complex, and the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development.
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Image courtesy Wiencek + Associates |
In 2008, then-Mayor Adrian Fenty sent out a Request For Proposals for developing in the project in 2008, promising that no former residents of the complex would be displaced; the building broke ground in 2010. The overall plan calls for 317 market-rate housing units, 206 affordable housing units, a 10,000 square foot park, and a new community center with green designs throughout.
The entire Park Morton redevelopment is being carried out by the Park Morton Development Partners (PMDP), a joint venture between Landex Corporation and the Warrenton Group. Wienecek + Associates designed the project. Hamel Builders is the general contractor.
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Image courtesy Wiencek + Associates |
The development was funded by a mix of city agencies and departments, as well as Freddie Mac, Prudential, Hudson Housing, and Capital One.
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1-BR Unit Rendering, courtesy Wiencek + Associates |
Georgetown Plant Sale: Top Arts Official Urges Open Discussion
Sometime this week, the distinctive 1940s art deco heating plant on the Rock Creek Canal in Georgetown got a listing on the federal government's real estate site, the Washington Post reported Tuesday on its Capital Business blog. It is slated to be sold in an online auction sometime in November.
That historic steam plant - the West Heating Plant - has become the symbol of a government sell-off of thousands of unused government properties, called "federal excess properties", launched in 2010 by the Obama
Administration.
In 2011, the 1940s plant at 1051 29th St. NW was added to the list, and in June the GSA briefed Congress on its nationwide efforts at the site.
How much revenue could it bring? Possibly millions. GSA can't comment on the value of "pending disposals," but developers see the site as one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in Georgetown.
But some say the sale process is taking place largely behind closed doors, including a top DC arts official. Thomas Luebke, FAIA, is Secretary of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (CFA), the federal body charged by Congress with protecting properties of historic value in the District. On September 5th, he wrote a letter to the GSA urging a more open discussion on the West Heating Plant's fate. DCMud obtained a copy of the letter on Wednesday.
Luebke urges the GSA to hold an open discussion with a wide range of stakeholders about the future of the property. In his letter, he cites Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, which requires federal agencies to determine the possible negative impacts of an action such as a sale, and what can be done to eliminate or mitigate those. That process, Luebke writes, normally involves open discussion.
"At this time I have not heard of any plans to proceed with this process [of open, public discussion] and hope that the GSA is committed to pursuing what would be expected for a property of this significance," Luebke writes. "While the sale of the property in the immediate term may yield a high sales price as a redevelopment project [...] it is most valuable in the long term precisely for its particular physical, spatial, and historic characteristics."
The building, the letter highlights, was designed in the Moderne style by local architect William Dewey Foster and is an example of federal government's investment in public infrastructure immediately following World War II.
Luebke, in the letter, urges the GSA to consider a use that would maintain the building's structural authenticity as a "massive masonry box-essentially open on the inside except for metal catwalks and platforms holding equipment." That structure, he writes, lends itself to myriad cultural uses, with the Tate modern museum in London being an example.
GSA says they're doing the required review. "GSA is currently engaged in that process," Dan Cruz, deputy press secretary for the GSA told DCMud.
Friends of Georgetown Waterfront Park and Ward 2 DC City Councilmember Jack Evans want to see part of the property turned into a park. "Councilmember Evans, as well as the Georgetown community, continues to support a mixed use development with park land," Andrew Huff, director of communications for Evans, told DCMud on Wednesday.
On Thursday, City Councilmember Jack Evans will be meeting with the DC Office of Planning, the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, and "leadership from the Georgetown neighborhood" to "continue the discussion" Huff wrote to DCMud. "It is not a public meeting."
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West Heating Plant. Photo courtesy GSA web |
How much revenue could it bring? Possibly millions. GSA can't comment on the value of "pending disposals," but developers see the site as one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in Georgetown.
But some say the sale process is taking place largely behind closed doors, including a top DC arts official. Thomas Luebke, FAIA, is Secretary of the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts (CFA), the federal body charged by Congress with protecting properties of historic value in the District. On September 5th, he wrote a letter to the GSA urging a more open discussion on the West Heating Plant's fate. DCMud obtained a copy of the letter on Wednesday.
