Douglas Development joins in on wave of Broad Street building rehabs

200douglas2 scaled

Douglas Development is beginning to renovate its Broad Street holdings, beginning with the former Clay Market building at North Second and East Broad streets. (Mike Platania photos)

After years of seemingly sitting on its holdings in the neighborhood, Douglas Development is starting work on the first of what it says will be more projects to come along a stretch of East Broad Street that’s seeing a recent surge in development activity.

D.C.-based Douglas is underway on a pair of building rehabs at 200 and 201 E. Broad St. that between them will house a total of 19 apartments above ground-floor commercial spaces.

The projects are a significant step forward for Douglas, which has gathered over a dozen properties in the neighborhood since the mid-2000s. Biggest among them is the former Central National Bank building at 219 E. Broad St., which it converted into apartments in an historic tax-credit rehab that wrapped up around 2016. But the firm sat on many of its other properties around Broad Street in the years since.

Douglas Asset Manager Cindy King said the work at 200 and 201 E. Broad St., across the street from each other, marks the beginning of the firm putting its Broad Street plans in motion.

“Our plan is to revitalize all of our assets on Broad Street. This is the kickoff,” King said.

She added, “Broad Street was always part of the plan, (but) we’ve had a couple other projects in the mix. It’s time to get this thing going. We’re excited about it.”

201douglas1 scaled

The Deco at CNB tower, in the background, was Douglas’ first project to completed in Richmond. One of its latest projects in Richmond, 201 E. Broad St., is in the foreground.

Some of those other projects include Douglas’s apartment conversions of the former Stumpf Hotel at 728 E. Main St. and the former Virginia Department of Environmental Quality building at 629 E. Main St. Douglas also recently spent a total of $7.7 million to acquire the former Massad House Hotel and Tiffanie’s Manor assisted living facility, also downtown.

Douglas purchased 200 and 201 E. Broad St. in 2007 for $1.8 million from late local businessman Samuel Liniado. Clay Market had operated at 200 E. Broad St. for over a decade before closing around 2019, while 201 E. Broad had been home to Liniado’s Harper’s Department Store and The Linen Mart for over 70 years, from 1933 to 2006, per an obituary. The 201 building’s been mostly vacant since.

King said the apartments at 201 E. Broad will be an even mix of one- and two-bedroom units, and the ground floor commercial space will be about 5,800 square feet.

Across the street at the former Clay Market building, Douglas is planning 11 apartments, 10 of which will be one-bedroom units with one two-bedroom. In addition to about 2,800 square feet of commercial space fronting Broad, King said that project will also have three office suites totaling about 2,000 square feet facing North Second Street.

King said those smaller offices will be available for anyone to rent, but that they may also be an option for building residents who’d like a home office.

ADO Architects is the designer for both projects, and L.F. Jennings is the general contractor. Divaris’s Brett McNamee, Ali McCrickard and Jimmy Cunneen are listing the commercial spaces.

King said they hope to have both projects completed by the first quarter of 2023.

Douglas’s projects add to other rehabs underway along the corridor.

landmark1 scaled

The former Jefferson Loan building at 10 E. Broad St. is being redeveloped into apartments.

Two blocks west, at 10 E. Broad St., Landmark Property Investment and Louis Adams recently kicked off work on the former Jefferson Loan and pawn shop building. Landmark co-founder Pinson Neal said in an email they’re turning the three-story, 17,000-square-foot building into 16 apartments above 3,000 feet of commercial space.

Neal said The Yellow Room Inc. is the project’s designer and L.F. Jennings is the general contractor.

It’s a slightly smaller renovation project than the one Landmark is working on at 909 E. Main St. downtown, where, along with The Wilton Cos., it’s going to renovate the Mutual Building into 170 apartments.

Also along Broad, local development firm The Monument Cos. recently began work at 109 E. Broad St., which is being renovated into eight apartments with commercial space.

Monument Cos. recently filed plans for the building that show an historic tax-credit renovation of the three-story, 7,200-square-foot building into eight apartments and ground-floor commercial space. An entity tied to Monument bought the building last July for $540,000, city records show.

monument1 scaled

After buying 109 E. Broad St. last year, The Monument Cos. recently started interior demolition on the three-story building.

It’s unclear what the breakdown of the apartments will be. Monument principal Chris Johnson wasn’t available for comment by press time. Monument’s other work in Richmond includes Cary Street Station in the Fan and The Riviere on Semmes.

Activity along Broad Street hasn’t been limited to residential projects. Hampton Roads-based restaurateur Juan Carillo is making a play into the Arts District, as has Common House with its oyster bar and restaurant Birdie’s.

