Albuquerque Journal

DOWNTOWN DWELLINGS

155 student apartments to open in Aug.

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Lobo Rainforest, housing for UNM students, is rising at Innovate ABQ

Come August, at least 95 percent of the 155 student apartments being built at the forthcomin­g Innovate ABQ research and developmen­t site Downtown are expected to be filled.

The University of New Mexico began accepting applicatio­ns and reservatio­ns this month for students who want to live in the six-story Lobo Rainforest building under constructi­on at the old sevenacre Baptist Church property at Central and Broadway. That’s where UNM, the city, the county and private partners are working to create a modern, high-tech research and developmen­t district.

The $35 million,160,000-square-foot facility is rapidly rising and on schedule to open in August, say developers, who broke ground last July. It will house entreprene­urial developmen­t programs and startup businesses on the ground floor, and up to 310 students in two-bedroom apartments, priced at $674 a month, on the top five floors.

“The outer frame for the first five stories is already in place, and we’re working to frame the sixth floor now to top the building out by March,” said Jason Perry, managing director of the Floridabas­ed Signet Developmen­t. “We’re doing electrical work and plumbing now on the lower floors.”

The apartments, reserved for sophomore students and higher, are drawing a lot of interest, said UNM Institutio­nal Support Services associate vice president Chris Vallejos.

“We’ve had a lot of inquires and a few contracts already signed,” Vallejos said. “Our target is at least 95 percent occupancy for the first year.”

The university will start actively marketing the apartments next month, focusing especially on students in UNM’s Innovation Academy. That program launched in 2015 as part of the Innovate ABQ project to offer students direct experience and real-world skills in entreprene­urship.

“We’re going gangbuster­s to get everything in place for August,” said Innovation Academy Director Robert DelCampo. “We have 541 students in the academy now.”

The goal is for academy-connected students to live, work and play at the Innovate ABQ site. The academy will be

housed on the Lobo Rainforest ground floor, alongside technology transfer programs run by UNM and some of the national laboratori­es, to help students and others build and grow new companies.

“It’s open for students to live there and participat­e in all the educationa­l and entreprene­urial programmin­g activities,” said UNM chief economic developmen­t officer Lisa Kuuttila.

After the Lobo Rainforest facility, the Innovate ABQ board will focus on the next phase of site developmen­t on the existing Baptist Church complex, a 71,000-square-foot facility on the site’s southeast corner. It will be remodeled into a mixed-use facility for business incubator and accelerato­r programs, high-tech labs, entreprene­urial support programs, and meeting and event spaces, said Innovate’s interim board president and chair, Terry Laudick.

“We have a good number of interested tenants, although we have no agreements in place yet,” Laudick said.

The board is also working to raise funds for Innovate programs and investment in startups that emerge at the site, said board member Jeff Apodaca.

“It’s all about private and public capital coming together for investment purposes to support entreprene­urs and create new companies and jobs,” Apodaca said.

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? The Lobo Rainforest building is under constructi­on at the Innovate ABQ research and developmen­t site Downtown at the old Baptist Church property at Central and Broadway. The University of New Mexico is accepting applicatio­ns for the building’s...
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL The Lobo Rainforest building is under constructi­on at the Innovate ABQ research and developmen­t site Downtown at the old Baptist Church property at Central and Broadway. The University of New Mexico is accepting applicatio­ns for the building’s...
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