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Showing posts with label East Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East Los Angeles. Show all posts

Friday

Metro Planning New Developments in Boyle Heights

Mariachi Plaza, seen during a recent CicLAvia (Image: Shannon Ino)

Yesterday brought the pleasant surprise of a new mixed-use development catacorner to the Gold Line's Mariachi Plaza Station.  Looks like that was just the tip of an oncoming TOD iceberg.

According to the agenda of the November 5th meeting of Metro's Planning & Programming Committee, the agency is planning new mixed-use developments on four additional properties in Boyle Heights.  This decision follows an 11-month selection process, in which Metro staff evaluated multiple proposals for each site on the basis of 1) their overall development program, 2) project feasibility, 3) the experience and qualifications of the development team and 4) a financial proposal to the agency.

The resulting transit-oriented developments would feature mixtures of affordable housing, retail and office space.  All are located within walking distance of high-frequency bus and rail service, a core tenet of Metro's TOD plan.

Mariachi Plaza Joint Development


Image: Primestor Development, Inc. and Gensler

A partnership between Primestor Development and architecture firm Gensler submitted the winning proposal for two acres of land abutting the Gold Line's Mariachi Plaza Station.  Their plans call for a purely commercial development, featuring over 120,000 square feet of retail and office space within two low-rise buildings.

A three-story structure would rise on the western edge of the project site, highlighted by a proposed 40,000-square-foot fitness center on its upper floors.  The building's ground floor would be subdivided between a 1,800-square-foot corner retail store, and an additional 28,500 square feet dedicated for food and beverage uses.

Moving west towards the Bailey Street side of the property, Primestor proposes an eight-story, 50,000-square-foot medical office building.  This particular amenity is in high demand near Mariachi Plaza, due to the presence of White Memorial Medical Center one block north.  Primestor's current plans also call for six-level garage within the mid-rise building, although Metro staff has expressed interest in reducing the proposed amount of on-site parking.



Santa Cecilia Apartments


Image: DE Architects and McCormack Baron Salazar

As reported yesterday, Metro is also moving forward with a second project at Mariachi Plaza, in partnership with developer McCormack Baron Salazar.  The four-story Santa Cecilia Apartments would rise from a 1.5-acre parcel at 1750 E. 1st Street, containing 79 affordable housing units above 4,000 square feet of ground-level commercial space.  Conceptual renderings for the project were designed by DE Architects, a Santa Monica-based firm whose previous work includes a 14-story apartment tower adjacent to North Hollywood Station.


1st/Soto Joint Development


Image: Bridge Housing Corporation, ELACC, Gonzalez Goodale Architects

Less than one mile east, Metro staff has selected the team of Bridge Housing Corporation and the East LA Community Corporation (ELACC) to develop two properties atop Soto Station.  Both sites will make way for affordable residential-retail complexes, designed by Pasadena-based Gonzalez Goodale Architects.

The first of the two buildings, known either as Los Lirios or Las Mariposas Family Housing, would rise on a parcel located immediately south of the station entrance.  The multi-family development would vary from four-to-six stories in height, containing 49 affordable housing units above 12,500 square feet of street-level retail and restaurant space.


The second project, named Los Tulipanes Senior Housing, would be located east across Soto Street from the station entrance.  Plans call for a two-to-four-story structure, containing 39 affordable units and 3,900 square feet of ground-floor commercial space.  However, construction of the senior housing complex will first require the purchase of an adjacent 6,450-square-foot lot.  ELACC and Bridge Housing Corporation have previously engaged in discussions about acquiring the property.

Besides the Metro-sponsored TODs, a third residential-retail development is planned near the northeast corner of 1st and Soto Streets.  The project would consist of a six-story building, containing 50 residential units, 8,500 square feet of office space, and 3,400 square feet of ground-floor commercial space.  According to a graphic included with the above renderings, the low-rise complex is also being developed by ELACC.



Chavez/Soto Joint Development


Image: Abode Communities

Moving north to Cesar E. Chavez Avenue, Metro would partner with nonprofit developer Abode Communities on another mixed-use development.  Designs from Abode's in-house architect Gio Aliano portray two four-story structures, connecting by a skybridge, which would contain 77 affordable units and 8,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space.

Like another Abode development in the South Bay, the Chavez project would be oriented towards families, and would thus features larger residential units than in most affordable housing complexes.  Current plans call for a mixture of 54 two-bedroom/one-bath units and 23 three-bedroom/two-bath units.  The project would also include substantial interior green space, offering safe play areas for children.

