View Full Version : A Look at the Development of the NoMa Corridor in NE DC


revitalizer
July 1st, 2007, 08:30 PM
Although development in the Capitol Riverfront area is materialising at a much faster rate, the NoMa corridor is shaping up to contribute significantly to DC's economy and expansion over the next 5 to 7 years.

Take a look at this very excellent map of the NoMa BID with a handy-dandy colour-coded project delivery timetable:
http://www.nomabid.com/map.pdf

NoMa is already home to XM Satellite Radio, CNN, the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (MWCOG), and CareFirst insurance.

Take a look at this PDF file from the DC Office of Planning's Vision Plan and Development Strategy for NoMa:
http://planning.dc.gov/planning/lib/planning/Section_1-_Executive_Summary.pdf

Here's a look at what's going up in NoMa over the next 5 to 7 years:

* 20 million square feet of office, hotel and retail space
* 6,000 residential units
* 36,000 new workers
* At least two new hotels

Take a look at this NoMa video that I found on the NoMa BID's official website:
http://www.nomabid.com/video.html


http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1198/685298569_afae7f159d_o.jpg
NoMa potential build-out (Rendering credit: DC Office of Planning)


The above rendering includes projects that are already being built and ones that are actively on the drawing boards. The rendering also shows the "Burnham at Union Station" development by Akridge that is slated to be built on a platform over the train tracks immediately to the north of Union Station.

revitalizer
July 1st, 2007, 08:52 PM
NoMA Launches Business Improvement District

By Erika Morphy of GlobeSt.com

Friday, March 23, 2007 - WASHINGTON, DC-The NoMA area of Washington, DC has been approved as a new Business Improvement District by the District of Columbia Council. NoMA is bounded by Massachusetts Avenue on the south, North Capitol Street on the west, and Q and R streets on the north. It extends eastward just beyond the CSX/Metrorail tracks.
The NoMA BID has a seven-member board chaired by Bruce Baschuk of J Street Development. BID status will provide tangible benefits to developers interested in the area, according to board treasurer Douglas Firstenberg, who is also principal of Bethesda, MD-based StonebridgeCarras.

“We will be providing services and marketing to tenants and visitors, such as cleaning and safety programs,” Firstenberg tells GlobeSt.com. “We will be involved in working with the District and other agencies to help develop infrastructure and other policies affecting this part of the city.”

Charles Wilkes, chairman of local development firm the Wilkes Co. and vice chairman of the NoMA BID, tells GlobeSt.com that the first project BID will tackle will be a “clean and safe” program, which entails employing street sweepers, uniformed guards and eventually installing streetscape and plantings. That project will take up a big chunk of the BID’s $1.2 million 2008 fiscal year budget, he says.

For the 2007 budget, the developers kicked in voluntary contributions to get the process off the ground. It was money well spent, Wilkes says, as it is largely seen as an investment that will pay dividend in future development.

According to Firstenberg, there is about $1 billion of either planned development or projects underway in this area. “That is not counting what the government is doing,” he says.

StonebridgeCarras, for example, is in the design phase of its Constitution Square project, a $350-million, two-building, seven-acre project. The building at the south side of the site is a 620,000-sf, residential/retail building that will consist of 55,000 sf of retail, 50,000 sf of which will be a grocery store, Firstenberg says. The other building is a 350,000-sf office with retail on the ground floor.

The Wilkes Co. as well has a project in the planning stages: a 650,000-sf mixed-use residential, office and ground floor retail complex in between M, Third and Fourth streets, according to Wilkes.

“We expect to see tremendous new development in the coming years--1.5 million sf of office space, 1,500 apartments and two hotels will break ground this year alone,” Baschuk says in a statement.

ajoutz
July 1st, 2007, 10:05 PM
Sweet. Is this the area with all the cranes you can see when you take the red line out of Union station? I've been watching them build like crazy for a few months.

revitalizer
July 2nd, 2007, 02:04 AM
Sweet. Is this the area with all the cranes you can see when you take the red line out of Union station? I've been watching them build like crazy for a view months.

