urban design and architecture review panel
- Student apartments with retail, restaurants and parking could soon rise on a vacant lot in the heart of Charles Village, developers and Johns Hopkins University officials announced Wednesday.
- The city's design panel on Thursday approved a master plan for a large mixed use development in East Baltimore opposite the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
- Beatty Development said Thursday it hopes to break ground early next year on its next building in Harbor Point — a roughly 18-story complex with 285 apartments.
- The developers of Harbor East dipped their toes back into the condominium market this week, presenting the city with new plans for long-stalled premium residences on top of the Four Seasons hotel.
- A proposal to build a nine-story, 305-unit apartment complex on Key Highway in front of the Digital Harbor High School prompted questions about parking and building scale at a city meeting Thursday.
- The city's design panel gave a qualified go-ahead to a new $80 million mixed use project in Locust Point Wednesday, marking another step in the evolution of the once dominantly industrial neighborhood.
- The Waterfront Partnership and the Greater Baltimore Committee are embarking on a comprehensive study of the Inner Harbor, aiming to sustain it as a vibrant part of the city.
- Baltimore's Urban Design & Architecture Review Panel gave approval Thursday to a revised design for the casino scheduled to be built near where Russell Street enters the heart of the city.
- The developer of Baltimore's waterfront Harbor East neighborhood has split into two companies, one that will focus on building at adjacent Harbor Point, and a second company that will manage Harbor East properties.
- Harrah's Baltimore continues moving toward groundbreaking
- Hulking casino parking garage causes concern as city design panel rejects design even as it raves about proposed entrances to underground light rail stations in downtown.
- Baltimore's Urban Design and Architecture Review panel on Thursday approved the master plan for a nearly 3 million-square-foot development at Harbor Point, the former Allied Signal chromium property between Harbor East and Fells Point.
- An informational meeting about initial plans for a mixed-use development in downtown Baltimore heard heated comments about the proposed demolition of a 1960s theater that has sat unused for eight years.
- After 16 years, M.J. "Jay" Brodie is stepping down as the head of Baltimore's influential, quasi-public economic development arm, the Baltimore Development Corp.