One of the curious things about the Nation’s Capital is that, unlike many older U. S. cities, Washington, D. C., never had any industry to speak of—unless you count the manufacture of hot air as an industry. In the District of Columbia, you don’t see those wonderful 19th-century Italianate factories that dot the cityscapes of Boston, New York, Baltimore, Chicago—strong-boned, high-ceilinged brick edifices that convert into magnificent loft apartments, condominiums, and mixed-use centers.
What Washington does have aplenty is churches and other “religious locations” —by one count, 857, or one for every 758 residents. Until recently, the Way of the Cross Church, a Gothic Revival structure that dates to 1898, was among them. Today, it is the Sanctuary, a handsome 30-unit condominium complex at 819 D St., NE.
The Sanctuary may represent the vanguard of a new trend in Washington: the conversion of some of the city’s older churches—many of them located in emerging or already desirable neighborhoods—to sorely needed residential use.
Exterior of the Sanctuary, at 816 D St., NE, Washington, D. C. The original Ninth Street Congregational Church dates from 1898. A three-story classroom annex built in 1916 now includes townhouses.
The church and its adjacent annex came on the market in 2014. The congregation had been migrating to the Maryland suburbs, and the sale of the church helped them finance construction of a larger building in Capitol Heights, Md. After some ownership changes, the quarter-acre property came under control of The Rubin Group, in partnership with real estate finance firm Regua. Andrew T. Rubin, Principal in the family-owned firm, brought in Bill Bonstra, FAIA, LEED AP, Founder of Washington design firm Bonstra | Haresign Architects, to lead the project.
In the course of the next two years, Rubin and Bonstra would learn more than they ever wanted to know about stained glass.
GETTING ALL THE NECESSARY APPROVALS
The first item on Rubin and Bonstra’s checklist was to obtain special zoning relief to change the building’s use to residential. Parking was the neighbors’ number one hot button. For years, local residents had been inconvenienced by church members taking up street parking on Sundays and weeknights. After meeting numerous times with the local Advisory Neighborhood Commission and other civic groups, Rubin and Bonstra were able to convince the locals that the parking problem would mostly go away once the church was shifted to residential use—especially with local bus, train, and new H Street trolley service in the neighborhood.
The more vexing problem had to do with the historic nature of the neighborhood. Although the church was not a designated landmark, because it was in the Capitol Hill Historic District and of a certain age, it was deemed a “’contributing building” under the District’s historic preservation guidelines. “Those buildings are what give the district its historical character,” says Gretchen Pfaehler, AIA, a member of the District’s Historic Preservation Review Board (HPRB).
Pfaehler, an Associate Partner at design firm Beyer Blinder Belle, was Chair of the HPRB at the time the Sanctuary came under its purview. She was particularly concerned about the stained glass windows, a subject in which she is an acknowledged authority. Under the code, she says, the windows were considered “artistic elements” that contributed “important character and effect” to the church.
The view from the bell tower (which never had bells)—“now the highest privately owned view in D. C.,” according to developer Andrew T. Rubin.
That position clashed with Bonstra and Rubin’s desire to make the building more appealing to prospective buyers by replacing translucent lites at eye level with transparent ones in some windows. “Stained glass might be good for spirituality,” Bonstra says, “but when you live in a building, you want to be able to look out the windows.”
The Review Board had denied two previous requests from developers who wanted to replace ornamental glass with clear glass; both decisions were upheld on appeal to the next higher authority. But they gave the Sanctuary team a chance to make the case for switching out the glass.
After conducting an extensive search, Bonstra and Rubin identified the glass restoration expert they believed could help them—Cumberland Stained Glass, Mechanicsburg, Pa. The 25-year-old studio is accredited by the Stained Glass Association of America.
The design team organized a site visit with Pfaehler and representatives from the D. C. Historic Preservation Office, the Capitol Hill Restoration Society, and the Advisory Neighborhood Commission. Cumberland’s President, Bryan Lerew, demonstrated a mocked-up window that illustrated how the lead matrix and ornamental design could be preserved, even if some lites were replaced with specialty transparent glass.
It was a textbook case of the effectiveness of physical mockups in building design. “The mockup did influence us,” says Pfaehler. “It allowed us to see the actual glazing in the appropriate lighting.” Lerew had specified a German-made glass (“Restover”) with a kind of distressed exterior side for the clear lites. The mockup helped overcome Pfaehler’s concerns about the sheen and reflectance of the clear glass as viewed from the street; at the same time, the glass provided the see-through visibility Bonstra and Rubin were looking for.
But the Review Board was not done. “We examined each window in detail to determine how much glass could be replaced without compromising the overall artistry of the window,” says Pfaehler. When Bonstra asked permission to punch holes in a street-facing wall for new windows, the board issued a categorical no. But they did allow new windows on the rear of the church and some operable windows for ventilation.
Following months of negotiation, the Review Board approved the revisions to the windows, although Pfaehler was emphatic that the decision applied only to the Sanctuary and was not to viewed as precedent setting.
