A 40-foot high development project that embodies the tensions created by new density-friendly zoning in Capitol Hill's core areas is moving forward after successfully navigating a path through the city's "early design guidance" process.
Though his firm hasn't yet acted on the early design approval, Brandon Nicholson of NK Architects said his team is still considering options after the Capitol Hill Design Review Board gave its blessing -- and guidance -- for key elements like massing and layout of the project's elements.
"L3 is something where neighbors aren't used to that scale in that zone," Nicholson said about the pushback the project received from neighbors and proponents of the adjacent FedRep Park lot.
The new "Lowrise 3" designation assigned to the area in the update to Seattle's multifamily code was approved by full Council this past winter but the NK project is the first on Capitol Hill to engage in the public process using the new framework. "The board can't really change size allowed by zoning," said the Hill's design review board chair Evan Bourquard this summer. "We can't just make this a single family development." We wrote more about that pushback here.
Nicholson said the developers are still considering their options and whether they can achieve a project that meets the design board's guidance and preserve the 1900 house that currently exists on the lot. "We're really trying to keep that house," Nicholson said. If it is preserved, expect some neighborhood entertainment as the more than 100-year-old house will need to moved offsite during construction of the project.
NK is also planning to drop the total units in the project to 24 and is looking at plans that would eliminate the 10 underground parking spots in an effort to reduce the mass of the project and lower its height.
The parking question is a good illustration of dilemmas faced by the project. On one hand, adjacent neighbors and people working to create the new park would prefer a shorter, smaller building. On the other, neighbors down the street probably aren't looking forward to increased demand in street parking if the project is built with no underground lot. "We're never going to make everybody happy," Nicholson admits. It's an understatement -- and a reality -- of developing in a zone designed for change.
Below is the Capitol Hill Design Review Early Design Guidance report from DPD. Make sure to read the public comment section for more from the sides of the residents and the FedRep Park group.
DRProposal3012300AgendaID3288 (1)
I don't understand this. There are similarly sized apartment buildings all over the neighborhood surrounding the proposed development, most of which have been around for decades. Why is this particular building facing "push back" when it's no different than buildings that have been going up on Capitol Hill since the middle of the last century?
And that house is an eyesore with no particular outstanding architectural detail, why waste money saving it? A better use of money would be increasing the number of units in the new building so that more people are able to live in a convenient, close-in neighborhood.