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CONTENT: Oct 11, 2013, 6:00am EDT
Breaking
GroundMcMillanplant designs refined before hearing
Michael Neibauer, Staff Reporter- Washington Business Journal
The
team behind the planned redevelopment of D.C.’s 25-acre McMillan Sand
Filtration Plant has released a revised set of blueprints for the controversial
Northwest Washington project.
The
redesign was submitted to the Historic Preservation Review Board late last
month, ahead of the scheduled Oct. 24 HPRB meeting. The last time the HPRB met
on the Vision McMillan Partners’ plan, members were not blown away, nor did
they write it off.
The
changes are technical, but noticeable and substantial. The building and street
layouts have been revised, setbacks increased, and designs refined “to shape a
more cohesive set of new buildings.”
As
one VMP representative explained, the palette of materials and colors is now
standard throughout the site, while the buildings have been shifted back to
allow the Olmstead Walk to loop the entire 25 acres.
VMP
consists of EYA, Jair Lynch Development Partners and Trammell Crow Co., with
partners that include Shalom Baranes Associates and Lessard Design.
The
overall McMillan setup comprises three prongs — VMP calls it the “tripartite
organization” — with the park and community center farthest south, the
multifamily and town homes in the center and medical office buildings to the
north.
All
20 above ground sand silos will be preserved.
The
decommissioned water treatment plant, bounded by Michigan Avenue, North
Capitol, Channing and First streets, was designated a historic landmark in the
early 1990s. Redevelopment plans have run into fierce community opposition.
1 comment:
Great. All 20 will be preserved...and surrounded by trillions of cubic meters of hulking cement buildings. Beautiful. This just shows how much they've been paying attention... NEWS FLASH: NOBODY CARES ABOUT PRESERVING ALL THE SILOS....people care much more about preserving the beautiful vaults underneath (which are much more impressive) by integrating them into the site design (just like the College City Plan did by the way) as well as the pumphouses above grade. The VMP plan will destroy nearly completely anything worth keeping. This is a slight of hand. We'll destroy the good parts...you get to keep your beautiful cement tubs. Cheers!
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