Yes, it is. And, wait until next year when you'll see even more construction cranes over in this area.

ajoutz
July 2nd, 2007, 03:10 AM
Wow, last time I checked, I believe I counted around 12-13 cranes. I had been wondering what they were for a while. I'm gonna check my cell phone because I think I either took some pictures or a video while the train was moving.

revitalizer
July 2nd, 2007, 03:52 AM
We're to the point now where DC is building mini-cities within the city. Maybe we can push the crane count up to 20 or so in NoMa by early next year.

Here's a list of projects in NoMa that are set to go later this year and next year:

Constitution Square Phase I - 100 M Street NE - 700 apartments

Washington Gateway - New York and Florida Avenue NE - 255 apartments, 180 hotel rooms, and 550,000 square feet of office

60 L Street NE by Camden - 690 apartments

First and M Street NE by Archstone-Smith - 500 apartments

Surprisingly, most of the activity that will get started later this year and next year will be mostly apartments. The Class A apartment vacancy rate in DC remains low so this market is very healthy. So, it will indeed be a new, mixed-use downtown neighbourhood and not just an office park.

revitalizer
July 3rd, 2007, 08:20 PM
Hispanic-owned Marriott to break ground
Washington Business Journal - 12:58 PM EDT Tuesday, July 3, 2007
by Jeff Clabaugh

Staff Reporter
Marriott International Inc., which regularly shows up on lists of best places to work for women and minorities, has pledged to have 500 minority- and women-owned hotels by 2010.

Its first Hispanic-owned hotel in D.C. will break ground next week.

Since Marriott made the pledge 2 years ago, more than 400 minority and women-owned hotels have opened or are under development, including about 30 in the Washington and Baltimore markets.

Its newest Courtyard by Marriott hotel will be the first in the city majority-owned by an Hispanic business, Miami-based The Finvarb Group. Wilmot & Brown & Bagwell, LLP and Welburn Hospitality, both local firms, will be minority owners.

Finvarb also owns the Residence Inn by Marriott in Chantilly.

The Courtyard by Marriott is being built at New York and Florida avenues NE., next to the new ATF headquarters building. Marriott says the 218-room hotel will feature a green roof and 10,000 square feet of retail space.

Mayor Adrian Fenty is scheduled to attend the groundbreaking July 11. The hotel is expected to open in 2009.

revitalizer
July 4th, 2007, 06:09 AM
http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1219/710560703_0188a293ba.jpg
Capitol Square

Capitol Square is a joint development by JBG Cos. and Morgan Stanley and is planned to have a phased completion between 2010 and 2013.

It is planned to be a 1.6-million square foot complex with:

* 575,000 GSF of office space
* 575,000 GSF of residential space
* 250,000 GSF of hotel space
* 200,000 GSF of retail space

NovaWolverine
July 4th, 2007, 05:48 PM
that's a fantastic building. I think NoMa around NY Ave. would be a good place to lift the height limit a bit. But I'm excited about the developments in that area. It's always got a lot of construction going on, and the projects themselves are high quality which is great.

revitalizer
July 5th, 2007, 02:28 AM
I agree, Nova! I used to associate JBG Cos. with bland, boring architecture and projects, but now that has all changed. It seems like just overnight that they've made a complete turn-around by partnering with some of the world's best architects and master planners. Hooray!

I'm really excited about the residential building on the right of the rendering that I posted above. And, if you look at the NoMa video from my first post, you can see their development on the right side of the ATF building. It looks like it will be high-quality.

And, I'm most excited about the one below by JBG now. It's not in NoMa, but I just had to post it again! Sorry!

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/230/513909005_8f98acfc49.jpg
1201 K Street. Developed by JBG. Designed by Richard Rogers + Partners

DistrictDirt
July 5th, 2007, 06:09 PM
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/230/513909005_8f98acfc49.jpg


That part of K street will be looking pretty good in a few years. Across from the Richard Rogers building will be 1050 K St:

http://www.towercompanies.com/images/prop_Dev_1050K.jpg

And right next will be 1099 New York ave, which is really cruising along now:

http://www.davisconstruction.com/assets/ProjectPhotos/00002079.jpg

Across New York Ave from that one is the Old Convention Center redevelopment, still a few years off but with plans that look really nice:

http://farm1.static.flickr.com/110/303248608_1e03001c47.jpg?v=0

Sorry I know we're supposed to be talking about NoMa here, but just had to respond to that last post :)

revitalizer
July 8th, 2007, 02:16 AM
oh, it's alright DistrictDirt. I temporarily deviated off course myself.

