This wonderfully-restored Federal is over 135 years old, making it about as old as my father's suits. (Depending on the season, he can look like anything from an extra from "Boogie Nights" to a Civil War reenactor.) Though it has all the modern finishes you could ask for - expanded bedrooms, up-to-the-minute kitchen - it's also retained a lot of the little touches that make it so warm and inviting. This sounds like an obvious, easy thing to pull off, but judging from all the houses I see that try and fail to capture this vibe, it must be pretty difficult, sort of like all the women that go for the Rihanna look and end up looking like David Bowie.
The house, which is very pleasantly set back from the street, sports a quaint front porch and a small stone patio. And the wall of the adjacent house, which isn't as set back, is covered with lush climbing vines and greenery, creating a sort of Southern gothic atmosphere. If I lived here, I'd have a special bodysuit made with ivy leaves all over it, and then film myself standing stock-still against this wall and leaping out at terrified passersby. Then I'd put the footage on Youtube and let the millions of clicks pay my mortgage. (Yes, I'm half-joking, but we both know it would probably work.)
Inside, the living room is warm and inviting, with a vintage fireplace and more than a touch of period charm. Right off the living room is the formal dining, wide and high-ceilinged, and the kitchen is outfitted with all the modern finishes you could ask for. Upstairs, the bedrooms are generously proportioned - time to order that California king - and outside you have a nice yard, and parking secured by a rollup gate. Located in Logan Circle which, if you ask me, is still arguably the best location in the city, with easy access to tons of amenities and neighborhoods and bars and restaurants. You'll have access to so many options, that going out is virtually guaranteed to be an exercise in hand-wringing and paralysis, followed by a wave of regret no matter what you pick, because deep down you know something else could've been better. Enjoy!
1219 S Street NW
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
$759,900
Rabu, 07 November 2012
West End Development Raising Tensions. Again.
As developers prepare for a massive redevelopment effort in DC's West End, following years of battle over the nature of development, yet another fight is brewing, this time over where to put the temporary fire station. An open field in the West End is on a short list of potential sites, but some neighbors say that park, Francis Field, is not the ideal spot. Ultimately, the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development (DMPED) must decide on a temporary site for the station, but the issue is already raising tensions.
The West End fire station, as well as the West End Library and the Special Operations Division for the Metro Police Department, must relocate in 2013 when Eastbanc begins work on redevelopment of two West End parcels, one of which houses the fire station. The city awarded the lots to a team of private developers in 2010 under the agreement that they would rebuild the West End Library and the fire station, in addition to building condominiums and retail space. The process has been blocked by a Ralph Nader-led advocacy group claiming to protect the public library.
In the meantime, the city must find a temporary location for the fire station.
DMPED confirms that it has three sites on its short-list for the fire station: Francis Field on 25th St. NW between M and N Streets, the tennis courts on 23rd St. between N and P Streets, and the vacant Stevens School at 1050 21st St. Each of the sites presents some awkwardness for a temporary fire station location. The city awarded Stevens School, vacant since 2008, to another private developer in September. The tennis courts are located in a residential area, making them a less likely alternative. Francis Field, the final possibility, is therefore drawing scrutiny. But a group called Friends of Francis Field argues that relocating the fire station there would destroy hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of recent investments in the park.
Gary Griffith of Friends of Francis Field said his group worked to raise $350,000 through a zoning process for renovations to the field in 2010. Those improvements, made by the developer Vornado when it built West End 25, involved planting trees and putting up a fence, among other things. "We don't think that those renovations should be undone," Griffith told DCMud. "We think it would be a bad precedent on the part of the District...what other private company would ever want to put funds into a public park if the District were just going to tear it out?"
Griffith said the Steven's School might be the best suitable temporary location, but the District has already awarded it to a private developer. "In giving away all these buildings to private developers, they have got nowhere to put the fire station." Griffith questions the city's planning and timing surrounding the sell-off and temporary relocation of public infrastructure. "We think that the deputy mayor has created this problem and he should solve it without taking away needed district property."
