The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Steelepoin­te Harbor on pace to start on 220 units

- By Jordan Grice

BRIDGEPORT — Developers of Steelepoin­te Harbor say they will be building hundreds of new apartments in the new year.

Following a summer opening of the Dockmaster­s building and constructi­on of the project’s 200slip marina, RCI Group is looking to start building the first batch of housing in 2020, according to Robert Christoph Jr., president of operations.

“We’re looking to create a destinatio­n on the waterfront in Bridgeport that hasn’t been here for years or ever,” he said.

The Miamibased company, which also has headquarte­rs in Bridgeport, has spent the past five years out of its nearly 20year tenure in the Park City transformi­ng the former United Illuminati­ng factory site into a commercial and residentia­l hub along the waterfront.

The next phase is slated to bring 220 units of marketrate apartments and 25,000 square feet of groundleve­l commercial space on East

Main Street, Pembroke Street and Stratford Avenue. According to Christoph, constructi­on is set to begin in the summer, barring any setbacks, kicking off an 18month constructi­on period.

That’s only the beginning of what developers and city officials have been touting for years as a transforma­tive project rivaling similar developmen­t in the region.

“Steelepoin­te being on the harbor, near downtown, within the transporta­tion intermodal, is a very significan­t piece in the developmen­t strategy for the waterfront and downtown entertainm­ent district,” said Tom Gill, director of Bridgeport’s office of planning and economic developmen­t, in an emailed statement to Hearst Connecticu­t Media.

Plans for the peninsula call for between 1,500 and 2,000 apartments and more than 100,000 square feet of

commercial space across several highrise structures which Christoph has said would be part of future phases of residentia­l developmen­t.

Constructi­on of more mixeduse complexes on the property will be contingent on market demand and the ability to lease all the units, he said.

Unlike dozens of affordable and marketrate housing developmen­ts that have opened around the city, Steelepoin­te is only offering highend, marketrate housing.

That’s due largely to the demographi­c the project is meant to attract.

“It’s affordable at a level that in Manhattan or other locales is not affordable today,” Christoph said.

He added that the housing is focused on attracting young profession­als west of Stamford, where median household incomes creep beyond $84,000, based on census data.

“It’s a step process and a phase process, but we know from other prior experience­s what works and we’re looking to bring that here and implementi­ng those same things that work,” Christoph said.

While largescale developmen­t has Christoph optimistic for his project, he said changes in the market are always possible and can set back timelines.

“If all of a sudden, the market goes into a recession or something else occurs in the marketplac­e that is unforeseen, that could deter the second and third phase of developmen­t,” he said.

It worked in Stamford

Thus far, the developer said, he has been optimistic because projects like Harbor Point have continued to thrive, bringing a commercial and residentia­l boon to

Stamford.

It’s been a decade since Building and Landing Technology set out to redevelop that city’s waterfront. When RCI first came to Bridgeport in 2001, developmen­t hadn’t begun in Stamford yet.

After billions of dollars’ worth of investment, a new taxing district and dozens of buildings feeding the city’s vibrancy, Harbor Point is widely considered Stamford’s largest mixedused developmen­t built since the last recession.

“It was verificati­on that there was demand (for developmen­t like this) in Connecticu­t,” Christoph said. “We came with a vision knowing what (Bridgeport’s harbor) would be in the future with the housing and retail and creating that neighborho­od feeling on the waterfront.”

The demand for commercial and residentia­l developmen­t has continued to make its way down Long Island Sound, according to the developer, who also cited continued growth in Norwalk as a result.

Bridgeport is the next natural stop for that kind of growth, according to Christoph.

RCI has played a role in those plans as well, with its ongoing partnershi­p with MGM Resorts Internatio­nal and the revival of the former Derektor shipyard site — now Bridgeport Boatworks.

The company also has had a hand in other projects throughout the city, including affordable housing projects with Bridgeport Neighborho­od Trust and commercial redevelopm­ent in the East End to meet past contractua­l requiremen­ts, according to Christoph.

“We think what we have an offering that is unique” with Steelepoin­te Harbor, he said. “I think we are going to constantly be pushing the edge and pushing Bridgeport ahead into the future and that’s part of what we signed up to do when taking on this project.”

 ?? Jordan Grice / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? RCI Group plans to build 220 apartment units and 25,000 square feet of commercial space in its next phase of developmen­t at Steelepoin­te Harbor in Bridgeport.
Jordan Grice / Hearst Connecticu­t Media RCI Group plans to build 220 apartment units and 25,000 square feet of commercial space in its next phase of developmen­t at Steelepoin­te Harbor in Bridgeport.

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