Copy of Letter from CFA to GSA, obtained by DCMud |
Luebke urges the GSA to hold an open discussion with a wide range of stakeholders about the future of the property. In his letter, he cites Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, which requires federal agencies to determine the possible negative impacts of an action such as a sale, and what can be done to eliminate or mitigate those. That process, Luebke writes, normally involves open discussion.
"At this time I have not heard of any plans to proceed with this process [of open, public discussion] and hope that the GSA is committed to pursuing what would be expected for a property of this significance," Luebke writes. "While the sale of the property in the immediate term may yield a high sales price as a redevelopment project [...] it is most valuable in the long term precisely for its particular physical, spatial, and historic characteristics."
The building, the letter highlights, was designed in the Moderne style by local architect William Dewey Foster and is an example of federal government's investment in public infrastructure immediately following World War II.
Luebke, in the letter, urges the GSA to consider a use that would maintain the building's structural authenticity as a "massive masonry box-essentially open on the inside except for metal catwalks and platforms holding equipment." That structure, he writes, lends itself to myriad cultural uses, with the Tate modern museum in London being an example.
GSA says they're doing the required review. "GSA is currently engaged in that process," Dan Cruz, deputy press secretary for the GSA told DCMud.
Letter from CFA to GSA on Sale of West Heating Plant |
On Thursday, City Councilmember Jack Evans will be meeting with the DC Office of Planning, the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, and "leadership from the Georgetown neighborhood" to "continue the discussion" Huff wrote to DCMud. "It is not a public meeting."
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Furioso's "1525 Fourteen" on 14th St. Close to Breaking Ground
10
comments
Posted by
Unknown on 9/19/2012 11:49:00 AM
Labels: 14th Street, Eric Colbert, Furioso Development
Labels: 14th Street, Eric Colbert, Furioso Development


"We are moments away from breaking ground," Furioso told DCMud, "and we are doing some preliminary stuff to cross all our Ts and Is." Developer Giorgio Furioso sees the future 42,000 s.f. building - in the planning stage for nearly a decade - as an anchor of 24/7 neighborhood vitality, bringing some daytime activity to a night-time destination.
Some office tenants for the building are ready to move in, Furioso said, but there are no decisions about a tenant for the 3,600 square feet of street-level retail. That announcement could come in the next few months, Furioso told DCMud.
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Original 2004-approved scheme |
The project has already gained the necessary approvals and financing. The Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB) approved the in-fill project in 2010. It was originally planned as a seven-story, cubist-inspired residential building in 2004, but Furioso changed direction.
The design for the six-story LEED gold building, which includes a green roof, geothermal heating, and solar panels, is by architecture firm Eric Colbert and Associates. Two underground floors include 28-small-car parking spaces, accessible by car elevator only, and a charging station for hybrid cars. The building also includes a bicycle room complete with showers.
The Mohawk artists lofts, the condo building Church Place, renovation of the historic Roosevelt, and Solo Piazza residential building on 13th Street are all past projects of Furioso. Furioso, who is stately in favor of a quality-over-quantity development model, only builds one development at a time.
"I think you can grow by being better rather than being bigger - sort of the Lorax idea," Fuioso, who was born in Italy and holds an MFA, told DCMud. "Sometimes the idea of success is measured by how many projects you do - whether you're the architect, the developer, the builder - rather than saying 'this project contributes to this neighborhood the way other projects don't.' It's a different approach to working and living."
Washington D.C. real estate development news
Your Next Place
Oh wow. You never see a place like this in the District. Most houses here are sort of like most of the people here - basic, slightly uptight, old-fashioned. This house, though, is like that girl you see at the party who's way too stylish and edgy to live here, and who you just know is going to move to New York in six months, so you better act fast, and by "act fast," I mean "stalk her on Facebook," because she's totally out of your league.
This house isn't out of your league though - well, as long as you've got $2.5 million on hand. (Okay, so it's out of your league.) This Tracy Place classic is open and bright and has a vague "California in the Seventies" vibe. (Though I should mention here that I wasn't alive in the Seventies, and I've never been to California.) The formal dining room and living room are dramatic and have windows galore, as well as recessed lighting and gleaming hardwood floors. And this house has maybe the greatest kitchen I've ever seen, a high-ceilinged gourmet masterpiece with stained-glass-fronted cupboards, a huge island, and top of the line stainless steel appliances. There are also two - yes, two - full-size sinks, so you can let twice as many dishes pile up and fester before sweeping them into garbage bags and buying all new ones.
