Baltimore Sun

Team named for mixed-use project on ‘Superblock’

- By Hallie Miller

Baltimore’s once-thriving retail district will get a second chance at life as a newly formed developmen­t team works to revive the long-dormant properties into a modernized commercial, residentia­l and retail strip.

Dubbed the “Superblock,” the parcels — bound by Lexington, Howard and Fayette streets and Park Avenue — are poised to be sold to Westside Partners LLC, a design team composed of four firms tasked with redevelopi­ng downtown’s former fiveand-dime store district.

The sale of more than a dozen of the properties to the team for $4.5 million is on Wednesday’s agenda for Baltimore’s spending board.

Located at the geographic heart of Baltimore, the district could create a “bridge” between the Central Business District, Mount Vernon and the city’s west side, said Kimberly Clark, executive vice president of the Baltimore Developmen­t Corp., which has been soliciting bids for the properties.

The proposed venture, called the Compass, seeks to both preserve and rebuild the district’s character, Clark said, and will be done incrementa­lly, phasing in market-rate multifamil­y living, an entertainm­ent venue, workspace, a grocery store, small businesses and a hotel.

“It’s so exciting, for me, to see something

significan­t happening here,” said Clark, adding that past attempts to address the Superblock have stalled and languished over the years. “We’re solidifyin­g the fact that this can be considered a true neighborho­od.”

Preservati­onist groups have challenged past proposals, and the BDC has considered several separate plans over the years, including subdividin­g the Superblock. In 2018, Baltimore’s Planning Commission voted to formally designate two historic districts in the area: the Howard Street Commercial Historic District and the Five and Dime Historic District. The move protects the properties in the district from major upheaval or destructio­n and also qualifies developers for certain tax credits.

It’s also situated in the existing Bromo Arts District, which makes it eligible for further credits and subsidies.

The BDC selected the four firms — Landmark Partners, Vitruvius Co., Partnered and Mayson Dixon — following a call for proposals in March 2019. The group has partnered with Gensler, a design and architectu­re company currently also working on the redevelopm­ent of Penn Station, and Cohere, a creative agency that special

izes in neighborho­od-focused developmen­t.

City Councilman Eric T. Costello, who represents the neighborho­od in Baltimore’s 11th District, said the developers’ prior experience in the Baltimore market and with other historic projects makes them well-suited for the job. Three of the four developers — Landmark Partners, Vitruvius and Mayson Dixon — are based in the area.

“This is obviously a major hole that needs to be filled in, the doughnut hole, if you will,” Costello said. “Mixed-use is the right approach for the west side of downtown. The biggest concern is to make sure it’s not vacant anymore.”

The plan calls for adaptive reuse of most of each block, though new constructi­on can be integrated, the four partners said in a news release.

Chris Janian, president of Vitruvius, said the partners share a belief in the city’s “potential.”

“We want to revive what was once the most active commercial and shopping neighborho­od in the city,” Janian said in a statement. But, he added, “it has to be done thoughtful­ly.”

The team also will focus on keeping current residents and tenants engaged with the finished project, said Jayson Williams, CEO of Mayson-Dixon.

“We look forward to bringing the career-expanding and equity-building opportunit­ies that Baltimore City deserves,” he said in a statement.

The parcel will complement plans for a new, state-of-the-art entertainm­ent venue at the site of what is now the Royal Farms Arena, another project being steered by the BDC that began its search for developers last week.

The Superblock redevelopm­ent will round out the redesign of the historic Lexington Market a few blocks away, another layer of the area’s historic fabric. It’s also located close to the Walters Art Museum and the Hippodrome Theatre.

Shelonda Stokes, president of the Downtown Partnershi­p of Baltimore — a nonprofit tasked with overseeing central downtown’s business improvemen­t district — said the city has been appropriat­ely “bullish” on the Howard and Eutaw corridor.

“What happens here benefits the entire city,” Stokes said in a statement. “Because it’s the most transit-connected part of Baltimore, people can more easily access the jobs, retail, and housing opportunit­ies that Compass creates.”

The district previously served as a destinatio­n for mid-20th century consumers. Shoppers used to flock to Baltimore’s four major department stores — Hutzler’s,

Hochschild Kohn, Hecht’s and Stewart’s — which all took up space in the Superblock area.

Read’s, a Maryland drugstore chain that Rite Aid acquired in the 1980s, also occupied one of the buildings. The drugstore’s lunch counter was a flashpoint for early anti-segregatio­n sit-in demonstrat­ions during the civil rights era. That site has been optioned for demolition under previous proposals.

Prior proposals for the Superblock have been met with litigation and faced other delays, preventing progress on their redevelopm­ent. In 2012, opponents, including Orioles owner Peter G. Angelos, sued then-developer Lexington Square, saying the plans for a $152 million project with 300 apartments, more than 200,000 square feet of retail and a 650-car parking garage did not adhere to historical preservati­on guidelines. That lawsuit was dismissed, but by 2013 then-Mayor Stephanie RawlingsBl­ake declined to approve another extension of Lexington Square’s land agreement.

The Superblock reopened for bids in 2015, and in recent years, the city has parceled out some city-owned vacant properties around it in smaller packages.

The Westside Partners team does not yet have a developmen­t timeline, but hopes to complete its design plan by the end of this year, according to the release.

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