Jose Sousa, deputy chief of staff with DMPED, told DCMud that DMPED had been working with the National Park Service to discuss the feasibility of the tennis courts and Francis Field as possible sites for the fire station. Sousa said representatives from DMPED and Fire and Emergency Medical Services (FEMS) would be meeting with with ANC2A and ANC2B next week to "share additional information about the benefits and challenges associated with each of the proposed sites."
"Our goal is to try to come to an accord on this in the near future. We've been working closely with the office of Councilmember Evans on this as well," Sousa wrote in an email to DCMud.
For now, the Friends are looking to the West End Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) 2A take a stand on the issue. Although the ANC is not a decision-making body, its recommendation could have sway with the city. The fire station temporary location issue is on the ANC2A agenda for November 14th. No matter what the city's decision, it seems no one is likely to be happy.
![]() |
| Current West End Fire Station. Image: Gary Griffith |
In the meantime, the city must find a temporary location for the fire station.
![]() |
| Work on Francis Field. Image: Gary Griffith |
DMPED confirms that it has three sites on its short-list for the fire station: Francis Field on 25th St. NW between M and N Streets, the tennis courts on 23rd St. between N and P Streets, and the vacant Stevens School at 1050 21st St. Each of the sites presents some awkwardness for a temporary fire station location. The city awarded Stevens School, vacant since 2008, to another private developer in September. The tennis courts are located in a residential area, making them a less likely alternative. Francis Field, the final possibility, is therefore drawing scrutiny. But a group called Friends of Francis Field argues that relocating the fire station there would destroy hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of recent investments in the park.
Gary Griffith of Friends of Francis Field said his group worked to raise $350,000 through a zoning process for renovations to the field in 2010. Those improvements, made by the developer Vornado when it built West End 25, involved planting trees and putting up a fence, among other things. "We don't think that those renovations should be undone," Griffith told DCMud. "We think it would be a bad precedent on the part of the District...what other private company would ever want to put funds into a public park if the District were just going to tear it out?"
![]() |
| Work on Francis Field in 2010. Image: Gary Griffith |
Jose Sousa, deputy chief of staff with DMPED, told DCMud that DMPED had been working with the National Park Service to discuss the feasibility of the tennis courts and Francis Field as possible sites for the fire station. Sousa said representatives from DMPED and Fire and Emergency Medical Services (FEMS) would be meeting with with ANC2A and ANC2B next week to "share additional information about the benefits and challenges associated with each of the proposed sites."
"Our goal is to try to come to an accord on this in the near future. We've been working closely with the office of Councilmember Evans on this as well," Sousa wrote in an email to DCMud.
For now, the Friends are looking to the West End Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) 2A take a stand on the issue. Although the ANC is not a decision-making body, its recommendation could have sway with the city. The fire station temporary location issue is on the ANC2A agenda for November 14th. No matter what the city's decision, it seems no one is likely to be happy.
| Rendering for the redevelopment of Francis Field (completed) - Image: Public Record |
Morning Real Estate Fix
The state of Arlington's commercial real estate market (Rebuilding Place) Arlington provides a lower rent for large commercial tenants like the federal government, but that edge is narrowing as Arlington rents rise and other neighborhoods offer competitive services.
Developer Donahue Peebles puts DC mansion on the market (Washington Post) Listed at $7m, the house is no longer a priority for the real estate developer that has moved away from DC and onto Florida.
A new study shows what home sellers want (Consumer Affairs) A recent Redfin study says that sellers aren't generally in a pinch to sell given their perception that the market will continue to go up. A majority of buyers agrees.
Fairfax County land use solutions on the web (GCN) Fairfax, DC's largest suburban enclave, turns to the web to consolidate information on land use and planning.
