Georgetown

Georgetown micro-unit project

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Deloper SB-Urban got the go-ahead today from the Board of Zoning Adjustment (BZA) for its planned micro-unit project on the site of Georgetown’s Latham Hotel.

The 140-unit development will incorporate the Latham Hotel and an addition at 3000 M Street NW (map). The apartments will be, on average, 330 square feet apiece, and they’ll come furnished. The project architect is Shalom Baranes Associates.

To make the development happen, SB-Urban requested a series of zoning variances and exceptions to modify the existing building into a micro-millennial paradise. The requests are:

  • A rear yard variance for an addition
  • A special exception to a parking requirement that would allow the company to provide 42 off-site spaces
  • A variance for the remaining 74 parking spaces
  • A variance for a loading dock and delivery space

 

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The hotel currently has 54 parking spaces, which SB-Urban plans to convert into amenity space for its residents. The retail portion of the project alone requires 24 parking spaces onsite; the developer is proposing 42 off-site parking spaces for retail tenants and residents. Residents of the new development will receive Capital Bikeshare and car share memberships, but will sign a lease that prevents them from parking on Georgetown streets. 

On Tuesday, the BZA approved all of the above variances, a big win for SB-Urban as it is planning similar projects in Blagden Alley and Dupont Circle. 

“We received conceptual approval from the Old Georgetown Board in early September,” SB Urban’s Brook Katzen wrote to UrbanTurf. “Today’s BZA hearing was the last major hurdle.”

Below are more renderings of the planned project.

Source: http://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/geor...

Founder of Under Armour buys 8 million dollar home in Georgetown

Apparently the skyline around the Ravens Stadium in Baltimore is running short on douchey billboard space. So Kevin Plank, founder of Under Armour finds a way to spend 8 million dollars in Georgetown.  

Kevin Plank, the 40-year-old billionaire founder of Under Armour, has reportedly just closed on one of Georgetown’s most glamorous mansions, which comes complete with eight bedrooms and a ballroom. Plank paid in the vicinity of $8 million for the sprawling house at 1405 34th Street, Northwest, according to a well-connected source. An even less connected source could tell you, you'd have to sell a lot of men's spandex underwear to break 8 million.

The home was put on the market with an asking price of $8.9 million by Deborah Winsor, who recently bought and moved into the former Dumbarton Street home of disgraced World Bank bossDominique Strauss-Kahn. Winsor’s husband, Curt Winsor, died last year. Winsor paid $3.3 million for the DSK house.

Plank’s new home, his second in Georgetown, comes with a glamorous provenance. It was the home of an American aristocrat, former ambassador David K.E. Bruce and his wife,Evangeline Bruce. They entertained often and put the ballroom in particular to good use. In its time it was the gathering place of Georgetown society. David Bruce died in 1977. Evangeline lived there until her death in 1995. Between the Bruces and the Winsors, it was home to biographer David Michaelis—who has written books about cartoonist Charles M. Schultz and artist N.C. Wyeth—and his then-wife, Clara Bingham.

Plank’s wildly successful sports apparel business was founded in Baltimore. He attended Georgetown Preparatory School in Bethesda, St. John’s College High School in DC, and the University of Maryland.

 

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Source: http://www.washingtonian.com/blogs/capital...