Metro DC area's loss of farmland (NewEraProgress.com) The DC region's major loss of farmland to sprawling development can be partially ameliorated by conservation easements.
MoCo and AHC partner to buy 768 unit project (AHC) A Germantown garden community becomes the largest project of AHC, which will now serve low- and moderately low income residents, thanks to grants from Montgomery County.
DC's walkable real estate market (Atlantic Cities) In DC, as in other cities, walkability creates the market, but the greater DC area leads the nation in nation in "regionally significant walkable urban places." But if you're reading this already knew that because you probably live in one. Much of DC and the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor count for most of them.
DC Police get hand in shaping new development (Washington Post) DC Police Chief Lanier is embedding police commanders with developers in order to make the new developments less susceptible to crime. Case in point is the Wharf in southwest DC.
Mortgage applications down (Mortgage Bankers Assn) For those keeping track of the never-ending ups and downs of the housing and mortgage markets, new applications are falling, though refinances still capture 79% of the market, despite the fact that rates have not dropped recently.
Kamis, 06 September 2012
Rabu, 05 September 2012
DC's Union Market to Open Saturday
![]() |
| Rendering courtesy of Edens |
D.C's long-anticipated Union Market hall opens in D.C. this Saturday, September 8th. The opening heralds what many hope will be an ongoing revitalization of the eastern downtown area, as well as the NoMa neighborhood. With the new market the city has two working market halls - institutions known worldwide as centers of trade, exchange, and community. The market is located between 5th and 6th Streets NE north of Florida Ave. and east of New York Ave., and held a preview party in July. The city's other market hall, the historic Eastern Market, is located in Capitol Hill.
The grand opening Saturday will be followed on Sunday by the second annual DC Scoop artisan ice cream competition from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. There is no admission cost. Market hours will be Friday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. until November, when the market will be open six days a week.
"We think that Union Market will be a terrific asset for NoMa residents and business," Robin-Eve Jasper, president of the NoMa Buiness Improvement District (BID) told DCMud. "For us, it is a first step in what is going to be a fabulous addition to the overall NoMa neighborhood."
![]() |
| Rendering courtesy of Edens |
The grand opening also marks a renovation victory in the face of a fire which did serious damage in November, 2011. The fire displaced vendors, including Harvey's Market, a meat shop which will reopen in the new market.
According to Edens, the market's developer, it will feature space for up to 40 vendors and "the finest food artisans ranging from up-and-coming entrepreneurs to well-known restauranteurs" and will operate year-round. Union Market is located in the former Union Terminal Market Hall, which was built in 1967, and has been renovated, although market activity on the site dates back to 1802. The architectural firm on the project is JCA Architects.
![]() |
| Rendering from Florida Avenue Small Area Plan, NoMa |
In 2009, the Office of Planning developed a Florida Avenue Small Area Plan with various site stakeholders. In addition to a recommendation for a mixed-use area of commercial and residential spaces, the plan also sketches out a long-term vision for a walkable area linking pedestrians destined for the Florida Avenue market area with the New York / Florida Avenue Metro, NoMa, and neighboring Gallaudet University campus.
Gallaudet University, with its campus just across 6th Street east of the market, is another major property owner and stakeholder in the zone. In 2009, it was a participant in planning talks for the area. The University has recently submitted a campus master plan for DC Zoning Commission review, according to planning office officials. Gallaudet owns four acres adjoining the Union Market site which is currently being used as a parking lot, but has no plans to redevelop its portion in the near future.
![]() |
| Rendering from Florida Avenue Small Area Plan, NoMa |
“The opening of Union Market is great," Harriet Tregoning, Director of the DC Office of Planning, told DCMud. "OP looks forward to seeing our plans being implemented."
NoMa BID president Robin-Eve Jasper echoed those hopes. "I think that the first piece coming to reality - the Union Market - will be a real catalyst as far as seeing those plans move forward."
Washington D.C. real estate development news
Selasa, 04 September 2012
Columbia Heights Affordable Housing Designed for Deaf
There is a tree-lined section of Euclid Street NW in Columbia Heights where a mural of an ocean scene faces an empty, grassy lot. That lot, at 1421 Euclid Street, NW - near the corner with 14th Street NW and a BP gas station - is the site of a future housing development designed for the deaf.
The 28-unit, $11.5 million apartment building will feature an audio-video entry system and balconies with every unit. The building will be the second D.C. apartment building designed especially to accommodate members of the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community (Gallaudet beat them, by a bit). The rental units will also meet the city's affordable housing requirements.
