Headline in Utah Business Magazine for a story on real estate development: Growth is Life and Stopping Growth is Death
An old colleague-advocate in DC used to say "developers are like sharks, if they don't build, they die."
-- The article.
"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.
An old colleague-advocate in DC used to say "developers are like sharks, if they don't build, they die."
-- The article.
Not unlike how kids play on elements in the public environment that aren't designed as play spaces, but they use them because there aren't alternatives, this City Weekly newspaper box is used for trash disposal at a busy intersection with a bus stop with no trash can (nor a shade screen, despite Utah's brutally hot summers).
(Apologize as it's not the best photo. I forgot to check for resolution after I took it.)
Labels: public space management, transit infrastructure, urban design/placemaking
This is a RadPower bike but it's an endemic problem. Labels: bicycle and pedestrian planning
Please clean up after your dog sign, 4th Street NE, Union Market, Washington, DC
One of the concerns expressed about the New Town redevelopment plan imposed on the Florida Market District through DC City Council legislation is the fact that by putting residents and industrial uses in close proximity, you add all the elements necessary to create significant conflicts.
► Dense neighbourhoods are more likely to provide good access to services/facilities.► Dense neighbourhoods are more likely to provide poor access to quality green space.► Residents in denser neighbourhoods are more likely to report feeling unsafe.► Generally, less social interaction occurs in denser neighbourhoods.
Placemaking is nothing new. The idea of designing urban space for humans rather than cars took hold in the 1960s, and the term describing the process of creating buzzy, people-centric districts gained traction in the ’70s. What used to be the domain of urban planners, however, is now deemed an essential strategy in property development. It’s no longer good enough to fill a building with people, you need to curate a vibe around it.
This, of course, has less to do with civic duty than the eventual payoff: it is much easier to fill developments in pleasant surroundings where shops, restaurants, schools and creative spaces are on the doorstep. Not all get it right: the development of London’s Elephant and Castle has led to heavy criticism of extreme gentrification and placing profit over people. King’s Cross, meanwhile, with its glass-encased offices, dining destinations and art college, Central Saint Martins, is widely viewed as a success story.Chipperfield is thankful for a private equity partner who agreed to sink “a couple of million” into retail ideas that “might not make money”. In reality, the projects are commercially successful.
As far as dogs go, I remember touring new buildings in NoMA 15+ years ago and being shocked at how the buildings included wings where dog owners could live, and on site facilities, like dog washing. But still, dogs need to be walked and that imposes demand for different kinds of accommodations outside of a building.
Labels: civic assets, housing market, integrated public realm framework, parks and recreation planning, public space management, urban design/placemaking, urban revitalization
(More from my trip to DC. And there was so much I didn't have time get to check out--Downtown, Dupont Circle, 14th Street NW, H Street NE, Capitol Hill and Eastern Market, the mixed use Safeway on Kentucky Avenue SE, a bunch of new recreation centers, Georgetown...).
She tools around in a used electric Fiat 500. She gave us a tour of Walter Reed. I think I would have missed a bunch without her chaperoning us.And I didn't have time to meet up with people outside of our old neighbors--we came out for the high school graduation of the next door girl that "we helped raise" until we moved.
Typically, pharmacy buildings are owned by real estate investment trusts who don't want to complicate a property by making it mixed use ("Problematic outcomes as real estate investment trusts buy more "high street" retail real estate," 2015). This is counter to good urbanism in cities, but the companies don't care.
That's why when companies like Walmart or Aldi start being okay with locating in mixed use buildings that's a big deal. Although it's not like they care about the site design or architecture that much.
There is an Aldi Supermarket on the ground floor of this apartment building on the 800-900 blocks of the south side of H Street NE, Washington, DC. The Aldi on South Dakota Avenue NE seems like it's more temporary--although that means 20+ years--as the building is under-developed compared to its potential.
If it's a site they want in a leased mixed building setting, they'll take it. But they'll still build single use buildings, but with underground parking, because land suitable for large parking lots aren't really available in the core of a city ("Lessons from Walmart's foray into DC," 2011, "The reason why Walmart is committed to a store that is part of a mixed use development," 2013). (Also see "LOL: Walmart closing stores, announces it won't move forward with two stores in lower income areas of DC," 2016).
The CVS on Georgia and New Hampshire Avenues in the Petworth neighborhood of DC used to be across the street on a parcel that needed to be heightened but never was.
