Details have yet to be announced for the Black Hills Energy building at 1815 Capitol Ave., but Heistand recently purchased that property as well and plans to revamp it as apartments.
Details have yet to be announced for the Black Hills Energy building at 1815 Capitol Ave., but Heistand recently purchased that property as well and plans to revamp it as apartments.
Wow, this is great! I walk past this building regularly and it has been wholly or largely empty for a LONG time. This block is in desperate need of Rehab as I think only one of the four buildings (the one directly east of this building) is inhabited.
Parking is scarce, and until we have large improvement in public transport, most residents will want a car. Based on the garage door off of Capitol St, I assume they have some quantity of indoor parking. Maybe the lot on the NE? There is also a lot across to the west. Kitty-corner is a garage, but there is a thread that someone has applied to turn that into loft apartments (condos?) also.
I also thought of the parking garage conversion. Â Don't know if anything has actually happened on that.
Anyways I trust NuStyle on this one, they have an amazing track record. Â And the activity in one of the deadest parts of downtown just shows the momentum and demand for anything and everything in the area.
It's really amazing how many of these large apartment-conversion projects have been completed, underway, or announced recently. Â All these new residents should really affect the downtown environment, with more retail and service businesses opening up to serve them.
Although I agree with the article in that it's unlikely we'll see large speculative office construction, I wonder if the decline in vacant office space downtown will create pressure to build more new office towers in the future?
Linkin5 wrote:Lets hope the demand is actually equivalent or even close to the amount of apartments are going in.
FWIW Bluestone said on their facebook recently that they are back to having a waiting list on all their properties. Â Obiously some of these projects are on different scales than Bluestones usual though.
I think the increasing supply of downtown housing is actually driving demand to some degree, as a growing population is making it a more desirable place to live. Â It will be interesting to see how quickly some of these massive projects can rent out, though, as it is an unprecedented increase in new residential units downtown. Â With the overall shortage of rental housing in the US now, though, I'm not to worried about them sitting empty.
Seth wrote:I think the increasing supply of downtown housing is actually driving demand to some degree, as a growing population is making it a more desirable place to live. It will be interesting to see how quickly some of these massive projects can rent out, though, as it is an unprecedented increase in new residential units downtown. With the overall shortage of rental housing in the US now, though, I'm not to worried about them sitting empty.
Agreed. Â And as Downtown reaches some level of critical mass in terms or residents, then more retail services will come along, which then leads to more people being interested in living downtown. Â I think we are beginning to witness this happen. Â It is wonderful to see.
Walked past two weeks ago and all of the windows were open. The two below ground parking garages were also open, and there was a rental dumpster onsite. I got a slight look inside the garage. I could see at least 10 spaces but I couldn't see around the corner to tell how far in (east) it went.
justnick wrote:Love it.
Wish something would actually go in that little round building. it's so classy.
From the article:
Cindy Gonzalez wrote:Perhaps even more recognizable than the main building is an attached 6,500-square-foot structure that faces the 19th and Dodge Streets intersection and has a round, domed entrance that Heistand says “looks like a flying saucer landed on top.” He said that segment, which was part of the purchase deal, likely will be leased as a small restaurant or coffee shop.
What was in the little round building before? Â For some reason, I picture a US Bank logo on it from the past...perhaps I'm confusing it with something else? Â The building will look nice once done... It may sound odd to say this, but I think the balconies will actually dress up the building quite a bit...right now, the design is too "vertical" Â Â Todd does do a good job on these projects. Â I remember years ago he did the Ford Warehouse on 10th & Â Dodge...it came out really nice while maintaining it's historical look (as he had to)
charlie123 wrote:What was in the little round building before? For some reason, I picture a US Bank logo on it from the past...perhaps I'm confusing it with something else? The building will look nice once done... It may sound odd to say this, but I think the balconies will actually dress up the building quite a bit...right now, the design is too "vertical" Todd does do a good job on these projects. I remember years ago he did the Ford Warehouse on 10th & Dodge...it came out really nice while maintaining it's historical look (as he had to)
I think it had ATM machines in it at some point, but I can't remember.
charlie123 wrote:What was in the little round building before? For some reason, I picture a US Bank logo on it from the past...perhaps I'm confusing it with something else? The building will look nice once done... It may sound odd to say this, but I think the balconies will actually dress up the building quite a bit...right now, the design is too "vertical" Todd does do a good job on these projects. I remember years ago he did the Ford Warehouse on 10th & Dodge...it came out really nice while maintaining it's historical look (as he had to)
The "cupcake" building! Â I think it was a branch of the Omaha National Bank originally.
Trenton was talking about this project on Grow Omaha this morning, saying it was more vacant office space being taken off the market. He then said the his group has recently sold three other buildings yet to be announced.
Coyote wrote:Trenton was talking about this project on Grow Omaha this morning, saying it was more vacant office space being taken off the market. He then said the his group has recently sold three other buildings yet to be announced.
Douglas Building, Service Life Building and Library Building??? I think most of these are pretty well occupied and might have some good leases on them, I doubt they'd be for conversions...
Not completely sure of my memory on this, but either an Omaha National Bank branch (drive through facility?, as branch banking regulations were very different back then), and then a Western Union Office. Â I could be wrong on the specific banking company(s), but it was definitely built for the bank business.
derog wrote:Walked past two weeks ago and all of the windows were open. The two below ground parking garages were also open, and there was a rental dumpster onsite. I got a slight look inside the garage. I could see at least 10 spaces but I couldn't see around the corner to tell how far in (east) it went.
I was wrong, I saw spots numbered up to at least 67.
derog wrote:Walked past two weeks ago and all of the windows were open. The two below ground parking garages were also open, and there was a rental dumpster onsite. I got a slight look inside the garage. I could see at least 10 spaces but I couldn't see around the corner to tell how far in (east) it went.
I was wrong, I saw spots numbered up to at least 67.
Nice so there is a good chunk of on site parking ready to go.
derog wrote:Walked past two weeks ago and all of the windows were open. The two below ground parking garages were also open, and there was a rental dumpster onsite. I got a slight look inside the garage. I could see at least 10 spaces but I couldn't see around the corner to tell how far in (east) it went.
I was wrong, I saw spots numbered up to at least 67.
I was wrong again, saw 73 numbered spots, but there may be even more. Also, a crane is outside.