Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Station Square apartment project expected to start in summer

Developer gains $3 million in state funding to build 316-unit complex

- By Mark Belko

A long-delayed Station Square apartment project finally may be stirring to life.

Dallas-based developer Trammell Crow Co. hopes to start constructi­on of the 316-unit apartment complex at the South Side entertainm­ent and office complex next summer after securing $3 million in state funding.

“I’m eagerly awaiting this developmen­t. We’re excited about this for Station Square to finally have some residentia­l buildings become part of our community there,” said Jim LaRue, director of asset management for Forest City Realty Trust, the Station Square owner.

Trammell Crow has been awarded a $1 million state redevelopm­ent assistance capital grant, $4 million less than it had requested, to help with the project. It also has received a $2 million state multimodal transporta­tion grant.

James Murray-Coleman, Trammell Crow senior vice president, said the money would be enough to get the project moving. The funds will be used for roads, a bike lane, a riverfront trail and other infrastruc­ture-related improvemen­ts, he said.

At one time, Trammell Crow had hoped to have the first apartment units finished by the summer of 2017. But the work was delayed, in part, as the developer waited to see if it would be awarded state funding it deemed critical to the project. It is now working to secure the various city approvals it needs.

“I can’t tell you how excited we are. It’s been a long time. We’ve been working on it for two years,” Mr. Murray-Coleman said.

The complex would be built on the east side of Station Square on land now used mainly for parking. The first apartments would be built next to the Smithfield Street Bridge and would include a mix of one-, two- and three-bedroom units. The average size would be 850 square feet.

In addition to the apartments, the developmen­t would include a 320-space parking garage and 5,000 square feet of retail space.

The project is ramping up as some developers are shying away from building apartments in or near Downtown because of fears

that the market is becoming oversatura­ted.

According to the Pittsburgh Downtown Partnershi­p, there are currently 4,339 apartment units located in or near the Golden Triangle and another 3,630 in the pipeline, including the Station Square project.

Despite such numbers, Mr. Murray-Coleman is bullish on the developmen­t. He sees the location and the fact that the apartments will be new, built from the ground up, as a selling point. Many Downtown apartments are being retrofitte­d into old office buildings or stores.

Likewise, Dan Adamski, managing director of the Jones Lang LaSalle real estate firm, believes the project has promise, in part because of the location.

“I think it will succeed because it’s unique and doesn’t have a lot of competitio­n in that neighborho­od,” he said. “And the views of the city are going to be one of a kind.”

Trammell Crow also has the option of doing more apartments in future phases. However, Mr. Murray-Coleman said the company may look at offices or a hotel in the second and third phases. The total project budget for all phases is more than $200 million.

 ?? Michael Henninger/Post-Gazette ?? An aerial photograph of Station Square in 2012. Trammell Crow Co. hopes to start constructi­on of an apartment complex in the area to the left of the Smithfield Street Bridge.
Michael Henninger/Post-Gazette An aerial photograph of Station Square in 2012. Trammell Crow Co. hopes to start constructi­on of an apartment complex in the area to the left of the Smithfield Street Bridge.
 ?? Station Square East Parcel Developmen­t team ?? An artist’s rendering of the Station Square redevelopm­ent, left.
Station Square East Parcel Developmen­t team An artist’s rendering of the Station Square redevelopm­ent, left.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States