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

A 50-acre waterfront redevelopment gets under way in Tampa

Mixed-Use

A 50-acre waterfront redevelopment gets under way in Tampa

Nine architects, three interior designers, and nine contractors are involved in this $3 billion project.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 30, 2017

Water Street Tampa's 18 buildings are being designed by mulitple architecturual and design firms. The 50-acre, 9-million-sf community is expected to attract 23,000 workers and residents to Tampa's downtown. Image: Strategic Property Partners. CLICK HERE TO ENLARGE IMAGE

Earlier this summer, the installation of more than $200 million in infrastructure, including new roadways and utilities, began in support of Water Street Tampa, a mixed-use neighborhood on 50 waterfront acres in this South Florida metro that, when completed in 2027, will include more than 9 million sf of residential, commercial, entertainment, cultural, and retail space.

Being built on what once were surface parking lots and industrial buildings, the $3 billion Water Street Tampa project is the vision of Strategic Property Partners (SPP), a development joint venture between Cascade Investment, which is controlled by Microsoft’s cofounder Bill Gates; and Jeff Vinik, who owns the Tampa Bay Lightning NHL franchise and the Tampa Bay Storm arena football team, and is a minority owner of the Boston Red Sox.

Gates and Vinik are the latest billionaire-entrepreneurs—others include Under Armour’s Kevin Plank in Baltimore and Quicken Loans’ Dan Gilbert in Detroit and Cleveland—to invest heavily in urban redevelopment and construction to reinvigorate economically challenged downtown areas.

“This is a city early in its growth,” Vinik said about Tampa during an interview last fall with Forbes magazine. “It’s a process, and we’re in the beginning to middle stages of that process. As someone who’s an investor, I look for potential and this has every bit of the raw materials to be a great place.”

Vinik added that Tampa benefits from its proximity to Latin America and from tourism in general.

If nothing else, Water Street Tampa is ambitious: it will include 18 buildings with 3,500 residences (which would double the current number downtown), 650-plus guest rooms in two hotels, 2 million sf of office space (the first to be built in downtown Tampa in 25 years), and 1 million sf of retail, cultural, educational, and entertainment space.

The project, which is expected to bring 23,000 workers and residents to this community, will offer 12.9 acres of green space. Water Street Tampa will be the first community certified under the WELL Community Standard being developed by the International Well Building Institute.

The first vertical phase of this project—with over 4 million sf of office, residential, hospitality, retail, and cultural, over 10 city blocks—will begin later this year and is scheduled for completion by 2020.

To view a video of how this project will develop and build out, click here.

SPP also donated an acre of land to the University of South Florida, which plans to relocate its Morsani College of Medicine and Heart Institute to an HOK-designed 300,000-sf facility in downtown Tampa. That construction is underway, and the new college should be ready for the fall semester in 2019.

 

The Coral Gables, Fla.-based architectural firm Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe & Associates is the designer of a 500-key hotel that will be part of Water Street Tampa. Image: Strategic Property Partners.

 

Water Street Tampa stands out for the sheer number of AEC firms that is involved in different aspects of this project.

They include nine national and local architectural firms: CookFox Architects (an office and residential over retail), Morris Adjmi Architects (a 157-key five-star hotel, condos, apartments, and retail), Olson Kundig (office over retail), Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (condos and apartments over a grocery story and retail), Gensler (two offices over retail), Alfonso Architects (the redevelopment of the site near Garrison Channel and Hillsborough Bay, residential and waterfront retail, and a new public park on the Riverwalk), Nichols Brosch Wurst Wolfe & Associates (a 500-key four-star hotel), Pickard Chilton (three office and residential buildings over retail), and Baker Barrios (one building, and the community’s district-wide cooling system and infrastructure).

The developer is working with three interior design firms: Roman & Williams, Cecconi Simone, and Champallmaud. And in the predevelopment phase, it signed on with a host of general contractors: Kimmins, Creative, Skanska, Kast, Suffolk, Coastal, Holder, Gilbane, and Moss.

“We wanted to use a large, diverse group [of AEC firms] that would design and build unique buildings,” explains Bryan Moll, SPP’s Executive Vice President of Development, in an interview with BD+C. He points out that there will be collaboration among the AEC firms. And he expects several of the GCs to be involved in the project’s different construction phases.

Moll notes that the infrastructure under construction is replacing “a bunch of thoroughfares connecting a highway” with a more-walkable grid of streets that links the downtown more seamlessly with the rest of the city. 

