Try to imagine Scott’s Addition as flat farmlands. Two hundred years ago it was part of Bellville, an 800-acre estate owned by John Mayo, and became part of the dowry of Mayo’s daughter when she married Winfield Scott in 1817.
Search Results for: SCOTTS ADDITION
Blackwood Development plans 7-story building in Scott’s Addition
The local developer wants to build a 250-unit, mixed-use building from scratch on the site currently occupied by Richmond Machinery & Equipment Co.
Virginia Credit Union expanding again with first branch in Scott’s Addition
The Icon at 3200 W. Broad St. will be VACU’s 21st location and it will follow the credit union’s other new branch at Carytown Place shopping center.
$3M deal for Hutcheson building will bring first food hall to Scott’s Addition
EAT Restaurant Partners, which owns more than a dozen local eateries, bought the 17,000-square-foot warehouse at 3013 W. Leigh St. and plans to open by 2024.
Three Notch’d Brewing to spill into adjacent space in Scott’s Addition
The brewery is expanding its location on West Broad Street by taking over storefronts left vacant by Red Goat Pizza and Richmond Wine Station.
Neighboring Scott’s Addition property owners in legal fight over parking spots
The owner of the parking lot wants to include it in its planned redevelopment, but the company that leases the 51 spots allegedly isn’t cooperating.
Plant store repotting itself from Fan spot to new Scott’s Addition building
PlantHouse has signed a lease for a larger space at The Otis, a mixed-use development that’s taking shape at 1601 Roseneath Road.
Developer buys Dairy Bar property in Scott’s Addition for $7M
It’s unclear whether any changes are planned for the three buildings at 1600-1602 Roseneath Road.
Citing cost, Mosaic rethinks plan for events space near Scott’s Addition
The caterer bought 3013 Cutshaw Ave. in 2020 and initial renovation quotes were about $1 million. Now the cost is nearly three times that, so the building is up for sale.
Staffing firm lands Scott’s Addition building for new headquarters
Mark Morton paid $710,000 for 2923 W. Marshall St., which will house his namesake company after it moved out of 1008 N. Sheppard St.