Buwa Binitie of Dantes Partners, the project's developer, released new renderings of the project to DCMud this week. "This is going to look and feel like any other high-quality market-rate housing," Binitie said. According to project architect Zachary Schooley of Grimm + Parker Architects, the apartment design, in addition to a two-way, audio-video entry system - will feature open floor plans to facilitate visual communication and signing.
The building's design considers future prospective deaf and hard-of-hearing residents' greater "reliance on the visual and tactile senses," Schooley told DCMud. "Spaces where the tenants can openly assemble together, open stairways, large amounts of glazing and the use of color all create a more stimulating (visual) environment." The design includes eight studio units, 16 one-bedroom units, four two-bedroom units, for a total of 28 units - 9 fewer than the original plan's call for 37 units.
Schooley said architects are working to amplify well-lit spaces and minimize the number of
darkened, or sharp, corners. He said the design team had also been experimenting with textural elements, such as wall coverings, flooring materials that will enhance residents' tactile experience of the space.
Binitie said Dantes has also brought on a new development partner on the Justice Park project. Mi Casa, Inc., an affordable housing non-profit, has replaced former development partners Perdomo Group and Capital Construction Enterprises, turning the development triad into a duo. The switch-up happened in April, Binitie told DCMud, adding that Dantes has "always been in the lead development role in the project."
Dantes Partners won the contract to design, build, and develop the city-owned property in July, 2010, under the administration of former mayor Adrian Fenty. The city stipulated that the building accommodate renters who meet eligibility requirements for affordable housing. Dantes Partners is the firm behind several other
recent D.C. developments including VIDA affordable senior housing in Brightwood and the long-running but embattled redevelopment of the West End library and fire station.
Binitie said Dantes has worked with a variety of community stakeholders during the design stage of the Justice Park project. According to Binitie, input has come from the neighboring condo communities of The Villaggio and Fairmont, among other locals.
Another person involved with the project since its inception is Glen Sutcliffe, an agent with W.C. & A.N. Miller, who caters to D.C.'s deaf and hard-of-hearing community. The child of deaf parents, Sutcliffe said he immediately welcomed the opportunity, and rallied members of his network to support the project.
He said the ubiquitous open floor plans featuring joined kitchen-living-dining areas have particular value to the deaf and hard-of-hearing. "When you are designing a living space for a deaf or hard-of-hearing individual, you have to think: everything is visual," according to Sutcliffe. He said the design would feature a strobe light fire alarm with a flash "piercing" enough to wake anyone up from a deep sleep, which would be a benefit even to the hearing. "Things that are designed and developed for a deaf person could have universal use all the time."
Although the D.C. metro area has a higher concentration of deaf individuals than almost any other locale in the world, Sutcliffe said, housing options for the deaf are extraordinarily underrepresented. "People might ask why we are doing this," Sutcliffe said. "Because a deaf person goes to buy a condo or a co-op or rent an apartment in the District and they have to do battle with the board, builder, or landlord to get accommodations."
Sutcliffe said even the simplest and cheapest feature is one that more builders could integrate into their designs: the audio-video entry system. "It is my sincere hope that this building may serve as a model for other developers to design their building similarly as far as accessibility," Sutcliffe told DCMud. "What is necessity for the deaf community could be an amenity for the hearing population - if you look at it that way, it makes perfect sense."
But as stipulated by fair housing law, the apartments must be made available for rental to anyone eligible for affordable housing on a first-come, first-serve basis. However, Binitie said, marketing will be "aggressively targeting deaf professionals." Renters must earn between 30 and 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), or, no more than $60,000 a year. Binitie says he expects ground-breaking will take place in early 2013, and the units will open to reservation until six months after construction.
"It will be first-come first-serve according to fair housing, but you have to understand that these are going to accessible units and we are going to try to accommodate as many (deaf) as possible," said Sutcliffe.
Washington D.C. real estate development news
The 28-unit, $11.5 million apartment building will feature an audio-video entry system and balconies with every unit. The building will be the second D.C. apartment building designed especially to accommodate members of the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community (Gallaudet beat them, by a bit). The rental units will also meet the city's affordable housing requirements.
![]() |
| Justice Park Designed Especially For the Deaf |
The building's design considers future prospective deaf and hard-of-hearing residents' greater "reliance on the visual and tactile senses," Schooley told DCMud. "Spaces where the tenants can openly assemble together, open stairways, large amounts of glazing and the use of color all create a more stimulating (visual) environment." The design includes eight studio units, 16 one-bedroom units, four two-bedroom units, for a total of 28 units - 9 fewer than the original plan's call for 37 units.
