Albuquerque Journal

Railyard Innovation

SF housing, live-work space, retail drew internatio­nal architects

- BY MONICA ROMAN GAGNIER JOURNAL NORTH

SANTA FE — City and community developmen­t officials Monday showed off residentia­l, commercial and multiuse projects under constructi­on in the Baca Street portion of the city-owned Santa Fe Railyard and announced all 18 parcels in the developmen­t have been leased.

Right now the last approved project, an 18-unit apartment complex called Baca Flats, is just an empty lot, but constructi­on is expected to be completed in the third quarter of 2020.

Monday’s tour, kicked off by Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber, showcased a mix of eclectic projects that salvage abandoned structures and use industrial building materials in ways not permitted in Santa Fe’s historic district.

One prerequisi­te for housing developers in the Baca Railyard is that their properties must be long-term rentals. “There are too many shortterm rentals in Santa Fe. We need housing, not more Airbnb rentals,” said Richard Czoski, executive director of the Santa Fe Railyard Community Corp., the nonprofit that manages the Railyard under contract with city government.

The freedom to experiment in the Baca Railyard has attracted internatio­nal architects such as Andres Paglayan and his wife Solange Serquis, who are the developers of Trailhead Terraces. Scheduled for completion in January, the project includes five apartment units plus a commercial building with at least 1,000 square feet.

Last week, Paglayan and Serquis opened Cafecito, a coffee shop that is a tribute their home city of Buenos Aires. “This is a great area of town where one can experiment with modern styles not allowed in the historic district,” said Paglayan, who moved his firm’s office to Trailhead Terraces.

Another internatio­nal architect represente­d in the Railyard is Devendra Contractor, who originally hails from India. A graduate of St.

John’s College in Santa Fe, Contractor is designing the New Mexico Museum of Art’s new Vladem Contempora­ry modern art offshoot.

His Baca Railyard project is Shoofly Pie, a 6,000-square-foot project with two residentia­l condos that have been sold and a 2,600-square-foot commercial space that has been leased to dhouz Design Studio.

Several of the Baca Railyard projects are live/work spaces that have been designed by their owners, although Michael Golino, who will live in one of three condos he designed and developed, quipped, “As soon as you say work, you’ve got to add three parking spaces.”

Developer Stephanie Sandston, who specialize­s in live/work spaces, has sold two residentia­l condos that feature metal barrel roofs normally found in Quonset huts for a total of $750,000.

Still missing from the Baca Railyard is a traffic light at Railfan Road and Cerrillos Road to make it easier to exit the project. “Richard [Czoski] promises us it’s coming,” said Alan Burrus, one of the pioneering developers in the Baca Railyard who arrived “25 or 30 years ago.”

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Stephanie Sandston, second from right, walks away from two homes she designed in the Baca Street portion of the Santa Fe Railyard developmen­t during a tour of the area on Monday.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Stephanie Sandston, second from right, walks away from two homes she designed in the Baca Street portion of the Santa Fe Railyard developmen­t during a tour of the area on Monday.
 ??  ?? Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber, left, tours the home that Michael Golino designed and built in the Baca Street portion of the Santa Fe Railyard.
Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber, left, tours the home that Michael Golino designed and built in the Baca Street portion of the Santa Fe Railyard.

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