Upstairs are five bedrooms, all with full en-suite bathrooms. This is huge. I like to think of having your own bathrooom as a kind of dividing line in life; if you do have your own, you're not allowed to complain ever, about anything in your life. If you have to share, go ahead and whine as much as you want, I'll at least pretend to feel bad since you have to smell other people's odors on a regular basis. Each room is bright and large and opens onto a huge shared deck. Underneath that deck is a huge first floor patio; yes, that's two levels of leisure space looking out onto a superlative garden that features a sloping landscaped terrace surrounded by greenery. Very private. It's like your own mini-Garden of Eden, by which I mean you can eat apples and have sex out there, but don't get caught by Dad or you're in big trouble.
2324 Tracy Place NW
5 Bedrooms, 5.5 Baths
$2,395,000
This house isn't out of your league though - well, as long as you've got $2.5 million on hand. (Okay, so it's out of your league.) This Tracy Place classic is open and bright and has a vague "California in the Seventies" vibe. (Though I should mention here that I wasn't alive in the Seventies, and I've never been to California.) The formal dining room and living room are dramatic and have windows galore, as well as recessed lighting and gleaming hardwood floors. And this house has maybe the greatest kitchen I've ever seen, a high-ceilinged gourmet masterpiece with stained-glass-fronted cupboards, a huge island, and top of the line stainless steel appliances. There are also two - yes, two - full-size sinks, so you can let twice as many dishes pile up and fester before sweeping them into garbage bags and buying all new ones.

2324 Tracy Place NW
5 Bedrooms, 5.5 Baths
$2,395,000
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
New Silver Spring Library Moving Forward: Construction Meeting Today
9
comments
Posted by
Amanda Abrams on 9/18/2012 10:59:00 AM
Labels: Library, Lukmire Partnership, Silver Spring
Labels: Library, Lukmire Partnership, Silver Spring

Work on the Silver Spring Library could begin within the next few months, according to sources at Montgomery County. "We’re moving forward on a very tight schedule, and this is a real priority project for the county." That’s Ernest Lunsford, division chief for Montgomery County’s Department of General Services, speaking about plans for the forthcoming Silver Spring library. The project—a roughly 63,000 square foot structure designed by the Lukmire Partnership to sit at the corner of Fenton Street and Wayne Avenue - has been inching along since 1999, when the county approved funding for it.

No longer. Design plans finally made it through a long community approval process, construction drawings have been created, and the site has been largely prepared for work to begin. On August 28, the county put the project up for bidding, and today, officials will be holding a “pre-bid” meeting for the eight contractors that have already completed a pre-qualification process.
The contractors are Clark Construction, Coakley & Williams Construction, Costello Construction, Donohoe Construction Company, Dustin Construction, Grunley Construction, Hess Construction, and Morgan-Keller Construction.
The bid opening date is scheduled for October 2, but Lunsford says there’s a chance that date will be pushed back by a week or so if substantial new information arises as a result of today’s meeting. Lunsford and his colleague, Susanne Churchill, the senior architect project manager, swear they will award a contract soon after that. They’ll choose the lowest bidder and issue a “notice to proceed,” allowing work to begin around November.
It’s a bit of a tricky project, explains Churchill, which could cause obstacles. Being a county endeavor, the development includes a prevailing wage clause as well as a “minority, female, and disabled person” subcontracting requirement. It’s complicated structurally, too: the Purple Line train will eventually run through a portion of the building, and an atrium includes special smoke exhaust requirements.
Design plans haven’t changed much in the past few months. A five-story building clad in cast stone that includes a glass curtain wall cantilevering over the Purple Line’s path, this new library will be almost four times bigger than the current one, which is the oldest library in Montgomery County’s system. Pyramid Atlantic art center will operate out of the first two floors, and the library—with expanded meeting spaces, a computer lab, and a larger children’s section—will take up the rest.
The project should be completed by fall of 2014.
Silver Spring, Maryland, real estate development news
No longer. Design plans finally made it through a long community approval process, construction drawings have been created, and the site has been largely prepared for work to begin. On August 28, the county put the project up for bidding, and today, officials will be holding a “pre-bid” meeting for the eight contractors that have already completed a pre-qualification process.