Schooley said architects are working to amplify well-lit spaces and minimize the number of
![]() |
| Park view from future Justice Park apartments on Euclid St. NW |
Binitie said Dantes has also brought on a new development partner on the Justice Park project. Mi Casa, Inc., an affordable housing non-profit, has replaced former development partners Perdomo Group and Capital Construction Enterprises, turning the development triad into a duo. The switch-up happened in April, Binitie told DCMud, adding that Dantes has "always been in the lead development role in the project."
![]() |
| Justice Park, rendering courtesy Dantes Partners |
recent D.C. developments including VIDA affordable senior housing in Brightwood and the long-running but embattled redevelopment of the West End library and fire station.
Binitie said Dantes has worked with a variety of community stakeholders during the design stage of the Justice Park project. According to Binitie, input has come from the neighboring condo communities of The Villaggio and Fairmont, among other locals.
![]() |
| Justice Park, rendering courtesy Dantes Partner |
Another person involved with the project since its inception is Glen Sutcliffe, an agent with W.C. & A.N. Miller, who caters to D.C.'s deaf and hard-of-hearing community. The child of deaf parents, Sutcliffe said he immediately welcomed the opportunity, and rallied members of his network to support the project.
He said the ubiquitous open floor plans featuring joined kitchen-living-dining areas have particular value to the deaf and hard-of-hearing. "When you are designing a living space for a deaf or hard-of-hearing individual, you have to think: everything is visual," according to Sutcliffe. He said the design would feature a strobe light fire alarm with a flash "piercing" enough to wake anyone up from a deep sleep, which would be a benefit even to the hearing. "Things that are designed and developed for a deaf person could have universal use all the time."
Although the D.C. metro area has a higher concentration of deaf individuals than almost any other locale in the world, Sutcliffe said, housing options for the deaf are extraordinarily underrepresented. "People might ask why we are doing this," Sutcliffe said. "Because a deaf person goes to buy a condo or a co-op or rent an apartment in the District and they have to do battle with the board, builder, or landlord to get accommodations."
Sutcliffe said even the simplest and cheapest feature is one that more builders could integrate into their designs: the audio-video entry system. "It is my sincere hope that this building may serve as a model for other developers to design their building similarly as far as accessibility," Sutcliffe told DCMud. "What is necessity for the deaf community could be an amenity for the hearing population - if you look at it that way, it makes perfect sense."
But as stipulated by fair housing law, the apartments must be made available for rental to anyone eligible for affordable housing on a first-come, first-serve basis. However, Binitie said, marketing will be "aggressively targeting deaf professionals." Renters must earn between 30 and 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), or, no more than $60,000 a year. Binitie says he expects ground-breaking will take place in early 2013, and the units will open to reservation until six months after construction.
"It will be first-come first-serve according to fair housing, but you have to understand that these are going to accessible units and we are going to try to accommodate as many (deaf) as possible," said Sutcliffe.
Washington D.C. real estate development news
Morning Real Estate Fix
Expedite zoning review so Wal-Mart can open (Washington Post) A handful of obstructionists sit in the way of jobs, progress, and fairness. The Board of Zoning Adjustment should fast-track its appeal so things can move forward.
Jumbo loans get easier, helping housing market rebound (Boston.com) As lenders make it easier for large loans, troubled homes in the higher range find refinancing easier.
Forest City has fastest leasing of any of its apartments at the Yards (Washington Post) Forest City says its Lofts at the Yards has leased all its 170 apartments, the fastest rate for a lease up in any of the residences it has built.
Jumbo loans get easier, helping housing market rebound (Boston.com) As lenders make it easier for large loans, troubled homes in the higher range find refinancing easier.
Forest City has fastest leasing of any of its apartments at the Yards (Washington Post) Forest City says its Lofts at the Yards has leased all its 170 apartments, the fastest rate for a lease up in any of the residences it has built.
Sabtu, 01 September 2012
Your Next Place

By Franklin Schneider
The house next door to mine has been sold at least three times in the six years I've lived here. After a while I just assumed it was haunted, but after the last owners moved out I was able to go inside for a visit and I found that no, it just sort of sucked. It was narrow, dim, and had the finishes of a Holiday Inn rent-by-hour conference room. Of course everyone moved out after a year or two.

3846 Woodley Road NW
6 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths
Sale price: $1,623,000




The house next door to mine has been sold at least three times in the six years I've lived here. After a while I just assumed it was haunted, but after the last owners moved out I was able to go inside for a visit and I found that no, it just sort of sucked. It was narrow, dim, and had the finishes of a Holiday Inn rent-by-hour conference room. Of course everyone moved out after a year or two.