Pennsylvania Ave PriceRight listed for sale (Greysteel) The leased supermarket, owned by Willco and NREB and opening later this month, goes on the market.
Developer Donahue Peebles puts DC mansion on the market (Washington Post) Listed at $7m, the house is no longer a priority for the real estate developer that has moved away from DC and onto Florida.
A new study shows what home sellers want (Consumer Affairs) A recent Redfin study says that sellers aren't generally in a pinch to sell given their perception that the market will continue to go up. A majority of buyers agrees.
Fairfax County land use solutions on the web (GCN) Fairfax, DC's largest suburban enclave, turns to the web to consolidate information on land use and planning.
Pennsylvania Ave PriceRight listed for sale (Greysteel) The leased supermarket, owned by Willco and NREB and opening later this month, goes on the market.
Selasa, 06 November 2012
Construction on The Tellus in Arlington Underway
"We are right on the construction schedule," Denton said. The team is busy with sheeting, shoring and excavation. S.E. Foster is the general contractor on the project. Denton said Hurricane Sandy caused a four-day hold-up in construction, but that the team would try to make up for lost time. "The storm had a little impact, but we are going to try to pick that up." The building is scheduled for delivery in the first quarter of 2014.
The Tellus, a 254-unit rental apartment building, is expected to be Arlington's first LEED Gold certified building. The project has been in the Arlington development pipeline since 2009, but developers put off starting the project during the recession, and started moving forward on the project just this year. Designs call for 254 residential units and 15,008 s.f. of office and retail space. Plans call for smart car and bicycle facilities, and water-saving and energy-efficient features. The schematic design is by the Lessard Group, WDG Architecture is the firm behind the newest working design.
Arlington, VA real estate development news
Beauty and the Barn
Q and A with John Blackburn
by Beth Herman
Celebrated equestrian architect John Blackburn of Blackburn Architects, PC, also known for his deft restorations and renovations of historical properties, was charged with resurrecting a post Civil War-era bank barn, where the lower portion of the structure is built into a hillside, and where the foundation actually predated the war. Desiring a barn conversion where the 2,590 s.f. structure would be used for entertaining, much of the site design was driven by the client's wife, whose environmental concerns and adopted green practices resulted in an effort to preserve as much of the severely deteriorating historic structure as possible. The project received an AIA Merit Award in Historic Resources and Southern Living magazine's Home Award in Historic Restoration. DCMud spoke with Blackburn about the project.DCMud: Tell is about the genesis of this historic structure and its metamorphosis.
Blackburn: It's my understanding that the bank barn foundation dates back to before the Civil War. It's on the banks of the Potomac in Loudoun County, Virginia, probably less than a mile from the Battle of Ball's Bluff (aka the Battle of Leesburg, October 21, 1861). I would imagine the barn was burned down at one point and rebuilt in the 1870s. The saw marks on the timber tell us the barn itself is post Civil War.DCMud: What was the program for the bank barn?
Blackburn: In addition to extended family gatherings, it was to be used for meetings, receptions, office retreats, etc. The basement stores some of the family's classic cars, go-carts and other recreational equipment.
DCMud: What strategy did you use in adapting an historic structure like this for modern purposes?
Blackburn: My goal in doing any project like this is that when you walk away from it, you close it up and it appears like it originally was: a barn. Whenever I renovate an original structure I like to respect its original use and perpetuate that to any degree possible, though here the northeast facade was replaced with floor-to-ceiling glass that provides panoramic vistas of the property and Potomac.
DCMud: What about the exterior?
Blackburn: It's been completely reclad, as it had to be, in SIPs (structurally insulated panels) and new board-and-batten skin. How you clad and insulate these old buildings is important. We did this barn in original plywood--the one that goes against the original siding we paint black, so when you see through the cracks in the original barn board you don't see anything: It's all black. To support that, we bolted into a 12x12 timber that ran around the perimeter a stainless steel shelf angle which carries the weight of the panel. The panel sits on that and is screwed into the timber frame of the barn, and you add normal building paper and barn boards on the outside of that panel just like what was found the original barn. So on the inside you see the original boards and on the outside are new boards, but you can't tell the difference.