Tampa’s Amalie Arena, where the Lightning play, is located within the Water Street Tampa district, which is also near the Florida Aquarium and the city’s convention center. Moll says there’s a possibility that this project could include an entertainment district.

As a waterfront property, resilience is key, especially in light of recent storms that wracked Texas and Louisiana. The design and construction of Water Street Tampa address the likelihood of rising sea levels and future severe weather events.

Moll says the entire site is being built at least 11 feet above current sea level, and most of the buildings will be on an even higher plain, between 15 and 25 feet above sea level. Critical infrastructure and mechanicals will be located at higher elevations, too, he adds.

The city of Tampa and Hillsborough County are financing part of the infrastructure installation.

Related Stories

Hotel Facilities | Jul 26, 2023

Hospitality building construction costs for 2023

Data from Gordian breaks down the average cost per square foot for 15-story hotels, restaurants, fast food restaurants, and movie theaters across 10 U.S. cities: Boston, Chicago, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York, Phoenix, Seattle, and Washington, D.C.

Sustainability | Jul 26, 2023

Carbon Neutrality at HKS, with Rand Ekman, Chief Sustainability Officer

Rand Ekman, Chief Sustainability Officer at HKS Inc., discusses the firm's decarbonization strategy and carbon footprint assessment.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jul 26, 2023

10 ways public aquatic centers and recreation centers benefit community health

A new report from HMC Architects explores the critical role aquatic centers and recreation centers play in society and how they can make a lasting, positive impact on the people they serve.

Multifamily Housing | Jul 25, 2023

San Francisco seeks proposals for adaptive reuse of underutilized downtown office buildings

The City of San Francisco released a Request For Interest to identify office building conversions that city officials could help expedite with zoning changes, regulatory measures, and financial incentives.

Designers | Jul 25, 2023

The latest 'five in focus' healthcare interior design trends

HMC Architects’ Five in Focus blog series explores the latest trends, ideas, and innovations shaping the future of healthcare design.

Urban Planning | Jul 24, 2023

New York’s new ‘czar of public space’ ramps up pedestrian and bike-friendly projects

Having made considerable strides to make streets more accessible to pedestrians and bikers in recent years, New York City is continuing to build on that momentum. Ya-Ting Liu, the city’s first public realm officer, is shepherding $375 million in funding earmarked for projects intended to make the city more environmentally friendly and boost quality of life.

Market Data | Jul 24, 2023

Leading economists call for 2% increase in building construction spending in 2024

Following a 19.7% surge in spending for commercial, institutional, and industrial buildings in 2023, leading construction industry economists expect spending growth to come back to earth in 2024, according to the July 2023 AIA Consensus Construction Forecast Panel. 

Hotel Facilities | Jul 21, 2023

In Phoenix, a former motel transforms into a boutique hotel with a midcentury vibe

The Egyptian Motor Hotel’s 48 guest rooms come with midcentury furnishings ranging from egg chairs to Bluetooth speakers that look like Marshall amplifiers.

Office Buildings | Jul 20, 2023

The co-worker as the new office amenity

Incentivizing, rather than mandating the return to the office, is the key to bringing back happy employees that want to work from the office. Spaces that are designed and curated for human-centric experiences will attract employees back into the workplace, and in turn, make office buildings thrive once again. Perkins&Will’s Wyatt Frantom offers a macro to micro view of the office market and the impact of employees on the future of work.

Healthcare Facilities | Jul 19, 2023

World’s first prefab operating room with fully automated disinfection technology opens in New York

The first prefabricated operating room in the world with fully automated disinfection technology opened recently at the University of Rochester Medicine Orthopedics Surgery Center in Henrietta, N.Y. The facility, developed in a former Sears store, features a system designed by Synergy Med, called Clean Cube, that had never been applied to an operating space before. The components of the Clean Cube operating room were custom premanufactured and then shipped to the site to be assembled.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category

Mass Timber

Charlotte's new multifamily mid-rise will feature exposed mass timber

Construction recently kicked off for Oxbow, a multifamily community in Charlotte’s The Mill District. The $97.8 million project, consisting of 389 rental units and 14,300 sf of commercial space, sits on 4.3 acres that formerly housed four commercial buildings. The street-level retail is designed for boutiques, coffee shops, and other neighborhood services.


Construction Costs

New download: BD+C's May 2024 Market Intelligence Report

Building Design+Construction's monthly Market Intelligence Report offers a snapshot of the health of the U.S. building construction industry, including the commercial, multifamily, institutional, and industrial building sectors. This report tracks the latest metrics related to construction spending, demand for design services, contractor backlogs, and material price trends.



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