But, I found something which may also be of interest to you. I think it was you that commented on MRP Realty's Washington Gateway project in NoMa over on the dcmud blogspot in reference to the lack of creative architecture. I was anonymous at the time over on the dcmud blogspot, and I made a comment to that effect also.

Well, if you look at the NoMa video, you will see that MRP Realty's Washington Gateway project looks different here. Which one is the most current? I happen to like the architecture in the video much better than on the renderings below. What does everyone think?

http://www.nomabid.com/video.html


http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1330/750158397_50293465e5_o.gif
Washington Gateway - Looking southwest along New York Avenue


http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1369/750158413_c4e983e102_o.gif
Washington Gateway - higher angle view; notice the NY Avenue-Florida Avenue metro stop and Metropolitan Branch Trail to the right of the project

xAKxRUSx
July 10th, 2007, 03:38 AM
Oh gentri-ma-fication.

revitalizer
July 10th, 2007, 04:58 AM
I wouldn't classify development in NoMa as gentrification. Current residents are not being displaced because there were none before this development started taking place on this track of land. The development is occurring on parking lots, abandoned warehouses, and former brownfield sites. That is not the classic sign of gentrification.

I basically don't even use the term "gentrification" in my vocabulary, but it is said that "gentrification" occurs when one set of residents are displaced by another set of residents, usually wealthier ones.

NovaWolverine
July 10th, 2007, 05:19 AM
The video looks great, I just hope they can really make the area pedestrian friendly, and more intimate. I want to see some nice public spaces and lots of people walking. But the video looks great, I think a lot of people would love to move there.

urbanaturalist
July 10th, 2007, 06:47 PM
Oh man, they're going to turn the small triangle with the trees on the bottom right corner of the 1st picture into a park. Thats where Wendy's currently sits, right down the street from me.....where am I going to go to get a late nite snack at 3 am!....:ohno:

Other than, I'm partly serious about taking out Wendy's at least make it a restaurant close by ( I love spicy chicken sandwiches), thats my NIMBYism.

The whole project looks good. I like the Metropolitan Branch trail running parallel with Red Line. You can see a dirt trail when you're riding the train into New York Ave station.

DCBaby
July 10th, 2007, 10:10 PM
Urban,

I was trying to figure out where the wendy's was also.

Revitalizer is right. That whole area where the Greyhound bus station is (first street) and K street, along with the east side of North Capitol street is parking lot city. I wonder what is going to happen to the McDonald's on NY ave.

revitalizer
July 13th, 2007, 09:57 PM
Yes, I also do hope that lots of pedestrian activity will become a part of this new neighborhood.

But, poor Wendy's. It looks like its future is already written as the site of a future park.

urbanaturalist
July 15th, 2007, 04:20 PM
Revitalizer,

I reluctantly might be able to let Wendy's go, but what about the bus station, thats a very important asset, because of its proximity to Union Station helps to make it a important transit nexus. People that can't afford trains or just want to take the bus are served tremendously by having the bus station in that location.

revitalizer
July 15th, 2007, 10:13 PM
Revitalizer,

I reluctantly might be able to let Wendy's go, but what about the bus station, thats a very important asset, because of its proximity to Union Station helps to make it a important transit nexus. People that can't afford trains or just want to take the bus are served tremendously by having the bus station in that location.

About the Greyhound bus station. Akridge is planning to incorporate a multi-modal transportation center into their new Burnham Place at Union Station 3 million square foot complex on a platform to be built over top of the train tracks immediately to the north of Union Station. I believe a new bus transportation system will be integrated into that. This is not confirmed yet as the plans are in the early stages of development. Plus, Akridge may be looking to sell their air-rights at Union Station to another developer will to tackle this massive project.