I guess they ended their lease and moved to a mixed use building. There are still other CVS stores in the area that remain single story automobile-focused uses in Takoma DC, on 14th Street NW in Columbia Heights, and on Georgia Avenue NW by the Safeway (still single story although the one in Petworth is not) on Piney Branch Road. So these remain fallow opportunities for better development.
What this also means for the Petworth site is that the REIT is likely to be willing to sell their single story site now that they can't get an easy tenant for it, allowing for more intense development there, which is a plus for urbanism and the city.
Single story still, while the one in Petworth that was single story has long since been converted into an apartment building with the Safeway on the ground floor. On the other hand, that site is two short blocks to a subway station.
This is a nice easy walk to the Takoma Metrorail station, but instead of two short blocks, it's 7/10 mile. Subway station proximity in DC, which has a transit network contrasted to Baltimore which does not ("WMATA's 50th anniversary from the start of service, Part 5: Making a better transit network | Connecting heavy rail + light rail + railroad "), makes all the difference in properties being worthwhile to develop, or not.
A Separated Yellow Line up Georgia Avenue would change the property values overnight, but would require wholesale rezoning like what Arlington County did with Wilson Boulevard, and DC has never gone to that length for land that is already zoned low density residential ("WMATA's 50th anniversary from the start of service, Part 2b | Lessons learned: Proposed expansions and the Metrorail system we don't have," 2026).
It does with commercially zoned land, like the liner buildings along Georgia Avenue, plus industrial land and land at transit stations ("To Create Abundant Housing, Ignore the YIMBY Playbook," Washington Monthly). But to go beyond the liner buildings a block, the way Arlington did, hasn't been done ("How DC Densified," Works in Progress).
It shows that while the development boom in DC has been astounding, there are still plenty of opportunities for redevelopment, but Metrorail proximity is key ("Today WMATA Metrorail's 50th anniversary from the start of service | Part 1: many lessons can be found, if you look," 2026).
This makes DC's failure to leverage streetcar service for the forthcoming redo of the RFK campus into a mixed use development anchored by an NFL football stadium, all the more apparent ("Bye DC Streetcar | Too small to reshape DC policy, Big enough to spur $1 billion in economic development,").
With the streetcar, DC's H Street NE is the most intensely developed corridor without immediate Metrorail access (although Union Station is nearby).
It was proof positive that the city needed to put streetcars on Georgia Avenue-7th Street NW/SW connecting to the Wharf, Rhode Island Avenue, Benning Road-Minnesota Avenue, Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue/Southern Avenue SE, and Kennedy Street-Riggs Road to spur development by providing better transit access between Metrorail stations, but as a way to spark development more.
For some reason, DC's elected officials still don't accept that Metrorail is the foundation of DC's economic success since 2000. Without it, the city would be provincial like, more like a state capital that isn't all that great--like Albany, New York (which loses out because people and many state government agencies prefer New York City).
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The old streetcar network used to serve the US Capitol via a couple different lines.I also suggested a heritage streetcar system with visitor centers and an expanded Union Station with transportation museum functions for the National Mall.
Labels: formula retail/chains, real estate development, real estate investment trusts, transit oriented development/TOD, urban design/placemaking, urban revitalization
The Walter Reed Army Medical Center was a large hospital and research campus on Georgia Avenue NW in Washington, DC.
It was merged and moved into the Bethesda Naval Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland.
The old campus went through a de-accession process and DC bought it and did a plan, calling for housing and retail mostly, with civic uses in some of the historic buildings.
I fell in with some people, too late in the process, who proposed instead of a predominately housing oriented project, a graduate medical education and biotechnology program for the site, with the aim of building back the jobs element of the campus--which when fully staffed had almost 8,000 employees.
But DC isn't particularly innovative when it comes to economic development planning. They are comfortable with housing and retail, but not much of anything else ("Demolition Marks Turning Point for Decommissioned Hospital Site," Engineering News Record). From the Washington Business Journal article "Historic hospital building at former Walter Reed campus for sale":
The Parks at Walter Reed’s main square, anchored by a Whole Foods, other retail and apartments, is the centerpiece of the larger $700 million development, which is slated to include 2,100 housing units, 100,000 square feet of retail and 200,000 square feet of office at buildout.
The long-term plan is for most of the historic buildings remaining on the campus to be redeveloped or preserved. But the development team has also marketed a few other properties on the campus, largely aimed at developers with niche ambitions.