And in the same block as Douglas’s projects, at 211 E. Broad St., Lory Markham and Walter Parks are converting the building that once housed Colonial Hairgoods Co. into nine apartments and a commercial space. It backs up to a building on the Grace Street side of the block that Markham and Michelle and Tom Rosman converted into apartments and two commercial storefronts.

Douglas’s King said the momentum in the neighborhood has company officials feeling optimistic.

“We’re seeing more activity on Broad, and there’s a lot of it,” King said. “We definitely want to do our part and keep Broad Street moving in the right direction.”

200douglas2 scaled

Douglas Development is beginning to renovate its Broad Street holdings, beginning with the former Clay Market building at North Second and East Broad streets. (Mike Platania photos)

After years of seemingly sitting on its holdings in the neighborhood, Douglas Development is starting work on the first of what it says will be more projects to come along a stretch of East Broad Street that’s seeing a recent surge in development activity.

D.C.-based Douglas is underway on a pair of building rehabs at 200 and 201 E. Broad St. that between them will house a total of 19 apartments above ground-floor commercial spaces.

The projects are a significant step forward for Douglas, which has gathered over a dozen properties in the neighborhood since the mid-2000s. Biggest among them is the former Central National Bank building at 219 E. Broad St., which it converted into apartments in an historic tax-credit rehab that wrapped up around 2016. But the firm sat on many of its other properties around Broad Street in the years since.

Douglas Asset Manager Cindy King said the work at 200 and 201 E. Broad St., across the street from each other, marks the beginning of the firm putting its Broad Street plans in motion.

“Our plan is to revitalize all of our assets on Broad Street. This is the kickoff,” King said.

She added, “Broad Street was always part of the plan, (but) we’ve had a couple other projects in the mix. It’s time to get this thing going. We’re excited about it.”

201douglas1 scaled

The Deco at CNB tower, in the background, was Douglas’ first project to completed in Richmond. One of its latest projects in Richmond, 201 E. Broad St., is in the foreground.

Some of those other projects include Douglas’s apartment conversions of the former Stumpf Hotel at 728 E. Main St. and the former Virginia Department of Environmental Quality building at 629 E. Main St. Douglas also recently spent a total of $7.7 million to acquire the former Massad House Hotel and Tiffanie’s Manor assisted living facility, also downtown.

Douglas purchased 200 and 201 E. Broad St. in 2007 for $1.8 million from late local businessman Samuel Liniado. Clay Market had operated at 200 E. Broad St. for over a decade before closing around 2019, while 201 E. Broad had been home to Liniado’s Harper’s Department Store and The Linen Mart for over 70 years, from 1933 to 2006, per an obituary. The 201 building’s been mostly vacant since.

King said the apartments at 201 E. Broad will be an even mix of one- and two-bedroom units, and the ground floor commercial space will be about 5,800 square feet.

Across the street at the former Clay Market building, Douglas is planning 11 apartments, 10 of which will be one-bedroom units with one two-bedroom. In addition to about 2,800 square feet of commercial space fronting Broad, King said that project will also have three office suites totaling about 2,000 square feet facing North Second Street.

King said those smaller offices will be available for anyone to rent, but that they may also be an option for building residents who’d like a home office.

ADO Architects is the designer for both projects, and L.F. Jennings is the general contractor. Divaris’s Brett McNamee, Ali McCrickard and Jimmy Cunneen are listing the commercial spaces.

King said they hope to have both projects completed by the first quarter of 2023.

Douglas’s projects add to other rehabs underway along the corridor.

landmark1 scaled

The former Jefferson Loan building at 10 E. Broad St. is being redeveloped into apartments.

Two blocks west, at 10 E. Broad St., Landmark Property Investment and Louis Adams recently kicked off work on the former Jefferson Loan and pawn shop building. Landmark co-founder Pinson Neal said in an email they’re turning the three-story, 17,000-square-foot building into 16 apartments above 3,000 feet of commercial space.

Neal said The Yellow Room Inc. is the project’s designer and L.F. Jennings is the general contractor.

It’s a slightly smaller renovation project than the one Landmark is working on at 909 E. Main St. downtown, where, along with The Wilton Cos., it’s going to renovate the Mutual Building into 170 apartments.

Also along Broad, local development firm The Monument Cos. recently began work at 109 E. Broad St., which is being renovated into eight apartments with commercial space.

Monument Cos. recently filed plans for the building that show an historic tax-credit renovation of the three-story, 7,200-square-foot building into eight apartments and ground-floor commercial space. An entity tied to Monument bought the building last July for $540,000, city records show.

monument1 scaled

After buying 109 E. Broad St. last year, The Monument Cos. recently started interior demolition on the three-story building.

