Wyndham Hotels & Resorts is the latest hotel company to show it sees a growth opportunity in the luxury sector moving forward in the pandemic recovery.
Rendering by Nelson
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This view look northeast at the proposed building, with the stacked containers closest to the Duwamish; Beacon Hill is in the background.
In a huge deal that few saw coming, the Port of Seattle announced that Trammell Crow will build it a two-story, 695,000-square foot industrial/logistics building at its Terminal 106. The arrangement will be a ground lease at its 31-acre property at 44 S. Nevada St. That s on the east side of the Duwamish Waterway, a little south of the West Seattle Bridge.
The Port said in a statement that, “The new facility will be able to support e-commerce, manufacturers and logistics providers that support maritime industries.”
Under the plan, Trammell Crow would raze a low-slung industrial property at 315 N. May St. along the southern edge of the block between May and Aberdeen streets and develop a building on the site with 650,000 square feet of offices and 15,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space. At 1112 W. Carroll Ave., along the northern edge of the block would be the residential building, with 378 apartments, 96 parking spaces and a ground-floor retail or restaurant space overlooking open space along Aberdeen and Carroll, according to the application.
Though the apartment building would have more floors, the office building would be substantially taller, at 410 feet compared with 359 feet for the residential development, plans show.