DCMud: The interior seems to maintain the barn's rusticity while courting air and light.
Blackburn: Interior materials and finishes are exactly from the original except where pieces were added to strengthen the structure or replace rotted board. Flooring is oak, as is the timber. We rebuilt the existing double sliding doors. After they are opened, behind them you have a double French glazed glass door entrance which lets in a lot of natural light and ventilation, but when you walk away, you close the barn doors so as not to see them, and the look of the original barn is maintained.
DCMud: During many barn conversions, we see items like patios and decks.
Blackburn: Many times when people want to renovate something like this they'll put a deck on it and that's a sure sign that it's no longer a barn but a residence. I didn't want to do that. Subsequently on the east side, where additional double barn doors were falling off, I did the same as on the front side: We rebuilt the barn doors and put French glazed glass doors behind it. When you open these 6-foot wide doors, instead of a deck sticking outside of the barn that doesn't fit, your interior space now becomes your deck. A railing behind the barn doors but in front of the French doors prevents any egress. As mentioned earlier the corn crib on the south side was turned into a deck, but it is out of view.DCMud: There were other barns on the property, so did you preserve them too?
Blackburn: We used barn siding on the interior of the bank barn, for example the sliding door in the kitchen and paneling in the bathroom. We had an existing barn on the north end that was falling apart, and we used the wood for this one. I've also learned from designing over 160 horse barns (some from historic beginnings) that these structures tend to be organic: Over the years, farmers would add a window here, a lean-to there, etc., so that it grows as you'd find with an industrial building. We did punch in a couple of windows so that light was channeled into a bathroom or kitchen.
DCMud: How would you summarize the work you did on this barn?
Blackburn: It responds to its historic context, and yet it responds to the site. Two of the major elements that respond to the site are the north window, which completely exposes it to the view, and the corn crib sun deck to the south which faces out over the farm but is completely hidden. These elements were melded into the context in a very successful way.
DCMud: Speaking of architecture that works, what would you count among the District's most influential designs for you?
Blackburn: There are two, though different as night and day, that I think are the best buildings in D.C. For an interior space I really like the Rotunda of the Library of Congress--the big, open reading room--which is the grandest, most beautiful, functional space. It's ornate, historic and fascinating. From the exterior, my choice has to be the Finnish Embassy. Because of its design and embellishment like the vines growing over it, it's my favorite building in D.C.
photos courtesy of Kenneth Wyner
Senin, 05 November 2012
HPRB Approves Two New Buidings for Blagden Alley
Slowly but surely, Shaw’s Blagden Alley neighborhood is growing. Two new developments proposed by Altus Realty Partners will fill in a couple of empty lots in the historic district and are now one step closer to reality—though when they’ll actually be complete is anyone’s guess.
On Thursday, DC’s Historic Preservation Review Board looked over proposed designs for the buildings by PGN Architects. One, at 1212 9th Street, will be four stories tall and include a small ground floor retail space; the other will sit at 917 M Street, but its longest side will run along the alley. HPRB approved both projects, leaving smaller details to be worked out with the Historic Planning Office staff.
At this point, both developments are in the very early stages, so details like whether the buildings will include condos or apartments, or how many units each will hold, are still up in the air. As for an estimated timeline for next steps, “it’s pure conjecture,” said Charlie Kehler, a principal with Altus. This stage is very much about design.
The four-story building on 9th Street is relatively straightforward. Filling in a vacant lot between Squares Fashions and a string of row houses, the building’s 9th Street façade will be clad in buff brick, with a stepped back central bay and a top floor of glass and aluminum. The ground floor would include shop windows topped by a steel canopy; above would be two floors of residences, plus a penthouse set back by about four feet. Just south of the building runs an alley, which residents would use to access parking.
