The Citizen: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:The Citizen rendering.jpg|right|thumb|450px|Rendering of The Citizen]]
[[File:The Citizen rendering.jpg|right|thumb|450px|Rendering of The Citizen]]
'''The Citizen''' is a 6-story, 144-"micro-unit" apartment building at 300 [[18th Street South]] in the [[Parkside District]]. It was proposed on the site of a former [[Wells Fargo]] drive-through by [[Golden Development Group]].
'''The Citizen''' is a 6-story, 144-"micro-unit" apartment building at 300 [[18th Street South]], on [[Block 150]] in the [[Parkside District]]. It was proposed on the site of a former [[Wells Fargo]] drive-through by [[Golden Development Group]], which acquired the property in December [[2019]] for $850,000.
 
The project was originally announced as a 110-unit student apartment building, with the name '''Canyon Lofts'''. Initial design plans included a 4,800 square-foot retail space and a 2,000 square-foot indoor climbing gym on the ground floor.


The design, by [[Creature]], won conceptual approval from the [[Birmingham Design Review Committee]] in February [[2020]].   
The design, by [[Creature]], won conceptual approval from the [[Birmingham Design Review Committee]] in February [[2020]].   
Line 15: Line 17:


==References==
==References==
* West, Ty (October 21, 2019) "Canyon Lofts, Rotary Trail condo projects moving forward." {{BBJ}}
* West, Ty (December 10, 2019) "Developer buys city center site for student housing project." {{BBJ}}
* Van der Bijl, Hanno (February 13, 2020) "Micro-unit student housing project in Parkside gains approval." {{BBJ}}
* Van der Bijl, Hanno (February 13, 2020) "Micro-unit student housing project in Parkside gains approval." {{BBJ}}
* Van der Bijl, Hanno (May 28, 2021) "Developer obtains $13M loan for downtown multifamily project." {{BBJ}}
* Van der Bijl, Hanno (May 28, 2021) "Developer obtains $13M loan for downtown multifamily project." {{BBJ}}
Line 26: Line 30:
[[Category:Golden developments]]
[[Category:Golden developments]]
[[Category:Creature buildings]]
[[Category:Creature buildings]]
[[Category:Block 150]]
[[Category:18th Street South]]
[[Category:18th Street South]]
[[Category:3rd Avenue South]]
[[Category:3rd Avenue South]]
[[Category:2022 buildings]]
[[Category:2022 buildings]]

Latest revision as of 21:55, 6 November 2023

Rendering of The Citizen

The Citizen is a 6-story, 144-"micro-unit" apartment building at 300 18th Street South, on Block 150 in the Parkside District. It was proposed on the site of a former Wells Fargo drive-through by Golden Development Group, which acquired the property in December 2019 for $850,000.

The project was originally announced as a 110-unit student apartment building, with the name Canyon Lofts. Initial design plans included a 4,800 square-foot retail space and a 2,000 square-foot indoor climbing gym on the ground floor.

The design, by Creature, won conceptual approval from the Birmingham Design Review Committee in February 2020. The developer obtained funding for the $21 million project from ServisFirst Bank and a building permit in May 2021. Construction was completed in late 2022.

The 70 foot-tall apartment building's 140 micro-units are 350 square feet each with a fold-out sofa bed, full kitchen, full bath and washer and dryer. The initial leases for those units were $1,150 per month, plus an $85 per month "technology bundle fee" and additional fees for up to two pets. The building also has four loft-style one-bedroom units which rented for $1,300 per month, and another 3,000 square feet of ground-floor retail.

The building, which sits opposite a Birmingham Xpress stop, is designed to encourage walking and to facilitate the use of public and on-demand transportation options, as well as food and package delivery services. Two Tesla Model 3 sedans with charging stations were provided for shared use by residents, along with storage areas for bicycles and electric scooters, but no on-site car parking was constructed.

An app called "Livly" operates door locks and thermostats while also managing food and package deliveries, a digital concierge service, and "lifestyle services" including pet care, personal trainers, dry cleaning and housekeeping. 60 of the units, managed by Mint House of New York City, operate as short-term rentals.

Retail tenants

References

External links