Refurbishing the 132 windows took six of Cumberland’s technicians nine months, Lerew says. “The windows were badly out of repair, and the lead had outlived its life,” he says. Cumberland craftsmen painstakingly preserved 75% of the original glass and restored all the original designs. The total cost of the glasswork, according to Rubin: about 10% of the total $15.1 million construction cost.
SHORING UP THE STRUCTURE
The 85-foot-tall bell tower needed major structural reinforcement. “We removed about four feet of the original wall all the way to the basement, then poured a 28-by-42-inch concrete column and laid engineered structural beams,” says Brian Lucey, Potomac Construction Group’s Vice President of Operations.
Inserting the shaft for the new three-story KONE elevator between the church and the old classroom annex proved vexing for Potomac and structural engineer Structura. Concrete in the annex had to be demolished, underpinning placed around the foundations, and new footings laid. “We had to shore up each concrete floor as we moved up, putting in new cinder block shaft walls to the roof,” says Lucey.
Potomac Construction Group crews carefully preserved light fixtures and original brick throughout the nearly 35,000-sf restoration. Note the special German-made transparent glass and the operable windows, two features the developer and design team worked hard to convince the District of Columbia Historic Preservation Review Board to approve.
“The window lines throughout the building varied due to the differences in structure and purpose of the church and annex,” says Colin Drumright, Project Architect, Bonstra | Haresign. “We incorporated these differences into the living units by having double-height spaces and varied floor elevations on the third floor.” Sloped seating in the choir loft was demolished to gain the proper alignment, he notes.
Potomac finished the 34,693-sf job last New Year’s Eve. By September, the 29 one- and two-bedroom units (440 to 1,900 sf) were sold out. The penthouse (two bedrooms/2.5 baths) went for $1,525,000, a condo sales figure the city’s Northeast quadrant had not seen since 2008.
The Sanctuary received an Award of Excellence in Historic Architecture from AIA Northern Virginia. Next month, it will be announced as a winner in Building Design+Construction’s Reconstruction Awards.
The conversion of the church had an almost Damascene effect on the participants. “We felt more like stewards of the building than developers,” says Rubin. “The church started telling us what to do.”
PROJECT TEAM | THE SANCTUARY
CLIENT The Rubin Group, in partnership with Regua ARCHITECT Bonstra | Haresign Architects STRUCTURAL ENGINEER Structura CIVIL ENGINEER VIKA Capitol MECHANICAL ENGINEER Capitol Engineering Group GLASS CONSULTANT Cumberland Stained Glass GC Potomac Construction Group
Plaster was removed from the walls in the main stairwell (and elsewhere) to reveal the original brick. The wooden balustrade was restored.
Related Stories
| Nov 14, 2014
What college students want in their living spaces
In a recent workshop with 62 college students, architects from Little explored the changing habits and preferences of today's students, and how those changes affect their living spaces.
| Nov 11, 2014
Renzo Piano's third building at London Bridge Quarter approved, will be built adjacent to the Shard
Renzo Piano Building Workshop has been granted planning approval for its residential building at London Bridge Quarter—a 26-story apartment tower dubbed Feilden House.
| Nov 7, 2014
Arts college uses creative financing to build 493-bed student housing
Many states have cut back funding for higher education in recent years, and securing money for new housing has been tougher than ever for many colleges and universities. A recent residence hall project in Boston involving three colleges provides an inspiring example of how necessity can spawn invention in financing strategies.
| Nov 7, 2014
Prefab helps Valparaiso student residence project meet an ambitious deadline
Few colleges or universities have embraced prefabrication more wholeheartedly than Valparaiso (Ind.) University. The Lutheran-based institution completed a $27 million residence hall this past summer in which the structural elements were all precast.
| Nov 3, 2014
Novel 'self-climbing' elevator operates during construction of high-rise buildings
The JumpLift system from KONE uses a mobile machine room that moves upward as the construction progresses, speeding construction of tall towers.
| Nov 3, 2014
Cairo's ultra-green mixed-use development will be topped with flowing solar canopy
The solar canopy will shade green rooftop terraces and sky villas atop the nine-story structure.
| Oct 31, 2014
Dubai plans world’s next tallest towers
Emaar Properties has unveiled plans for a new project containing two towers that will top the charts in height, making them the world’s tallest towers once completed.
| Oct 29, 2014
Better guidance for appraising green buildings is steadily emerging
The Appraisal Foundation is striving to improve appraisers’ understanding of green valuation.
| Oct 27, 2014
Studio Gang Architects designs residential tower with exoskeleton-like exterior for Miami
Jeanne Gang's design reinvents the Florida room with shaded, asymmetrical balconies.
| Oct 21, 2014
Passive House concept gains momentum in apartment design
Passive House, an ultra-efficient building standard that originated in Germany, has been used for single-family homes since its inception in 1990. Only recently has the concept made its way into the U.S. commercial buildings market.