The HPRB had a few comments about the height of the penthouse and whether the alley would be wide enough to regularly accommodate cars, but the board unanimously approved the design.
The second building is a bit more complicated. In an effort to complement the decorative Second Empire row houses that lie along M Street just west of 9th Street and just east of the proposed building, the architects gave the development’s M Street façade three vertical sections alternately made of block, glass and brick. Turning the corner, the long side along Blagden Alley uses the same materials—and includes a three-story glass gallery—though with more of a horizontal orientation.
The design incorporates an existing historic one-story garage on the alley. The developers are planning on excavating to create underground parking, and the new building would rest on top of part of the structure.
HPRB members expressed some concern that, while the side of the building appears to be sufficiently industrial to fit with the alley’s overall aesthetic, the front is a bit too stark to complement the row houses. “It’s a blank cypher—I’m not sure what you’re trying to capture,” said HPRB member Nancy Metzger. Still, the group approved the design, leaving the developers to work with HPO to iron out any final issues.
Kehler was pleased with the decisions and said Altus is excited about the area. “We love the neighborhood’s identity,” he said. “We think it’s where DC will be focused in the future.”
Washington, D.C., real estate development news
![]() |
| Building at 1212 9th Street |
At this point, both developments are in the very early stages, so details like whether the buildings will include condos or apartments, or how many units each will hold, are still up in the air. As for an estimated timeline for next steps, “it’s pure conjecture,” said Charlie Kehler, a principal with Altus. This stage is very much about design.
![]() | |
| 1212 9th Street, from the south |
The HPRB had a few comments about the height of the penthouse and whether the alley would be wide enough to regularly accommodate cars, but the board unanimously approved the design.
![]() |
| Building at 917 M Street |
The design incorporates an existing historic one-story garage on the alley. The developers are planning on excavating to create underground parking, and the new building would rest on top of part of the structure.
![]() | |
| 917 M Street building seen from west |
Kehler was pleased with the decisions and said Altus is excited about the area. “We love the neighborhood’s identity,” he said. “We think it’s where DC will be focused in the future.”
Washington, D.C., real estate development news
Label:
Altus Realty,
Blagden Alley,
PGN Architects,
Shaw
Morning Real Estate Fix
Washington Times plant sells for $14.6m (Washington Business Journal) The warehouse at 2850 New York Ave, once owned by the Times, was picked up by a Colorado-based investment trust.
Vornado says 2014 will be turnaround year for BRAC recovery (Washington Business Journal) The New York based real estate investment trust says 2.4m s.f. of its space will have been impacted by federal tenants relocating onto federally owned property, but it is starting to make headway on replacing them, a process that will take years.
Commercial loans - demand and supply up (Globe Street) A recent report by the FRB says commercial lenders are easing standards to provide more loans, and that developers are taking them up on the money.
Branding: the next big thing in real estate (CNBC) Celebrity branding of luxury projects has been catching on internationally, with exclusive amenities, with some suggesting it can raise the value of a building by a third.
Architects billing up in September (Architect Magazine) For the first time in 5 months, the AIA index on architectural billings was positive.
Vornado says 2014 will be turnaround year for BRAC recovery (Washington Business Journal) The New York based real estate investment trust says 2.4m s.f. of its space will have been impacted by federal tenants relocating onto federally owned property, but it is starting to make headway on replacing them, a process that will take years.
Commercial loans - demand and supply up (Globe Street) A recent report by the FRB says commercial lenders are easing standards to provide more loans, and that developers are taking them up on the money.
Branding: the next big thing in real estate (CNBC) Celebrity branding of luxury projects has been catching on internationally, with exclusive amenities, with some suggesting it can raise the value of a building by a third.
Architects billing up in September (Architect Magazine) For the first time in 5 months, the AIA index on architectural billings was positive.
Langganan:
Postingan (Atom)














