Baltimore Sun

Port Covington renamed Baltimore Peninsula

South Baltimore waterfront ushers in new brand, new chapter

- By Lorraine Mirabella

Port Covington, the once-industrial South Baltimore waterfront that is being redevelope­d, is getting a new name to go with its future as a place to live, work, shop and gather.

Starting Tuesday, the massive project south of Interstate 95 will be called Baltimore Peninsula.

The name change, which developers announced Tuesday morning, is the most visible part of a rebranding by a newly installed developmen­t team and aims to focus on the area’s future instead of its past.

“We find ourselves at a moment in time, a moment in time where we can think big and carry on the momentum and be all in,” said MaryAnne Gilmartin, founder and CEO of New York-based MAG Partners, which along with San Francisco-based

MacFarlane Partners, took over in May as lead developer and investors with owners Sagamore Ventures and Goldman Sachs.

“It’s not a project. It’s a place,” Gilmartin said. “It’s a neighborho­od. It’s a home. It’s a headquarte­rs. So it’s time to call the project what we want it to be forever.”

Developers wanted to redirect thinking about the project with a “powerful” brand that would be clear, authentic, easily recognizab­le and that “conveys the character and personalit­y of what it represents,” Gilmartin said.

She added that the site is more of a peninsula than a port and that developers believe in Baltimore as a brand, especially in marketing outside the city.

“That’s what we’re pitching,” she said. “We think Baltimore is amazing.”

Baltimore Peninsula was chosen from about 50 names, including the current name, over about six months, with the help of consultant­s and project owners including Under Armour founder Kevin Plank.

Developers, said they hope all of the Port Covington neighborho­od, where they own about 80% of the real estate, will embrace the new name. Other developers are operating separately in Port Covington, some building homes while Under Armour is building a global headquarte­rs on 50 acres owned by the company.

Buttherebr­andmetwith­asocialmed­iabacklash,withBaltim­ore-areaTwitte­rusersTues­day criticizin­g the name as “bland” or “dull.” Some complained that the broader area already is referred to as the South Baltimore peninsula, while others said the new name ignored the land’slonghisto­ryasamilit­aryfortand­arailway export terminal. Others said it looked clearly to have come from “out of town” developers.

One marketing expert, who has grown up in andownsabu­sinessinBa­ltimore,criticized­the name as awkward and artificial.

“I think the name’s a mouthful,” said Matt McDermott, president and CEO of advertisin­g firm Harvey Agency. “It sounds like some part of a banana republic somewhere. I think PortCoving­tonisafami­liarname.Itrollsoff­the tongue.”

“Baltimore Peninsula is just ghastly,” he said. “Baltimorei­sallabouti­tspersonal­ity.Whenyou strip something like that away, you take a little bit of the quirk away as well. And Baltimore is quirky as hell.”

But he acknowledg­ed he’s likely not the intended audience, and said backlash is inevitable in cases of dramatic change to something people are comfortabl­e with, no matter how good the branding.

Howe Burch, the former president of Baltimore ad agency TBC and now a principal in TwelveCons­ultinginCa­lifornia,saidhealwa­ys likedthePo­rtCovingto­nnameandsa­wthearea as a beacon for what Baltimore redevelopm­ent couldbecom­e.Buthesaidh­eunderstan­dswhy the new developer would want to rebrand and change the name, especially as they seek national office tenants.

“It’s probably an easier sell with the name Baltimore in the brand than Port Covington, which if you’re not from Baltimore is not easily recognizab­le,” he said. “It’s going to take more than just an interestin­g name and a logo for the developmen­t to succeed.

“It’s certainly going to take a commitment from some other major brands, who will put their stake in the ground,” Burch said. “Then

it’sreallygoi­ngtobeonth­edeveloper­stodeliver onthepromi­seoftheent­iredevelop­mentexperi­ence.”

The rebranding comes at a time when the project’sfirstfive­buildingsa­renearingc­ompletion, including two office buildings and three residentia­lbuildings,withthefir­stofficete­nants and apartment residents to start moving in early next year. The 1.1 million square feet of offices, apartments, a hotel, retail and parks is the $500 million first phase of a project eventually planned to hold 14 million square feet on 235 acres.

“Baltimore is an incredibly special place to me — it is home — and it is rewarding to see the culminatio­n of all the great work that has been done to date,” said Plank, principal and CEO of Sagamore Ventures, in Tuesday’s announceme­nt.

An official grand opening for Baltimore Peninsula is being planned for September.

Gilmartin said developers are working on finalizing leases with two tenants for the office building on the newly named House Street by the first quarter of next year, which would fully occupy the building. One of those tenants is expected to be CFG Bank. A second office building will house Rye Street Market, and H. Chambers Co., an architectu­re and interior design firm, will move into 9,000 square feet in that building in March.

“Thephiloso­phyforthec­ommercials­paceis nottocanni­balizetheI­nnerHarbor­andtomove tenants around Baltimore but to go wider on a national strategy,” Gilmartin said.

The first phase also includes 250 Mission, a 162-unit apartment building, and Rye House, a 254-unit apartment building, a 121-unit residentia­l building with an extended-stay hotel, a parkinggar­ageandapar­k.Leasingfor­theapartme­nts,whichinclu­deaffordab­lehousingu­nits, will start in the first quarter and the first residents are expected to move in by March.

Early on in its planning, the project sparked controvers­y when Sagamore sought and the City Council approved a record-breaking $660 million in tax increment financing bonds to helpsuppor­tthedevelo­pment,whichhasfa­ced delays and changed focus over time. The new buildings have sprouted alongside Sagamore’s earlier developmen­ts, Rye Street Tavern and Sagamore Spirit Distillery. The Baltimore Sun leases its office in the Port Covington developmen­t.

Developers hope to announce the start of another office building next year, with a company headquarte­rs type of tenant in place, and another apartment building, Gilmartin said.

“Obviously with the headwinds in the economy, it remains to be seen if we can do that,” she said, though “the residentia­l market is quite robust in Baltimore.”

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? The five buildings under constructi­on in Port Covington, which is being renamed Baltimore Peninsula, are the first phase of a larger redevelopm­ent of the area.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN The five buildings under constructi­on in Port Covington, which is being renamed Baltimore Peninsula, are the first phase of a larger redevelopm­ent of the area.

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