The bid opening date is scheduled for October 2, but Lunsford says there’s a chance that date will be pushed back by a week or so if substantial new information arises as a result of today’s meeting. Lunsford and his colleague, Susanne Churchill, the senior architect project manager, swear they will award a contract soon after that. They’ll choose the lowest bidder and issue a “notice to proceed,” allowing work to begin around November.

Design plans haven’t changed much in the past few months. A five-story building clad in cast stone that includes a glass curtain wall cantilevering over the Purple Line’s path, this new library will be almost four times bigger than the current one, which is the oldest library in Montgomery County’s system. Pyramid Atlantic art center will operate out of the first two floors, and the library—with expanded meeting spaces, a computer lab, and a larger children’s section—will take up the rest.
The project should be completed by fall of 2014.
Silver Spring, Maryland, real estate development news
Monday, September 17, 2012
Cobbling Together Georgetown's Streets
Some of the oldest streets in DC have finally gotten a facelift and officials this week celebrate the big reveal. The streets are home to streetcar tracks dating back to 1903 that have become recognizable symbols of historic
Georgetown.
A ribbon cutting Tuesday will mark completion of the $11.8 million 'rehabilitation' of O and P Streets, largely federally-funded through the Federal Highway Administration. The ribbon cutting will be held at 10:30 on Tuesday.
Over the years, the section of O and P Streets in between Wisconsin Avenue and 37th Street got bumps and wrinkles. Cobblestones around the old streetcar tracks sunk creating ridges of four inches in some places. Safety concerns emerged, as did questions about whether the city should keep the tracks and cobblestones or improve safety.
The city has managed to do both, Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) 2E member Ed Solomon told DCMud. "Everyone is happy that both goals have been met." "Some have even
commented they couldn't believe how smooth the street could be with
cobblestones." The project has been on the city's to-do list for 20 years, seriously for the last nine.
The project included the restoration of O and P, the repaving of 33rd, 34th, 36th, and 37th Streets
between O and P Streets, the restoration of curbs, gutters and
sidewalks, and the evening out of street surfaces. The city has placed an emphasis on reusing materials when possible. "The whole project was partly a preservation as well as a streetscape
project," said Dara Ward, DDOT's spokesperson for the project. "As much of the original materials as possible were refurbished
and re-installed." The city even employed an archeologist in the beginning phases of the project who made some interesting finds, as reported by Georgetown Dish.
The city also conducted streetlight and drainage improvements, installed crosswalks, curb ramps, tree boxes and tree rails, reinsalled police call and fire alarm boxes, and planted trees, and restored underground parts of the streetcar tracks on O and P Streets. The city refurbished underground, 250-pound cast-iron yokes that support the tracks at five-foot intervals, as well as track manholes and junction boxes.
Any improvements to Georgetown's streetcar lines are purely aesthetic. DDOT permanently removed tracks on P Street between 35th and 36th Streets and on 36th Street between O and P. Even as the city is working to get the H Street Benning Road streetcar route online and servicing passengers by summer 2013, Georgetown is still just one more part of town with streetcar tracks and no streetcars to use them.
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Work on P Street NW in Georgetown. Photo courtesy DDOT |
A ribbon cutting Tuesday will mark completion of the $11.8 million 'rehabilitation' of O and P Streets, largely federally-funded through the Federal Highway Administration. The ribbon cutting will be held at 10:30 on Tuesday.
Over the years, the section of O and P Streets in between Wisconsin Avenue and 37th Street got bumps and wrinkles. Cobblestones around the old streetcar tracks sunk creating ridges of four inches in some places. Safety concerns emerged, as did questions about whether the city should keep the tracks and cobblestones or improve safety.
![]() |
Old streetcar lines on O and P Streets NW got a face lift |
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Image courtesy DDOT |
The city also conducted streetlight and drainage improvements, installed crosswalks, curb ramps, tree boxes and tree rails, reinsalled police call and fire alarm boxes, and planted trees, and restored underground parts of the streetcar tracks on O and P Streets. The city refurbished underground, 250-pound cast-iron yokes that support the tracks at five-foot intervals, as well as track manholes and junction boxes.
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Rehabilitated Streetcar track elements. Photo courtesy DDOT |
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Restored streetcar track. Photo courtesy DDOT |
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