flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

700 Constitution: Healthy living

Reconstruction Awards

700 Constitution: Healthy living

Hospital turned apartment brings luxury living to a D.C. neighborhood – and saves a valued piece of architecture.


By David Barista, Editorial Director | November 29, 2018

To meet preservation board requirements, the project team took careful measure to obscure the building’s rooftop garden from the street level. Photo: Paul Burk Architectural Photography.

Two decades is a long time for a hospital to sit, unused, with no future. Yet, there sat the 1920s-era hospital building in the heart of Washington, D.C.’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. Until an enterprising development team, led by Urban Structures, Borger Management, and Ronald D. Paul Companies, proposed an unusual plan to convert the 140,000-sf, four-story hospital into a luxury apartment building. As wild as it sounds, the $45 million plan worked, and the building’s first residents moved in early last year.

But the road from start to finish was a rocky one. It involved a complete roof-to-basement renovation of the building, delicate structural underpinning work to support two levels of below-grade parking, sensitive preservation work that needed Historic Preservation Review Board approval, and the design and construction of a world-class multifamily facility fitting of the neighborhood.

Called 700 Constitution, the complex houses 139 units (studio, one-, and two-bedroom), with an outdoor courtyard, fitness center, community room, yoga studio, e-lounge, and a package delivery system. A rooftop garden with bio retention, deck, and grilling area offers views of the U.S. Capitol dome and the Supreme Court.

The existing floors, with their double-loaded corridor and standard patient room depths, did not provide the apartment plan required in today’s rental market. The solution involved relocating the building’s corridor outside of the column-defined circulation pattern by adding a steel-frame and concrete structure on the rear of the building. This shift also allowed the team to add balconies to the rear façade of the building, which was not highly scrutinized by the preservation boards.

Each day of the 18-month demolition process presented a new obstacle to the design concept, most unforeseen. The demolition process exposed four different structural systems in varying states of soundness. Former exterior masonry walls with Palladian-style windows were uncovered intact, sandwiched between walls of later construction. This is just a taste of what the team faced and overcame to complete this award-winning project.

 

 

700 constitution courtyard

 

Bronze Award Winner

BUILDING TEAM Architecture, Inc. (submitting firm, architect) 700 LLC (developer) RD Jones & Associates (interior architect) Cagley & Associates (SE) FACE Associates (MEP) Donohoe Construction (GC) DETAILS 140,000 sf Total cost $45 million Construction time October 2013 to July 2017 Delivery method Design-bid-build

 

CLICK HERE TO GO TO THE 2018 RECONSTRUCTION AWARDS LANDING PAGE

Related Stories

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, Brock University

The five-story brick-and-beam structure is an adaptive reuse of the Canada Hair Cloth Building, where coat linings and parachute silks were once made.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: Marwen

Marwen currently offers 100 studio courses to 850 underserved students from 295 schools and 53 zip codes.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: The Cigar Factory

The Cigar Factory was originally a cotton mill but became the home of the American Cigar Company in 1912. 

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: St. Patrick's Cathedral

The cathedral, dedicated in 1879, sorely needed work.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 15, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: Lovejoy Wharf

After demolishing the rotten wood wharf, Suffolk Construction (GC) built a new 30,000-sf landscaped quay, now known as Lovejoy Wharf.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 15, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: KETV-7 Burlington Station

The 1898 Greek Revival train terminal, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974, had been abandoned for nearly four decades.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2016

Reconstruction Awards: The Gallery at the Three Arts Club

On the exterior of the building, masonry and terra cotta were revitalized, and ugly fire escapes on the south façade were removed.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2016

Big-box store rescaled to serve as a preventive-care clinic

The hospital was attracted to the big box’s footprint: one level with wide spans between structural columns, which would facilitate a floor plan with open, flexible workspaces and modules that could incorporate labs, X-ray, ultrasound, pharmacy, and rehab therapy functions.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2016

Fire-charred synagogue rises to renewed glory

The blaze left the 110-year-old synagogue a charred shell, its structural integrity severely compromised. 

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 11, 2016

Adaptive reuse juices up an abandoned power plant

The power plant was on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Giants 400

BD+C Awards Programs

Entry information and past winners for Building Design+Construction's two major awards programs: 40 Under 40 and Giants 400



halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021