At any rate, a major multi-modal transportation center is planned for Burnham Place at Union Station.

revitalizer
August 4th, 2007, 01:53 AM
Copyright and terms of use of article below has been verified. Safe to post.

http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1246/1001966658_b9ce332b5a_o.jpg
Union Place DC

For immediate release
NoMA BID news media contact: Leslie Braunstein
703/234-7762
info@lhbcommunications.com

First Residential Building Breaks Ground in DC’s NoMA Neighborhood

The Cohen Companies To Develop 700-Unit Union Place

Washington, D.C., July 30, 2007... A neighborhood block party just north of Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. kicked off construction of the first residential project in the NoMA (north of Massachusetts Avenue) Business Improvement District (BID). The Cohen Companies will deliver the first phase of Union Place, ultimately planned for about 700 rental apartments, in mid-2009. Union Place is located at 3rd and K Streets, N.E.

“This is a celebration of a community, not a project -- a community that had the foresight to restore peace and prosperity,” Cohen Companies President Ronald J. Cohen told approximately 200 neighborhood residents gathered for the ground-breaking ceremonies and block party on Saturday, July 28.

“It was a pure grass-roots force of residents who had faith in the future and saved this neighborhood, and the leader was Loree Murray,” Mr. Cohen continued as he announced the naming of the Phase I building “The Loree Grand” in honor of Mrs. Murray, who founded the Near Northeast Citizens Against Crime and Drugs civic association more than 20 years ago.

D.C. Congressional Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, who also spoke at the event, told Mr. Cohen: “What you are about to do here says why it is important to stay and have faith in the neighborhood. Thank you for not giving up.”

D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty said the Cohen project “represents what’s great about the District of Columbia” and its developers. Other speakers at the event included D.C. City Councilmember Kwame Brown (At-Large), chairman of the Council’s Economic Development Committee, and D.C. Department of Transportation (DDOT) Director Emeka Moneme.

The first phase of Union Place consists of 212 apartments, about 30 of which will be designated as affordable workforce housing for families earning up to 80 percent of the area median income. The developer committed to allocating 11 percent of all apartment homes as affordable, with no public subsidy or financing, as part of the District’s Planned Unit Development process.

Also included in the first phase is construction of an interior courtyard that will be open to the public during the day, an accredited child care center, underground parking at the ratio of one space per apartment, a green roof, a fitness center, and about 4,000 square feet of ground-level retail space.

Union Place will offer seven different floor plans ranging from junior one-bedroom units starting at 516 square feet up to two-bedroom-plus-den units of more than 1,400 square feet. Upscale finishes will include granite kitchen countertops. An indoor/outdoor swimming pool opening onto the courtyard is planned for Phase 2.

Residents of Union Place will live within two blocks of both the Union Station and New York Avenue Metro stations. To enhance the pedestrian experience in NoMA, DDOT has started refurbishing the K and L Street underpasses below 2nd St., N.E. When the work is completed, the underpasses will have new sidewalks, bright lighting, and public art displays.

“We are excited to have our first residential community under construction in NoMA,” said Elizabeth Price, President of the NoMA BID. “NoMA is well on its way to becoming an all-new community with over 20 million square feet of mixed-use space to be built out over the next two decades. By this time next year, we will be under construction with seven major developments totaling 1.5 million square feet of office space, 1,500 multifamily residential units, 100,000 square feet of retail space, and 400 hotel rooms.

Mr. Cohen began assembling the land for Union Place in 1988, eventually acquiring 42 separate properties. Twenty abandoned row houses were demolished to make way for Union Place. “This neighborhood has transformed itself through the energy and sacrifice of individuals who wanted to rid their community of drugs and crime, so that their children could grow up in peace and safety,” he said.

The NoMA BID is bounded generally by Massachusetts Avenue on the south, North Capitol Street on the west, and Q and R Streets on the north; it also extends eastward just beyond the CSX/Metrorail tracks. Centrally located within the BID is the New York Avenue Metro Station, situated near the new ATF headquarters building. Private developers are investing more than $1 billion this year with plans to develop over 20 million square feet of office, residential, hotel, and retail space in the 35-block area covered by the NoMA BID over the next 20 years. For more information about the BID, including a development pipeline map, see the BID Website at http://www.nomabid.org. For more information about Union Place, visit http://www.UnionPlaceDC.com.

revitalizer
August 13th, 2007, 09:49 PM
For immediate release
NoMA BID news media contact: Leslie Braunstein
703/234-7762
info@lhbcommunications.com

DC’s NoMA Accepted into LEED Neighborhood Development Pilot

New Rating System Integrates Smart Growth, Urbanism, and Green Building Principles

Washington, D.C., August 8, 2007... The emerging NoMA (north of Massachusetts Ave.) neighborhood just north of Union Station and Capitol Hill has been accepted into the LEED for Neighborhood Development pilot program (LEED ND), being conducted by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC). This new program integrates the principles of smart growth, urbanism, and green building into the first national rating system for neighborhood design.