Partly because the lead was somewhat of a wack job, even though a credentialed medical doctor with some affiliations with the Royal College of Surgeons Medical School in Dublin was part of the group and we were working with the nearby Washington Adventist University, which like many 7th Day Adventist colleges, has a number of health professional programs (Loma Linda University in California is a bonafide graduate medical school), we just never got anywhere.
Photo: Critical Systems.Although later, lobbying directly with Congress, Children's Hospital Center took over the old Armed Forces Institute of Pathology there, which would have been turnkey for a medical school, and set it up to do research ("Children's National Health System Accepts Walter Reed Property").
They're there, but I don't know how its progressing. They call it the Innovation Campus ("NIH awards $6.7M to build additional lab space at Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus"). But it's a $6 billion project, so it's a big deal.
I ended up rewriting the concept for the St. Elizabeths campus in Southeast DC, where DC ended up building a new hospital.But that program ended up being a pretty ordinary hospital, not the public health innovator, graduate health education and biotechnology campus I proposed. Again, because DC just isn't very innovative.
Although later I realized, when writing about the conversion of the Pfizer research campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, seeding a biotechnology program is quite hard. That facility had a lot of drugs in the pipeline which Pfizer was no longer interested in, and they willingly let new startups take them over.
Although I have to say the development is pretty impressive. A lot is there, and nice public spaces, a super beautiful Whole Foods supermarket, and other stuff. Lots of apartments.
Because it was designated as a historic district during the planning process, there is design review for renovation of old buildings as well as new construction. While most buildings aren't nearly as nice and historically compatible as the one at the top of the entry, they're not terrible. But nowhere as good as the one pictured above.
The first building is so good because it abuts a historic building.
Whole Foods. Because there are charter schools on the campus, the kids/youth grow up being able to experience this at lunch and after school. It's open to all, not limited to residents of the development. So it's a great public park amenity that the city doesn't have to pay to maintain--and couldn't at this high level of design and maintenance.
Labels: agglomeration economies, change-innovation-transformation, economic development, housing, innovation districts/technology sector, real estate development, urban design/placemaking, urban economics
One of the last projects I was involved with in DC was building consensus within the neighborhood to create an extension of the Metropolitan Branch Trail between Fort Totten Metrorail Station and Takoma, in part by using the right of way on Blair Road, but also removing a lane of road.
This was very controversial. The road was too wide relative to its traffic capacity, which was constrained a few blocks up, by going from four lanes to three lanes to two lanes. The amount of throughput is "regulated" by the queuing capacity of the two lane sections and traffic signals.
It's also along the elevated Metropolitan Branch railroad tracks, which contain both the Red Line east leg Metrorail and on either sides, tracks of the Chessie System railroad (formerly Baltimore and Ohio), which are also used some by Amtrak for service to Pittsburgh.
The elevated section made the roadway like a race track and cars drove much faster than the posted speed limit, this was abetted by one side being industrial, but the other residential.
We positioned this as a road safety issue. There were a bunch of crashes but not too many accidents--but a few--resulting in death. One such crash resulted in a couple deaths after the process of getting neighborhood approval but before the safety and trail improvements were implemented.
It was pretty amazing to be able to walk this trail and recognize how much work I and others put into making it happen--our process alone was at least eight months, and of course the long term design and then engineering and construction took many person months. I wasn't able to check the section by Fort Totten (next time) which shifted the trail from on street including a tough hill.
I saw children from a day care, a runner, a woman walking her dog, cyclists, scooter riders, people pushing baby carriages, etc. on the Trail.But I did see people on it. More on the weekend, compared to the Tuesday when I took these photos.
One of the things that shocked me is that they actually did a form of what I recommended maybe 15 years ago, about how to report problems on the Trail.It would be nice if like how I wrote about doing "after action analysis" ("Things I learn going to events by closely observing and analyzing them"), they would do this for the trail. There are opportunities for public art and other amenities. Very few trash cans, although not too much trash.
This wide side section would be great for a small playground or picnic area.
But some sections had a lot of leaf mold buildup and I couldn't help but think how the city could leverage National Trails Day ("National Trails Day: Saturday June 6th") to do such community cleanups on the trail, or to do adopt a block programs, like they do for the city streets.
Because the street is so much narrower now, pedestrian crossings from the Trail to the neighborhood aren't "insane."They do have bicycle sharing stations at certain points on the trail, at least at Kansas Avenue NW.
I was skeptical of this concept, with the retaining wall to protect bicyclists from traffic but it works well, and exactly as it was rendered years ago.Labels: bicycle and pedestrian planning, urban design/placemaking