Review board gives Midtown project conceptual approval
Staff report
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
The city of Charleston's Board of Architectural Review voted 4-1 Monday to give conceptual approval to the Midtown project, an ambitious $150 million proposal that developers say could mark the entrance to downtown Charleston.
After an initial rejection two months ago, developers behind the project returned to the board with more-intricate building details and an internalized loading-dock system, appeasing the concerns of many nearby residents.
The 4.3-acre project, which sits between Meeting Street and King Street along Spring Street, calls for 235 luxury hotel rooms, 140 to 205 condos, about 35,000 square feet of retail space and 8,000 square feet of meeting space.
Board member Craig Bennett gave the only dissenting vote.
The development is now up for preliminary approval, which will take into account more of the building details in the project. The project could be part of a transformation of the upper King Street area.
The development group behind the project, Regent Charleston LLC, said it hopes to break ground early next year.
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Posted by icbmman on May 6, 2008 at 9:04 a.m. (Suggest removal)
And the BAR votes for another mediocre project. Instead of forcing the developer to think bigger for an entrance to downtown, it will be the same old mid-rise development that this city adores. Very disappointing.
Posted by 512c on May 7, 2008 at 9:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)
This town doesn't have "an" entrance... She has entrances...
Historic plans show the way we have filled in marshes, and moved roads... People used to take 3 weeks to travel from long away. and the idea that a city had a gate was perhaps understandable when it had WALLS...
Today the only walls are invisible...
and by the way, doesn't P & C have a stake or two in the land in this article? I think it is good that something is finally happening, other than the big block of cream concrete...
Maybe some windows, some doors on the street... etc...