"We have a tremendous opportunity here in NoMA to literally build an entire neighborhood from scratch,” said Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty. “And I am proud of the work that is being done to make sure what we create will be a model for sustainability in the 21st Century."

Many of NoMA’s major office, retail, and residential buildings -- a total of over 20 million square feet of space -- are being planned to meet LEED green building criteria. “NoMA ’s redevelopment embraces environmentally friendly building design and technology as well as smart growth principles, allowing people to live, work, and shop within walking distance of the U.S. Capitol and our city’s superior public transportation system,” said Elizabeth Price, President of the NoMA Business Improvement District (BID), which worked with the D.C. Office of Planning to secure NoMA’s participation in the LEED ND program.

Several of NoMA’s early development projects will participate in LEED ND on behalf of NoMA:

MRP Realty’s Washington Gateway, a project with one million square feet of office, apartment, hotel, and retail space, is slated to break ground in second quarter 2008. The office component will be built for Gold LEED certification and the other uses will be designed to LEED standards.
StonebridgeCarras and Walton Street Capital will break ground later this year on the first phase of its 2.3 million square feet Constitution Square mixed-use development including office, residential, and retail space. The office component will be built for Silver LEED certification and the residential component will be designed to LEED standards.
A 218-room Courtyard by Marriott hotel, under construction for delivery in 2009, will have a green roof and other environmentally friendly features. It is part of Marriott’s commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 40,000 tons annually.
Other NoMA projects have also made strong commitments to sustainable design:

The General Services Administration is seeking LEED certification for the new Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives headquarters.
Tishman Speyer’s 1100 and 1150 First Street projects, with a total of 670,000 SF of office space and 30,000 SF of retail space, are being designed to receive Silver LEED certification. 1100 First Street is scheduled to break ground this summer for delivery in 2009.
J Street Development is designing all three of its NoMA projects to meet LEED certification: a 90,000 SF office condominium building at 111 K Street to deliver in early 2009, a 200,000 square foot boutique office condominium at 100 K Street to deliver in 2010, and planned redevelopment of a warehouse located at 1111 N. Capitol Street.
The first phase of JBG’s Capitol Square is in the early planning stages to participate in the LEED program. Capitol Square will include up to 1.6 million square feet of mixed-use space.
Participation in the LEED ND pilot program is an opportunity for NoMA and other selected neighborhoods to receive third-party recognition for incorporating smart growth and green design principles. Feedback from the pilot program will be used to refine the rating system. LEED ND is a collaborative effort that includes the USGBC, the Congress for New Urbanism, and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

In addition to LEED ND, the District’s Office of Planning has launched the NoMA Sustainability Study (ecoNoMA), which will recommend neighborhood-scale strategies that promote sustainable design, including improved energy efficiency, water conservation, stormwater management, transportation, and recycling. Together, LEED-ND and ecoNoMA put NoMA on the forefront of the sustainable development movement that brings government, community, and business leaders together and looks beyond individual building impacts to neighborhood–wide solutions.

The NoMA BID is bounded generally by Massachusetts Avenue on the south, North Capitol Street on the west, and Q and R Streets on the north; it also extends eastward just beyond the CSX/Metrorail tracks. Centrally located within the BID is the New York Avenue Metro Station, situated near the new ATF headquarters building. Private developers are investing more than $1 billion this year with plans to develop over 20 million square feet of office, residential, hotel, and retail space in the 35-block area covered by the NoMA BID over the next 20 years. For more information about the BID, including a development pipeline map, see the BID Website at http://www.nomabid.org.

For more information on the U.S. Green Building Council, the LEED Green Building Rating System, and the LEED Neighborhood Development pilot program, visit http://www.usgbc.org.

Infoman
March 28th, 2009, 01:24 AM
Anything new on this project???