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  #2321  
Old Posted Mar 12, 2011, 4:27 AM
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Another Belltown tower

This 26 story building is proposed across the street from Alto and is going through design review currently...



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  #2322  
Old Posted Mar 12, 2011, 5:44 AM
seaskyfan seaskyfan is offline
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Thanks for updating the list. Great to hear the North Lot project might be starting soon.
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  #2323  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2011, 5:48 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by InlandEmpire View Post


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Stadium Place will have three towers of housing, 19,000 square feet of retail and 360 parking stalls on the west side of the site.

Construction will start in late summer on a four-story podium and two apartment towers on Qwest Field's north parking lot in Seattle, the first stage in 1.5 million-square-foot mixed-use development that has been years in the making.

http://www.djc.com/news/re/12026952.html
nice! what's the floor count on the tallest tower? i counted 20 or so on that middle one. will definitely change the area! i hope this encourages developers to invest in residential conversions of historic buildings in pioneer square!

speaking of lists, anyone wanna update the first post? it's outdated and i'm not up for the challenge.
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  #2324  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2011, 3:55 PM
mhays mhays is online now
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25 or so. It would definitely change the area. Pioneer Square needs a big infusion of wage earning people, to soften the overreliance on bar crowds, shelter residents, and game crowds. They would join the office workers, artists, and residential pioneers as a strong influence. This would be the sort of critical mass it needs.

An additional office tower around 20 floors would be built immediately to the right, when the market called for it.

There's some room for residential conversions but not a ton. Good idea when the opportunity exists.
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  #2325  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2011, 6:49 PM
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Looks like the 1200 Madison 16-story apartment project is starting on First Hill.
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  #2326  
Old Posted Apr 3, 2011, 5:20 PM
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New to this forum

Testing....want to see what the posting process is like.
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  #2327  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2011, 4:52 PM
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6th & Lenora Twin Towers

This is a pretty mammoth project; great to see it getting underway! So this makes about 3 high rise projects underway in and around downtown again.


Hot market for rentals inspires twin towers


Seattle developer Pine Street Group plans to break ground within days on a high-rise apartment complex in the Denny Triangle that would be the biggest new downtown construction project in 3 ½ years.

By Eric Pryne

Seattle Times business reporter

PREV 1 of 2 NEXT


VISUALIZATION@STUDIO 216

The Sixth & Lenora Apartments, shown in an artist's rendering, will consist of two 24-story towers, 654 units and 18,000 square feet of retail space.


Related

Seattle developer Pine Street Group plans to break ground within days on a high-rise apartment complex in the Denny Triangle that would be the biggest new downtown construction project in 3 ½ years.

The two-tower, 24-story Sixth & Lenora Apartments is the latest — and largest — entrant in what has become a race among developers to meet growing demand for in-city rental housing that they expect won't abate soon.

At 654 units, the project would be the city's second-largest market-rate apartment complex, said Mike Scott of research firm Dupre + Scott Apartment Advisors.

Matt Griffin, Pine Street's managing partner, said the apartments will target young people who work for such nearby employers as Amazon.com and the Gates Foundation — "people who want to walk to work. We truly believe this is a place people could live without owning a car."

The project, on a mostly vacant, half-block site on Sixth Avenue between Lenora and Blanchard streets, also would have 18,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space.

Pine Street's complex is a strong vote of confidence in the city's booming apartment market, Scott said.

"A year ago, things were improving, but there still was a lot of concern on the part of investors," he said. "That's dissipated. This [project] is proof of that."

Griffin said his firm and its development partners, pension-fund investors represented by real-estate investment adviser Bentall Kennedy, won't borrow money for the $200 million complex: They'll build it entirely with their funds.

Developers have been rushing in recent months to get new apartment buildings permitted and under construction. The apartment-vacancy rate has dropped while rents have begun increasing, according to Dupre + Scott and other researchers. They also say more consumers are reluctant to buy as home prices continue to drop.

Yet, while apartment demand is rising, supply isn't: A lull in construction during the recession's depths means relatively few new units will be finished this year.

Research firm Apartment Insights Washington anticipates 1,866 units will be delivered in 2011 in King and Snohomish counties, less than one-third as many as in 2009.

Hence the recent development boom. But, while many projects are in the pipeline, Sixth & Lenora would be just the second high-rise to break ground since the rush began.

Pine Street obtained permits to start building two years ago but held off while the economy was soft. Now, however, "we're all starting to see recovery," Griffin said.

Job growth is up, he said, and many younger workers are turning to apartments because they recognize owning a home could interfere with their ability to go where the jobs are.

He said Sixth & Lenora should appeal to them in part because it's in a walkable neighborhood blocks from Westlake Center, downtown's prime transit hub.

Relatively low construction costs also make this a good time to build, he said.

Apartments in the towers, mostly studios and one-bedrooms, will average about 700 square feet. The project isn't scheduled for completion until February 2013, Griffin said, but the units probably would rent for an average of about $1,900 a month in today's market.

