News and Opinion on Neighborhoods, Schools and Local Governments of Redmond, WA.
Thursday, March 4, 2021
Green Rooftop And Vertical Garden Building Incentives
Tuesday, September 1, 2020
Significant Private Projects In The Pipeline
LMC, 265 dwelling units. 5 story, by Marymoor trail |
In 2019: 132 SFH, 233 multi-family units and 24,400 s.f. commercial space were built.
2020 YTD: 61 SFH, 895 multi-family units, 610,766 sf commercial space.
Single Family Home construction hasn't changed significantly between 2019 to 2020 but increases in multi-family units and commercial square footage are exceptional.
About 11 projects were presented; I'll focus on five:
The most significant is "Redmond Square." It's on the corner of 166th and Redmond Way. Over 13 businesses will have to move. To name a few: John L. Scott, the Pony Express, Ed Wyse, Pizza Hut, Noodeland, Beyond Beauty, Flying Apron, Bamboo Gardens, Modera Bakery, Beauty Supply, Acupuncture, Vision Clinic, and a Yoga business.
What we will get: "Redmond Square" looks like two separate buildings but functions as one. It's a monolith. 613 dwelling units, 61 affordable units (80% AMI,) 33,000 sf commercial space, adjacent to transit station. Parking? I was informed by one of the business owners demolition will begin early 2021. (The city throws up barriers when validating timelines.)
"Harmony" drew the most questions and comments from Council. Councilmember Vanessa Kritzer seemed skeptical about 1) it's absence of affordable housing and 2) the unusual housing type for our downtown. Harmony living spaces are tiny. It has 9 dwelling units of 465 sf and and 91 "residential suites" of 155 sf each. They will rent out for $1100. No school impact fees. The residential suites share a kitchen and living room with each other. Steve Fields wanted Council to be more involved in these developments and Tanika Padeya suggested an amendment to require affordable housing.
The "Together Center, a nonprofit human services center of over 20 years will be redeveloped. Paid-off. 49,000 sf commercial, 280 dwelling units, 280 affordable units at 60% AMI, 30 parking spaces, 2-stories, art at gateway. Completion expected by 12/2021.
Proctor: NW Redmond -- Willows Road & 124th. Construction will be challenged by steep slope. Stats:
87, 3-story townhomes, 9 affordable at 80% AMI, signal at 124th. two community parks. 195 dwelling units, 80% AMI, 22,000 sf commercial, trails and open space. Proctor will be a "10-minute community" servicing the businesses on Willows Road, including a subsidiary of Facebook.
Amazon: Macy's in Redmond Town Center is being renovated to accomodate ~ 300 Amazon engineers, working on their satellite space project. Macy's departed.
-- Bob Yoder
9/1/2020
Monday, September 20, 2021
2021 Private Development -- Low Affordablity, High Commercial
Recap of Redmond Council's 9/14 Study session:
- Of significance, Commercial Space grew 90% from last year. 7,500sf (2020) 77,912sf (2021) The senior planner glazed over this; council didn't raise any questions. Redmond is becoming a retail desert. Our planners should report retail statistics and be held accountable.
- Staff reported 58 Pre-Applications on all projects under review. 😩
- Nelson "Project One," 4,316 Sq ft Commercial proposed, 25 Affordable units,Woonerf and Open Space.
- Redmond Square: 623 New units, only 62 affordable units, 30,000 Commercial SqFt Retail is getting shoved out.
- Redmond Sunrise Apartments: 93 dwelling units. 2,000 SqFt Commercial (yes, more) Roof top activity deck and Car stackers. Innovative design!
- LMC South Marymoor Village: 284 Units, 28 low-cost affordble units. Why is 10% affordable units the city standard for all these projects? Why not an extra story to incent 25% affordable?
- The Spark, 217 Dwelling units, 12,800 Sqft proposed. Here we go again: 22 affordable units.
- Proctor Willows: 195 Dwelling Units, 20 affordable, 22,000 Sq ft. commercial (yep) Trails/Public Art. (Yay)
- NOTE: President Padhye asked the Planning Director why 10% affordable units are so common in developments. The Director appeared to brush this aside saying the large projects have a higher percentage of affordable. Why not an extra story to incent 25% affordable?
