District of Columbia

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Rockrose Development will complete the 245,000-square-foot renovation of three office properties located in Washington, D.C., this fall. Located within the Dupont Circle neighborhood, the project includes buildings located at 1900 M St. Northwest, 1146 19th St. and 1140 19th St. Together, the renovated properties will comprise “The Row on 19th.” John Skolnik and Michael Katcher of Cushman & Wakefield are exclusively leasing the project on behalf of Rockrose.  

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Berkadia’s Affordable Housing division has arranged a $37.8 million low-income housing tax credit (LITHC) investment for the construction of Northwest One Phase II, an affordable housing multifamily community in Washington, D.C. Upon completion, the development will total 212 units in a mix of studio, one-, two-, three- and four-bedroom layouts for residents earning between 30 and 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), with 11 units reserved for individuals who were previously homeless. Amenities will include a business center, clubhouse, fitness center, laundry room and a game room. Berkadia secured the financing on behalf of the developer, a joint venture between MRP Realty, CSG Urban Partners and Taylor Adams Associates.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Total nonfarm payroll employment in the United States rose by 336,000 jobs in September, reports the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). According to The Wall Street Journal, this growth beats the expectations of economists and could signal another interest rate increase by the Federal Reserve before the end of the year. Sectors that experienced notable growth include leisure and hospitality, government, healthcare, professional, scientific, technical services and social assistance. Leisure and hospitality and government employment added 96,000 and 73,000 jobs, respectively, which is above the average monthly gain for both sectors. Employment in the transportation and warehousing and information sectors changed little. The unemployment rate also remained unchanged at 3.8 percent. The BLS additionally revised the employment numbers for July and August. July’s employment gain was revised to 236,000, up from 156,000 initially. The August figure was revised to 227,000, up from 187,000 initially. Together, the revisions total an increase of 119,000 jobs.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — A public-private partnership between American Campus Communities (ACC) and Georgetown University has broken ground on the redevelopment of Henle Village, an existing residence hall on the university’s campus in Washington, D.C. Following renovations, the community will offer an additional 278 beds, bringing the property’s bed count to 740. The residence hall will offer apartment-style units with kitchens and in-unit bathrooms. The project, which is expected for completion in summer 2025, is targeting LEED Platinum certification. The development team for the project includes RAMSA Robert A.M. Stern Architects and John Moriarty & Associates.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Total nonfarm employment in the United States increased by 187,000 in August, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). These findings reflect greater growth than anticipated, with economists previously predicting an increase of 170,000, according to CNBC. Despite this, 187,000 remains below the average monthly gain of 271,000 over the prior 12 months. The healthcare, leisure and hospitality and social assistance sectors added 71,000, 40,000 and 26,000 positions, respectively. Construction employment increased by 22,000, and employment in the professional and business services saw a modest increase of 19,000. Transportation and warehousing lost 34,000 jobs in August, and employment in other sectors saw little change. The unemployment rate for August is 3.8 percent, marking a 30-basis-point increase from July and the highest unemployment level since February. Additionally, the BLS significantly revised down the nonfarm employment numbers for June and July. With revisions, combined employment in the two months was 110,000 lower than previously reported. According to CNBC, the August report largely aligns with Federal Reserve’s expectations, and the central bank is expected to refrain from increasing interest rates at its September meeting. However, the Fed is expected to make a final increase for the year in October.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Hoffman & Associates is nearing completion of The Westerly, a 449-unit apartment community in the Southwest neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Set to deliver later this year, the community will include residences in one- and two-bedroom layouts, 20,000 square feet of amenity space and 29,000 square feet of retail space. Committed retail tenants will include Good Company Doughnut Café and Apple Tree Public Charter School. Thirty percent of apartments at The Westerly will be reserved for households earning at or below 30 and 50 percent of the median family income (MFI). Amenities will include a rooftop with a pool deck, terrace, grills and lounge areas, game rooms, TV and library lounges, a 3,900-square-foot fitness center and 2,200 square feet of coworking and meeting space. Leasing at the property, which was designed by Hickok Cole, is scheduled to begin later this summer. The Westerly will be situated three blocks from The Wharf, a $3.6 billion mixed-use development that Hoffman & Associates co-developed, and one block from the Waterfront Metro station.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Walker & Dunlop has provided a $108.8 million Fannie Mae loan for the refinancing of Park Chelsea, a 429-unit apartment building located in Washington, D.C.’s Capitol Riverfront neighborhood. The borrower, WC Smith, developed the property in 2016 as the first phase of The Collective, a 1,138-unit apartment development. Brendan Coleman and Connor Locke of Walker & Dunlop originated the financing. Park Chelsea’s amenities include a leasing center, 24-hour concierge, club room/game room, library, conference room and a garden room. Additionally, residents of The Collective have access to amenities across all three phases of the project, including indoor green space with an amphitheater, a full-size basketball court, outdoor singles tennis court and coworking space.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Total nonfarm employment in the United States rose by 187,000 jobs in July, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This marks slower growth than predicted by economists, reports CNBC, with the Dow Jones estimating an increase of 200,000. July’s job growth shows little change from June, which the BLS revised down by 24,000 to 185,000. Healthcare added 63,000 jobs in July and social assistance added 24,000 jobs. Employment in financial activities increased by 19,000. Construction employment also increased by 19,000 jobs, and leisure and hospitality fields showed little change, with an increase of 17,000. The unemployment rate remained steady, with a slight decrease to 3.5 percent from the 3.6 percent rate in June.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Akridge and National Real Estate Development (National Development) have topped out Phase I of The Stacks, a 2.7 million-square-foot mixed-use development in Washington, D.C. Situated in the city’s Capitol Riverfront district and within the Buzzard Point neighborhood, Phase I of the project is dubbed Building B, which is one of three 14-story residential towers coming to the development. The first phase will feature 1,100 apartments, 35,000 square feet of retail space, 300,000 square feet of below-grade parking and loading and a 15,000-square-foot public park. General contractor Clark Construction has finished vertical construction on Building B and will now pivot to finishing concrete operations on Buildings A and C. Bank OZK provided construction financing for the project. The Stacks is jointly owned by Akridge, National Development, Bridge Investment Group, Blue Coast Capital and institutional funds managed by National Real Estate Advisors. The project team expects to fully deliver The Stacks by the end of 2025.

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Arctaris Impact Investors LLC has completed Phase I of Northeast Heights, a six-story, 281,000-square-foot office building in Ward 7 of Washington, D.C. The office building is located in a Qualified Opportunity Zone, which is an economically distressed area where new investments may be eligible for preferential tax treatment. The office building is the first phase of a three-phase, $600 million effort to revitalize Ward 7, according to Arctaris’ website. Future phases of Northeast Heights are expected to include a grocery store redevelopment, approximately 1,300 residential units and community spaces. According to Arctaris, the project was catalyzed by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s mandate for city agencies to use the leasing power of the D.C. government to encourage economic development in historically underserved communities. Northeast Heights was pre-leased to the city’s Department of General Services and will serve as the new headquarters for the agency, which employs approximately 700 people. The Department of General Services was the first city agency to sign a contract for office space east of the Anacostia River under this initiative. “Arctaris is proud to be part of the coalition led by Mayor Bowser, combining forces with like-minded, community-oriented investors to help bring new vitality …

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