Before Sixth & Lenora, the last building project of similar magnitude in greater downtown was Aspira, a 37-story apartment tower at Terry Avenue and Stewart Street that broke ground in November 2007, according to Bryan Stevens of the city's Department of Planning and Development.

Pine Street Group probably is best-known as the developer of Pacific Place, the downtown retail-entertainment complex built in the late 1990s. The firm has focused its development efforts exclusively on the downtown area.

"We often say that if we can't walk to it, it's probably something we can't understand," Griffin said.

Eric Pryne: 206-464-2231 or epryne@seattletimes.com
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  #2328  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2011, 7:14 PM
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Once everyone gets rolling, currently underway in greater Downtown will be highrise buildings of:

24
24 (twin of above)
17 (3rd & Cedar apts, three floors above grade)
16 (1200 Madison apts, in full demo)
12 (Amazon offices, bottom of hole, crane is up)
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  #2329  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2011, 10:35 PM
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Average size: 700 sq ft.
+
Average price: $1900
=
Holy cow
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  #2330  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2011, 3:00 AM
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Spendy....not too far from Cap Hill prices. My 800 SF 1 bed is about that price. 2 beds run what a large-ish house mortgage price would cost in non-coastal cities.
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  #2331  
Old Posted Apr 22, 2011, 3:44 AM
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Pox on Greg Condo-Conversion Nickels... Priced out of housing... Need more new aPodments...
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  #2332  
Old Posted May 6, 2011, 1:40 PM
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i'd like to see that Stadium Place
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  #2333  
Old Posted May 6, 2011, 6:15 PM
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More exciting than just Stadium Place, is the height increase that was approved by city council for the broader Pioneer Square, Stadium, International, Little Saigon districts.

Hopefully these areas are built up to the liking of area residents so that more districts might look favorably on density/height increases.
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  #2334  
Old Posted May 10, 2011, 1:23 PM
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Colman Tower starting soon!

May 10, 2011
Colman apartments may start in June
By JOURNAL STAFF

SEATTLE — Goodman Real Estate appears to be preparing to start construction of the 16-story Colman Residential apartment project at Western Avenue and Columbia Street.

The long-time surface parking lot on the property is now closed, and crews from Turner Construction, the general contractor, were doing preliminary work on the site yesterday. Workers said construction is tentatively scheduled to begin next month.



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That's number 6 for the number of towers gearing up downtown....
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  #2335  
Old Posted May 10, 2011, 1:28 PM
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Cinema Tower - 2116 4th Avenue project

This 40 story apartment project received conditional approval from the DPD...




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  #2336  
Old Posted May 11, 2011, 8:39 AM
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It's nice that the Coleman apartments might be starting soon. My only peeve is that it's a solid clump of a building and doesn't even have a pocket plaza to break the building up a bit. They could have increased the height a couple of floors too. The profile would have been slimmer on all sides.
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  #2337  
Old Posted May 20, 2011, 3:30 AM
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Colman fixes the last "gap" on the east side of Western through the CBD.

Housing near Pioneer Square and the Financial/Government district will be very helpful. There's not much housing south of Madison on Western. More broadly, this helps whittle away at the over-dominance of office uses in the south half of the CBD and Pioneer Square, the latter having a lot of housing but not a ton of market rate.

We need more parks in the CBD, but I'm happy with a street wall here.
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  #2338  
Old Posted May 20, 2011, 3:13 PM
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Ooo nice projects. Very Kewl...

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  #2339  
Old Posted May 26, 2011, 2:18 AM
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1200 Madison put up a tower crane today.

Colman fenced off a few weeks ago and cut down the trees onsite (on their property, not on street) this week.

Back in business fellas.
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  #2340  
Old Posted May 28, 2011, 8:21 AM
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Has anyone watched the presentation of the waterfront concepts? I was blown away by some of the ideas and other's I thought could improve. Others I don't expect will go through

Tides (Thin parts of waterfront)-the idea of collecting and directing water through a natural water treatment system was one of the best things about the project. Other ideas included adding ramps and whatnot, buttt the "tide-walks" where you'd see the tides coming in and out really impressed me.

Folds (Buildings)-after watching the first meeting i thought about what waterfront buildings around the world looked great. i thought of the oslo opera house, the vancouver convention center and the dockland office building in hamburg. i really liked the idea of using roofs as green space and allow bunches and bunches of trees in other areas. and the designs team concept did just that! i loved the terraces and hills leading to the waterfront from pike place!

anyways, the only thing i thought could improve were the outdoor hot tubs. they should instead design a building in pier 62/63 that slopes up towards the water and underneath there could be a community pool complex. it'd offer more space, a lap pool and free-swimming one, maybe even the hot tubs. they're already using the concept on the pike-to-waterfront hills, the ferry-terminal-roof park and in other parts, why not extend it? it'd be awesome to swim on a pier, looking out into the bay. it'd be even more amazing if they used an infinity pool and sliding glass doors to open during those oh-so rare 80+ degree summer days!
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