Sunday, July 26, 2015
Reinventing Microhousing - Yobi Apartments Open House Tour Aug 25th 5:30-7:30pm (NEW DATE)
NOTE - DATE HAS CHANGED: AUGUST 25TH 5:30-7:30PM - 1219 E MARION ST
The Yobi Apartments is finally ready. This project has been much discussed as a new model for how to build microhousing in Seattle. The Yobi was designed from the ground up with the conviction that congregate housing can be a desirable housing option where the architecture and the shared features can support chance interaction and help to build community among the residents. For microhousing proponents and critics alike, we welcome you this open house to learn more about microhousing and what it can be.
Event Invitation and RSVP:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/reinventing-microhousing-come-tour-the-yobi-apartments-tickets-17914814693
Some related reading:
Our original post describing the project:
http://neimanarchitects.blogspot.com/2013/03/re-inventing-microhousing.html
A review of microhousing code issues and basic metrics:
http://www.theurbanist.org/2014/09/18/an-architects-perspective-the-details-of-microhousing-projects/
A discussion of the The Yobi's sustainable features and energy use:
http://neimanarchitects.blogspot.com/2015/02/re-inventing-microhousing-yobi.html
Should the Seattle City Council revisit restrictions on micro-housing?
http://www.seattlemet.com/articles/2015/7/17/hala-report-calls-for-modifying-barriers-to-pod-apartments
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Marion Green Wins 2015 PSRC Vision 2040 Award
We had a little party today to accept a Puget Sound Regional Council Vision 2040 award for our Marion Green Townhouses. The homes were completed a few months ago, but this is a project that has been more or less nine years in the making.
In 2006, Scott Clawson and Todd Allan walked into my office with a piece
of land. They wanted to build a little townhouse project, keep one unit for
themselves & hold the other two as rentals.
At the time I was just starting to get into development projects. I knew very little about townhouses, just enough to
be aware that virtually every project was built in the same way: Build units in the front, units in the
back, and the center of the site is a driveway zone that gets you to the
parking garages. Scott and Todd asked me if I could design them one of
these. I took one look at the cross section of the building & said "well, you could, but this is a really bad housing design. Why not just cover the center with a deck? That would hide all of the car parking & the center of the project becomes a community open space that you all enjoy." Simple, right?
Turns out why not is because this concept violated
about a dozen development standards of Seattle's land use code. To do this simple little project we had to volunteer go
through the design review process to get permission to depart from all of the
various standards that we’d need to get the project done. All told it took over two years to get our
permit approvals, and by the time we work our way through the process, it was the fall of 2008, which you may
recall was when the entire economy collapsed. Bank financing dried up, the project foundered, and never got built.
I was upset that we didn’t get this little
jewel of a project built but even more so that as a city, our codes were wound so tight that it was a “good ideas to the
back of the line” kind of situation. As
it turned out, the Department of Planning and Development was of a similar mindset, and beginning to study a re-write of the multi-family
code. It was becoming clear that we needed to liberalize our land use code if we were going to make good housing possible. I spent the recession organizing a group architects to work with the city on the code
language, and also to go out into the community to give presentations, explain the code changes and why they were necessary.
By 2011, we had a new code in place, and as it turned
out I was the person who had spent the most time reading it. This gave me
an opportunity to meet a lot of developers who came to me to ask what was possible
under the new code. This is how I met
Joe Paar. He was one of the first people
that recognized the value of
combining technical code knowledge and design skill to develop more successful
projects, in every sense. When I decided
to develop my first project, I needed a partner to help make the finances work. Joe was the guy that I asked for help & within a couple minutes discussion we were off to the races. Joe was a true partner at every step of the
way, and he deserves a lot of credit for getting this project successfully to the finish line.
All told it took nine years from the first sketch to where we got to stand in the courtyard with the project team and take a victory lap. From the outset my goal was to build a
better mousetrap: Provide a replicable
model for a better way to do infill housing in Seattle. I truly believe
we’ve done that. We’ve found a way to
hide the cars, create more open space, break down project scale, bring more
natural light into the homes, and most importantly, provide a commons that
helps facilitate and build community among the families that share this little
plot of land. I'm also happy to say that other people have started to
pick up on this model. There are now
four other courtyard lid projects in the works, two by our office, but two
others by different architect/developer teams. It is my hope that the
recognition that we are received today will help to spread the word and speed
the adoption of this new housing archetype in the marketplace.
Thank you to the residents of Marion Green for sharing you home with us today. I hope you enjoy living in Marion Green as much as we enjoyed making it for you.
Project Team:
Architect: David Neiman and Juan Vergara - Neiman Taber Architects
Developer: David Neiman and Joe Paar - Paar Development
Structural Engineer: Jim Harriott and Benjamin Bird - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen - Philbin Landscape Architects
Structural Engineer: Jim Harriott and Benjamin Bird - Harriott Valentine Engineers
Landscape Architect: Patricia Lenssen - Philbin Landscape Architects
Geotechnical Engineer: Rob Ward - Geotech Consultants
General Contractor: Peter Ottele and Doug Scheer - Village Builders
Strategy and Marketing: Joe Paar - Paar Development
Sales Agent: Jacob Menashe - Berkshire Hathaway
General Contractor: Peter Ottele and Doug Scheer - Village Builders
Strategy and Marketing: Joe Paar - Paar Development
Sales Agent: Jacob Menashe - Berkshire Hathaway
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)