Monday, January 28, 2019
OPINION: Planned development on corner of Willows & 124th brings challenges and opportunities
Could something like this happen here? haha Internet |
Quadrant is working with the City to develop "Business District" property at the intersection of NE 124th Street and Willows Road on the Southwest corner. The Planning Commission was very involved.
Here goes.
The Applicant (Fred Proctor) is proposing a mixed-use development consisting of approximately 370 residential units with a variety of housing types that would include for-sale townhomes, triplex and traditional for-rent apartment style dwellings. The development would also include a minimum of 20,000 sq. ft. of ground-level or stand-alone retail or commercial space, to include neighborhood-scale commercial uses, office, and/or day care center uses.
Willows Road is already congested and traffic is poor here; and will be more challenged when Facebook moves in. Council member Myers calls this development "a ten minute community" where many of the residents can work nearby, keeping cars off the road (with some shopping at Totem Lake.) A necessary signal on 124th is sure to slow traffic. The development is virtually it's own neighborhood.
To mitigate traffic the City will try to work with Metro for all day service. Right now it's AM / PM. Whenever possible, I won't be driving through this corner. A new sidewalk is planned on 124th is to connect a northern and western trail, I assume for pedestrian and bicycle mobility.
The range of housing types creates needed flexibility to integrate with the site and creates more variation in housing affordability:
>10% of the townhomes will be at 80% of average monthly income.
>10% of the apartments will be at 70% of average monthly income.
The development will include open space tracts, landscaped active and passive recreation, a trail network, and potentially, a gateway/bike rest stop feature on the northeast corner of the site. Open space is 20% of the site.
Green development incentives specific to the site are 1) electric vehicle charging, 2) green roofs, 3) solar panels on townhomes, 4) solar panels on community buildings. Quadrant is required to use two of the four options. Council member Myers said solar is a poor choice for our region since "there is a -500% rate of return."
What's your opinion?
For development diagrams, plans and mapping click this link.
https://redmond.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=F&ID=6991868&GUID=8B0CADAE-4CB4-498E-B110-FFD3C43BA5D7
-- Bob Yoder, opinion
Source: 1/27/2019 Council study session & memo
Thursday, April 22, 2021
L.W. School District Buys 25 Acres For Future Schools
Lake Washington School District Learning Areas |
Elementary and secondary schools can be accommodated on the parcel. One of the finest amenities, in my opinion, is it's proximity to nature preserves, trails and parks. It abuts the riparian habitat of Evans Creek while keeping within the Urban Growth Boundary. Thousands of housing units may be built south of the property; students can walk to school. The land is adjacent to a dynamic commercial district. The regional amenities of light rail, Marymoor Park and trails are not far-off.
The purchase price is $40,000,000. Funding sources are: the Rose Hill property sale ($18,000,000,) April 2016 bond project balance ($20,000.000,) and the Capital Levy. The bond and levy received construction assistance funds.
Superintendent Barbara Posthumous spent plenty of time talking about the growth within our region,
pressuring the District. Some of the news is alarming: King County is the fourth largest county in the country by population growth; LWSD is the fastest growing District in King county. LWSD enrollment has grown by 31% (7,337 students) since 2008 and is expecting continued growth of 11% for the next ten years, bringing in an additional 3,450 students. The majority of the district’s schools are at or over capacity, and continued population growth will only exacerbate this.
Totem Lake is projected to have 3,600 new housing units within ten years; with downtown Kirkland and Rose Hill 1900 new units. The City of Redmond city center and Marymoor Village are projected to have 3200 new units. Sammamish projects 1274 units in the next ten years. Redmond has the largest growth of any city in the District.
Twenty-nine of 41 schools are at or over capacity at this time. LWSD is the second largest District in the State.
Ongoing business growth on the Eastside is rapid: Google plans to add up to 1 million square feet of office space in Kirkland. Amazon is bringing 300-600 engineers to Redmond. A major Facebook business unit is moving onto Willows Road; the large Proctor housing development will service them.
--Reported by Bob Yoder, 4/22/2021
I want to thank Barbara Posthumous, Associate Superintendent of Business and Support for her excellent presentation on the land purchase. Ms. Posthumous is also the C.F.O. of the District. Barbara gave her presentation during the District Business Meeting of April 19th.
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
UPDATED: "10 Minute Communities" Are A Model For Smart Planning
For your information, below is a recent King County Press Release announcing plans for 232 affordable housing units near the Northgate Light Rail Station.
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