Conversely, the best houses are almost never on the market. (Much like the best women - I know because I've been checking their Facebook relationship statuses daily for years.) This sprawling 1914 house is a perfect example of this principle. It's been in the family for decades, and when you walk through it you can see why. High ceilings, wide open spaces, miles of burnished hardwood floors, four fireplaces, and six generous bedrooms, all spread over three levels. I'd stay here for decades too. (Unfortunately, the open house ended at 5pm.)

Coming in, you enter into a large, open reception hall area off which all the main rooms branch off, so the house is really made for socializing, parties, etc. The centrally-located dining room is fantastic, the kitchen is unbelievably roomy, I loved the large, elegant library (books are the new vinyl), the master bedroom is "suite" (ha ha! puns!), and if I lived there I'd totally call dibs on the sunny, quirkily shaped attic bedroom. Outside, there's a truly epic backyard and (if there was an emoticon for "intense jealousy," it would be right here) an in-ground pool - this place really is the "too good to be true" house that every family on television lives in, except that it's actually real. And like the hot women on facebook, it was off the market before I even had a chance at it.
3846 Woodley Road NW
6 Bedrooms, 3.5 Baths
Sale price: $1,623,000




Jumat, 31 Agustus 2012
Petworth Safeway Closing September 8th for Multi-family
Washington D.C. real estate development news
Label:
Duball,
Georgia Avenue,
supermarkets,
Torti Gallas
107-Year-Old Cleveland Park Home Dodges Bullet
A 107-year-old home in Cleveland Park has received a last minute pardon from razing, after the property was sold to a new owner and plans to develop the site for the moment shelved.

"The raze application and the concept proposal have been withdrawn," confirms Steve Callcott, Deputy Preservation Officer at Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB). "We received notification from their attorney that the property has been sold to a different owner."
The saga of the marginalized home at 3211 Wisconsin Avenue was set to come to an abrupt end, as the last owners had sought permission to raze the house to make way for a six-story apartment building.
But the HPRB rejected this proposal, later saying that the "new location and context was inappropriate for the building," despite the fact that its initial report found the Quebec Place lot "would provide a more visually compatible context of similarly sized and scaled single family houses." An HPRB report noted that the house was "deteriorating and vacant" and was "in need of substantial repair" as well as missing the original porches. Additionally, there was speculation that the original builder and architect of record, a Treasury Department bookkeeper named Donald Macleod (he built the house for his sister Euphemia), had simply copied the plans for the house out of a builder's manual or pattern book, theoretically reducing the house's value as a historical artifact.
Following the denial of the relocation request, developers changed gears and planned to raze the house and build a six-story apartment building much like the surrounding ones - that is, until the property changed hands at the last minute. So what's next for the once-endangered house?
"We have no applications pending [regarding 3211 Wisconsin]," says Callcott. "We're not exactly sure what's going to happen to it."
Washington D.C. real estate development news
"The raze application and the concept proposal have been withdrawn," confirms Steve Callcott, Deputy Preservation Officer at Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB). "We received notification from their attorney that the property has been sold to a different owner."
The saga of the marginalized home at 3211 Wisconsin Avenue was set to come to an abrupt end, as the last owners had sought permission to raze the house to make way for a six-story apartment building.
Previous developers at Hastings Development had proposed a wholesale relocation of the house, from its Wisconsin Avenue location in Cleveland Park to a vacant lot at 3118 Quebec Place NW. A 2008 report from Hastings Development described the sad case of a home that had "lost its setting" and was "pressed between multifamily apartment buildings." Pictures illustrating this point depicted a forlorn two story house dwarfed on each side by looming monoliths and fronted by a hectic thoroughfare. Encroachment was gradual; to the south, an eight-story apartment building was constructed in 1958, and to the north, a (unsightly) seven-story building went up in the Eighties. In contrast, 3211 was a modest, two-story frame house, set back from the street with a small front yard.
But the HPRB rejected this proposal, later saying that the "new location and context was inappropriate for the building," despite the fact that its initial report found the Quebec Place lot "would provide a more visually compatible context of similarly sized and scaled single family houses." An HPRB report noted that the house was "deteriorating and vacant" and was "in need of substantial repair" as well as missing the original porches. Additionally, there was speculation that the original builder and architect of record, a Treasury Department bookkeeper named Donald Macleod (he built the house for his sister Euphemia), had simply copied the plans for the house out of a builder's manual or pattern book, theoretically reducing the house's value as a historical artifact.
Following the denial of the relocation request, developers changed gears and planned to raze the house and build a six-story apartment building much like the surrounding ones - that is, until the property changed hands at the last minute. So what's next for the once-endangered house?
"We have no applications pending [regarding 3211 Wisconsin]," says Callcott. "We're not exactly sure what's going to happen to it."
Washington D.C. real estate development news
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