70 New Apartments for Fifth Ward
"The Quin," a 5-story, 70-unit apartment complex with retail in booming Walker's Point.
A 70-unit, five-story apartment building is coming to the north end of Walker’s Point. Planned for a vacant lot at the northeast corner of the intersection of S. 2nd St. and W. Florida St., the building will contain a mixture of apartments and commercial space. This is the first Milwaukee-area project for Linden Street Partners, a company which maintains offices in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Santa Ana, California
The building will be known as “The Quin” after its location in Milwaukee’s former Fifth Ward. The name comes the Latin root (“Quin”) for five, says Scott Richardson, one of two partners (along with Andrew Ganahl) in Linden Street Partners.
Richardson notes the firm was “drawn to site by the good things already happening in the S. 2nd Street corridor and in Walker‘s Point.” The firm’s website states “the project is a textbook example of an infill site, surrounded by beneficial existing uses.” They’re right: the building is within walking distance of the Historic Third Ward and way too many bars, restaurants and businesses to list.
Working with a design by Rinka Chung Architecture, the development team hopes to break ground by May. Altius Building Company will serve as the construction manager on the project. Once construction starts the building will take approximately 13 to 14 months to build.
Linden Street Partners acquired the 21,000-square-foot, vacant lot at 324 S. 2nd St. for $475,000 in July 2016. The lot was assessed for $168,000 in 2016.
Renderings for the buildings show a passenger train rolling behind the building, and the building does in-fact border railroad tracks, but train-spotting potential residents will find themselves disappointed. Amtrak’s Hiawatha and Empire Builder trains do not utilize the track and instead rely on the northern Canadian Pacific mainline which goes through the Milwaukee Intermodal Station. The tracks are actively used by freight trains.
The Quin meets existing zoning for the site allowing the development team to build the project as of right, but city approval was needed for one portion of the project’s design. Rinka Chung Architecture recently secured Common Council approval for a 99-year airspace lease for a portion of the building’s facade that would hang over the sidewalk.
The building is one of many new apartment developments in the Walker’s Point neighborhood, including the recently profiled Brix Apartments and Trio Apartments.
Renderings
Site
Eyes on Milwaukee
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There’s absolutely no way any development could be taking place on or anywhere near South 2nd St after the city took away the second vehicle lane and added bike lanes. How could anyone possibly get through that area let alone have it thrive?
Media needs to do more pieces that connect the “then” with the “now”, so we can all remember to take a slightly longer view of things than the number of customers a certain gas station did or did not lose.
http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2015/09/11/friday-photos-taxi-parking-to-urban-living/
http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2015/04/22/plats-and-parcels-renaissance-on-s-2nd-street/
http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2015/02/09/plats-and-parcels-walkers-point-on-the-rise/
http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2011/01/27/momentum-building-on-south-2nd-street/
http://urbanmilwaukee.com/2009/04/30/complete-street-makeover-for-s-2nd-street/
@Rich. Thanks for that… I remember quite clearly a certain writer at the JS (now working for Ron Johnson) arguing reducing the lanes would be terrible for S. 2nd Street:)
So freight trains run right behind the building? Hope the rent reflects that. I currently live about a quarter mile from a freight train line and when the train goes by, it is a low deep rumble that I can hear clearly. If you are a fan of trains, then this may be your spot; otherwise, not sure everyone would want that disruption several times a day.