Additional Metro-owned parcels are also slated for construction in the near future.  Immediately east of the proposed mixed-use complex, McCormack Baron Salazar intends to construct a new supermarket.


Thursday

Mariachi Plaza Getting an Affordable Mixed-User

Conceptual rendering (2012) from DE Architects via Metro

Five years after the Gold Line's Eastside branch opened, development is finally headed to one of the Metro-owned properties above Mariachi Plaza Station.  According to plans submitted to the city in late October, an mixed-use affordable housing project will be constructed on the vacant 1.5-acre lot at 1750 E. 1st Street.

The proposed residential complex, dubbed the Santa Cecilia Apartments, is being developed by a partnership between Metro and McCormack Baron Salazar.  According to a document from the State Treasurer's Office, plans call for 79 one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments, with rents ranging from approximately $450 to $1,200 per month.  Units would be reserved for families making 30-60% of the Los Angeles median household income.  The four-story development would also include approximately 4,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space, situated at the southwest corner of 1st Street and Boyle Avenue.


The Santa Cecilia Apartments are part of a broader effort by Metro to build affordable transit oriented developments on its various East Los Angeles properties.  However, many of these projects have inspired a lukewarm reaction from their surrounding neighborhoods, and in certain cases outright hostility.  A particularly controversial proposal known as Lorena Plaza has sparked fierce debate over its inclusion of housing for mentally ill and formerly homeless individuals.

At Mariachi Plaza, the Santa Cecilia Apartments are merely the first component of a much larger plan.  Additional Metro-owned land to the north of the subway station is also slated for development, although construction is not imminent.  An earlier proposal for the site called for a low-rise complex, featuring community-serving retail and medical office space.

Further improvements are also in the works for other properties surrounding the Gold Line station. West across Boyle Avenue, La Monarca Bakery is currently building out their new location on the ground floor of the Boyle Hotel, a 19th century Victorian structure which now serves as affordable housing.  On the opposite side of the intersection, a public park is tentatively planned for a quarter-acre site controlled by CRA/LA.


Boyle Heights Getting More Gold Line TOD Action


Back in January, news of a supportive housing project adjacent to the Gold Line's Indiana Station was met with hostility from Boyle Heights residents.  Hopefully a proposed transit oriented development next to Soto Station will get a warmer response.  According to a recent case filing with LADCP, plans are in the works for a 64,000 square foot mixed-use structure near the intersection of 1st and Soto Streets.  Rising six stories, the project would consist of 50 residential units, 3,400 square feet of street level commercial space, and 8,500 square feet of office space on its top floor.  Residential and commercial tenants would be served by a 70-vehicle garage, most of which would be located underground.  Occupying three parcels between 2407 and 2421 E. 1st Street, the project will require the demolition of several existing residential structures, some of which date back to the late 19th century.  Although a six-story building would tower over the mostly low slung Boyle Heights neighborhood, 2407 E. 1st Street may be in store for neighbors of a similar scale in the near future.  Metro is currently soliciting bids for a mixed-use development to be built on their 1.4 acre property on the opposite side of the intersection.


Monday

Gold Line Adjacent Affordable Housing in Boyle Heights

Lorena Plaza, Image from A Community of Friends

Are you a low income individual who has always wanted to live next to a giant cemetery?  If so, A Community of Friends has a project in the works that will be right up your alley.  Lorena Plaza is a 49-unit affordable housing development, pegged to replace a vacant, Metro-owned parcel at the northeast corner of 1st and Lorena Streets.  The five-story edifice would rise across from the 136 year old Evergreen Cemetary, which contains over 300,000 headstones and a lot of not-evergreen grass.  Located just a short walk from the Eastside Gold Line's Indiana Station, Lorena Plaza would feature 7,000 square feet of ground floor retail space.  The $23 million project has received a lukewarm reception from the surrounding neighborhood due to a stipulation that half of its units be reserved for mentally ill and formerly homeless individuals.  Nearby business owners and residents told the Metro Board in March 2013 that "the mentally ill would not make good neighbors."  Casting those concerns aside, the Metro Board voted 10-1 to negotiate with A Community of Friends on the project.  Lorena Plaza is scheduled for completion in March 2016.  Perhaps the rest of the Eastside Gold Line stations will also spawn mixed-use TODs by then (get your act together, Mariachi Plaza!).