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BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Struever Bros. Eccles & Rouse’s proposed expansion at Tide Point won’t result in Harbor East: Part II.
“I hope we don’t have the impression or sense that we’re trying to create another Harbor East,” Bill Struever, president and chief executive officer of Struever Bros., said Thursday to the Baltimore City Urban Design and Architecture Review Panel. “This is a different thing altogether.”
Harbor East is tall buildings and high density, Struever said. Tide Point figures to be a lot more residential with some office space — mainly for Under Armour — and retail in the mix.
The plan calls for several new residential buildings, about 196,000 square feet of office space and a garage with more than 1,500 parking spaces. The expansion would also include the construction of a Baltimore Immigration Museum on the waterfront.
Struever Bros. is seeking a zoning change to move forward with the plan.
Under Armour, which currently has headquarters in Tide Point, plans to expand its presence in Locust Point by taking on 140,000 square feet of space in the Overflo Public Warehouse on Beason Street. The building will be converted to give the Baltimore-based sports apparel maker office space, a showroom and a small retail outlet. Under Armour has signed a 6 1/2-year lease on the building and plans to add 350 employees with the expansion.
Tim Pryor, a developer on the project, told the panel the plan’s goals were to meet Under Armour’s expansion goals without “disrupting the integrity of the neighborhood.”
Struever Bros. has met with the Locust Point Civic Association, which had concerns with the original expansion plans. The group said the original plans included buildings that were too high for the neighborhood and created too much density in the area.
With that, the developer revised the plans, lowering the building heights, including taking a combination garage and residential building from 26 stories to 15 stores, an office building from 12 stories to seven stories and a second apartment building from 11 to seven stories.
“It’s reduced the overall impact on the community,” Pryor said.
In all, the expansion would result in about 650 new residential units, he added.
Matt D’Amico of Design Collective said several empty patches in the neighborhood south of Key Highway would be filled with several four- to five-story residential buildings and individual row houses.
“We can place buildings in there that fill in the gaps and give the street the definition it should have,” D’Amico said.
acannarsa@baltimoreexaminer.com
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Comments from Examiner Readers
2:00 PM MST on Fri., Feb. 29, 2008 re: "Tide Point expansion plan includes Under Armour space, residential units"
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1:05 PM MST on Fri., Feb. 29, 2008
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10:19 AM MST on Fri., Feb. 29, 2008
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12:17 AM MST on Tue., Jul. 17, 2007
re: "Under Armour to kick off effort aimed at women"
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8:16 PM MST on Tue., Jul. 10, 2007
re: "Under Armour to kick off effort aimed at women"
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BA said:
They have a right to complain about population density if they've already lived there. I'm surprised that if you sell homes there you wouldn't see this! What roads do you take in there when you show a house, are they: Fort ave, Fort ave, Fort ave, and the water taxi? I live in the South Baltimore neighborhood and that traffic'll even effect me. It's like the idea of building a whole commmunity where the Balt. Sun printing factory is in S. Baltimore off Hanover St, what road infrastructure will they use for that growth? Will they build a ramp directly into I-95?
71 agree | 71 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
What
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Dunn said:
Wait a minute... This Locust Point, there is new construction everywhere. One of the best assets in this area is Tide Point, it has done a lot for the community - the beautiful boardwalk with hammocks, kayaks, and views, with great employment. Also, this is Struever Bros., who tend to do things right. My guess is that the older residents are the angry ones. But the new residents who pay 6x the taxes are for it. Tide Point and Struever is not the problem here, but there is a lot of ugly new construction that doesn't jive. I'm not a resident here but I do sell homes in this area, this certainly won't hurt property values.
75 agree | 64 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I just saw the advert on TV...The girls soccer team in this gear is HOT!!! This should be the required uniform, I'll love soccer a bit more!!!
192 agree | 184 disagree
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prn said:
They've definitely cornered the apparel market and drastically cut into Nike's share of the market. Their ads are very effective and just by looking at the pic and seeing the very beautiful local talent they used for their shoot, I imagine it will be highly successful.
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