It’s unclear what the breakdown of the apartments will be. Monument principal Chris Johnson wasn’t available for comment by press time. Monument’s other work in Richmond includes Cary Street Station in the Fan and The Riviere on Semmes.

Activity along Broad Street hasn’t been limited to residential projects. Hampton Roads-based restaurateur Juan Carillo is making a play into the Arts District, as has Common House with its oyster bar and restaurant Birdie’s.

And in the same block as Douglas’s projects, at 211 E. Broad St., Lory Markham and Walter Parks are converting the building that once housed Colonial Hairgoods Co. into nine apartments and a commercial space. It backs up to a building on the Grace Street side of the block that Markham and Michelle and Tom Rosman converted into apartments and two commercial storefronts.

Douglas’s King said the momentum in the neighborhood has company officials feeling optimistic.

“We’re seeing more activity on Broad, and there’s a lot of it,” King said. “We definitely want to do our part and keep Broad Street moving in the right direction.”

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Bruce Milam
Bruce Milam
2 years ago

It does my heart good to see East Broad Street buildings undergoing so much rehabilitation and repurposing, especially In light of the naysayers that forecast the downfall of the city after the destruction in the wake of the George Floyd death. It appears to me that the the future of the City is still very bright. I’ll have to get those sunglasses.

Michael P Morgan-Dodson
Michael P Morgan-Dodson
2 years ago
Reply to  Bruce Milam

Well if the City can keep crime from returning Downtown like it has in other sections of the City. 4:30 PM yesterday a tenant at their apartment near 1st and Broad was shot during a robbery as they walked into their building. At the end of March we saw one shooting at 10th and Main at 8pm and an shooting around 11pm on Broad and 6th. Violent, and especially gun crimes, are up since 2019. City leadership needs to do MORE than talk about their plans.

Ed Christina
Ed Christina
2 years ago

I agree, we need much stricter gun control laws.

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago
Reply to  Ed Christina

OMG

John Lindner
John Lindner
2 years ago

I’m glad to see these long-neglected properties get the love they deserve. I’m especially excited to see the building that houses Clay market be renovated. It’s going to be stunning.

lee Cl;ark
lee Cl;ark
2 years ago

It is great to see all of these renovations take place. Richmond was hit with a double whammy- Riots and pandemic. Richmond has so much history and offers a lot to tourists and residents alike. Having a vibrant Broad street is vitally important in creating a healthy tourist destination as well as desirable home for residents.

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago
Reply to  lee Cl;ark

I’d like to know the types of personalities that downvoted this.

Brett Hunnicutt
Brett Hunnicutt
2 years ago
Reply to  lee Cl;ark

It didn’t seem to slow development downtown. The only reason this stuff sat so long is because the developer decided to watch it rot. It’s been going on for a decade, meanwhile, development takes place furiously around him, even during the pandemic and protests.

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago

I’d like to say “so, it begins…” but it has been beginning in fits and and starts for a long time. I always feel like I am in a small minority when I say that Broad is the premiere commercial area of the Richmond area, and that Scott’s Addition is a flash in the pan and Carytown will be eclipsed. The reason for this is the clearly superior built environment that is already there not only on Broad but also directly adjacent. When I first really explored Richmond, I was amazed at the treasure of Broad street as a commercial… Read more »

Justin Reynolds
Justin Reynolds
2 years ago
Reply to  Shawn Harper

BRT isn’t going away and it’s ridership numbers have been strong. I’m not sure what point you are trying to convey. This series of developments will only strengthen Broad.

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago

are they charging fares yet? I live in Petersburg and I admit that I am not always up to date on Richmond issues day-to-day — Broad is definitely uglier downtown — hard to deny — I liked the green areas, and would’ve preferred MORE, maybe, instead of a bus lane, a BIKE lane — but only do-gooder middle class people are expected to bike — the poor, well that would be genocidal to expect THEM to bike, even if their health would improve…. They need the most passive forms of transportation, the ideology seems to insist. IS the ridership high?… Read more »

Shawn Harper
Shawn Harper
2 years ago

As far as it “going away” is concerned — yeah, the sunk costs alone make sure that it will likely stay until it “works” — which will not mean that it pays for itself with fares, of course…. that is never the standard these days.

Jackson Joyner
Jackson Joyner
2 years ago
Reply to  Shawn Harper

So many ridiculous points that I can’t even figure out which to address in that word salad.

Lucas de Block
Lucas de Block
7 months ago
Reply to  Shawn Harper

What’s holding broad street back is the high speed car traffic. Since the bus inherently reduces car traffic it makes broad street safer (though there is still a while to go). Broad street should make narrower car lanes and a protects bicycle path next to sidewalks.