224-unit apartment project near VUU gets Council go-ahead

brookroad1

Brook Road Apartments is slated to rise in the city’s Northside. (Courtesy of Cox, Kliewer & Co.)

With City Council’s stamp of approval, a $32 million apartment project is now set to rise on the site of an old Northside postal warehouse.

Council voted Monday to approve a special use permit for a 224-unit apartment development at 2009 Brook Road and 2011 Northumberland Ave. near Virginia Union University. A U.S. Postal Service warehouse will be razed to make way for two four-story buildings.

The project’s developer is W Brook Road LLC, a group made up of local general contracting firm Loughridge & Co., Kimberly Kidd and Dennis Alan Williford Jr.

2009 Brook Road and 2011 Northumberland Ave

An adjacent wooded lot along Brook Road will also be cleared. (Mike Platania)

City Council voted unanimously to approve the ordinance, which was on its consent agenda.

Two citizens spoke against the project. Another two spoke in favor of it, including Virginia Union University’s senior vice president Maurice Campbell.

Councilman Chris Hilbert said he believes it will provide “much needed student housing for Virginia Union University,” $400,000 in new tax revenue and draw more retail to North Lombardy Street and Brook Road.

The city’s Planning Commission voted to approve the SUP in October, and the Council vote on the matter was delayed six times since being introduced in September.

John Waechter, Loughridge’s director of business development, said during that time the LLC had held numerous community meetings and met with Councilman Chris Hilbert, who represents the area.

“We added some additional things to support the neighborhood, things like putting trash receptacles along Roberts Street and helping them with parking enforcement,” Waechter said.

“We’re trying to be good neighbors. I think Hilbert sees that and the broader goal. People don’t want to displace residents with development. We want to add rooftops to the neighborhood and rejuvenate it rather than gentrify it.”

The Edgehill-Chamberlayne Court Civic Association opposed the SUP, and Virginia Union University, which last week began seeking development proposals for a nearby motel site at 2201 N. Lombardy St., is supporting the apartment project.

Now that the project has been approved, Waechter said they’re looking to break ground by year-end.

brookroad1

Brook Road Apartments is slated to rise in the city’s Northside. (Courtesy of Cox, Kliewer & Co.)

With City Council’s stamp of approval, a $32 million apartment project is now set to rise on the site of an old Northside postal warehouse.

Council voted Monday to approve a special use permit for a 224-unit apartment development at 2009 Brook Road and 2011 Northumberland Ave. near Virginia Union University. A U.S. Postal Service warehouse will be razed to make way for two four-story buildings.

The project’s developer is W Brook Road LLC, a group made up of local general contracting firm Loughridge & Co., Kimberly Kidd and Dennis Alan Williford Jr.

2009 Brook Road and 2011 Northumberland Ave

An adjacent wooded lot along Brook Road will also be cleared. (Mike Platania)

City Council voted unanimously to approve the ordinance, which was on its consent agenda.

Two citizens spoke against the project. Another two spoke in favor of it, including Virginia Union University’s senior vice president Maurice Campbell.

Councilman Chris Hilbert said he believes it will provide “much needed student housing for Virginia Union University,” $400,000 in new tax revenue and draw more retail to North Lombardy Street and Brook Road.

The city’s Planning Commission voted to approve the SUP in October, and the Council vote on the matter was delayed six times since being introduced in September.

John Waechter, Loughridge’s director of business development, said during that time the LLC had held numerous community meetings and met with Councilman Chris Hilbert, who represents the area.

“We added some additional things to support the neighborhood, things like putting trash receptacles along Roberts Street and helping them with parking enforcement,” Waechter said.

“We’re trying to be good neighbors. I think Hilbert sees that and the broader goal. People don’t want to displace residents with development. We want to add rooftops to the neighborhood and rejuvenate it rather than gentrify it.”

The Edgehill-Chamberlayne Court Civic Association opposed the SUP, and Virginia Union University, which last week began seeking development proposals for a nearby motel site at 2201 N. Lombardy St., is supporting the apartment project.

Now that the project has been approved, Waechter said they’re looking to break ground by year-end.

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Michael Dodson
Michael Dodson
5 years ago

Wow, I wish we could get some real urban infill. This is suburban, auto-centric (no front door on Brook and centered around a surface parking lot) single use (no retail space) housing is a poor design for the area. All of these new units will only draw more students over from College Park area off W Fells Street leading to its decline.