Land Use Application to allow two, 4-story structures, one containing 61 residential units above 5,533 sq. ft. of commercial space and one containing 41 residential units above 4,612 sq. ft. of commercial space. Parking for 109 vehicles to be provided in a below grade garage.
Design Review Early Design Guidance to construct a four story building containing 66 residential units, 4 live-work units, and 1,735 sq. ft. of commercial space. Existing structure to be demolished.
Design review early design guidance application proposing an 8 story building containing 101 residential units, 8 live work units above 15,700 sq ft. of commercial/ office / retail space. Parking for 129 vehicles to be provided in 2.5 stories below grade. Future application anticipated to include a rezone from NC3P-40’ to NC3P-85’.
Land Use Application to allow a 4-story building containing 96 residential units, above two live-work units and 7,226 sq. ft. of retail space. Parking for 82 vehicles to be provided below grade.
A PCC Natural Markets grocery will take the place of City People’s Garden Store in Seattle’s Madison Valley in a planned development that faces opposition from some neighbors.
The PCC store will occupy 25,000 square feet of a mixed-use building being developed by The Velmeir Companies.
The building will also include about 1,600 square feet for another, yet-to-be-determined retailer, as well as 75 apartments and an underground parking garage with 156 parking spaces, the Michigan-based developer said.
Velmeir plans to break ground in early 2017 and open the retail and apartment spaces in 2018, according to a news release.
With the highrise boom getting so much attention, it's worth remembering that lowrise apartments like these are actually the largest part of Seattle's housing construction, with several thousand units underway now in urban districts.
Land Use Application to allow an 8-story structure containing 55 apartments. Parking for 14 vehicles to be located below grade. Existing structure to be removed.
The last three posts show projects with 145 housing units and 28 parking spaces. That's how density fits on small lots. Especially the triangle-shaped project with no parking, where a garage would be basically impossible (going from memory on that site).
Parkstone Properties, the developer of "Cubix Aurora" at 1008 North 109th Street, has told BuzzBuzzHome that construction will be starting July 2016 and estimated completion is April 2017. Also, the unit count has gone up to 101 units.