[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Spacer
SEARCH
Spacer
NEWS CENTER
Spacer

August 2007

Home page
Current Issue
Past issues
Daily Headlines
Virginia Ideas
Editor's Blog
Spacer
TOP FEATURES
Spacer
Business Calendar
Virginia's Wealthiest
List of Leaders
Fantastic 50
Legal Elite
Super CPAs
Maritime Guide
Business Guide
Spacer
MARKET RESEARCH
Spacer
Business Libraries
Regional Guides
Spacer
CLASSIFIEDS
Spacer
Jobs
VACommercial
Executive Services
Spacer
CONTACT US
Spacer
Contact Us
Advertise With us
Planning Calendar
Subscribe
Spacer

Return to Virginia Business - February 2005

News & Features


Crystal City gets a makeover
Arlington's proximity to nations's capital draws development

by Brett Lieberman
Virginia Business

February 2005

When Gemma Meloni moved to Crystal City in the late 1990s to be close to her job as an engineer working for the U.S. Navy, she was close to everything. She could walk to work, her gym, the grocery store and the Metro. What the government contractor couldn’t do was convince friends that they could have fun in the concrete and glass neighborhood and its labyrinth of underground tunnels, which were sandwiched between the Pentagon, Ronald Reagan National Airport and a short drive from Washington, D.C., and Old Town Alexandria. “A lot of people used to say, ‘How could you live in Crystal City? There’s nothing there,’” recalls Meloni.

READER RESOURCES
Related stories:
Customer service drives loyalty at longtime hardware store
Federal spending spurs Northern Virginia's booming economy
Web Pointers: For more information
Arlington Economic Development
Charles E. Smith Commercial Realty
Arlington Chamber of Commerce

READER REACTION

Feedback: Comment on this story
Do you think the addition of street-level restaurants and retail will make Crystal City a popular Northern Virginia destination?
Yes
No
Don't know

Today, she can cross the street for a seafood dinner at McCormick & Schmick’s or grab a beer at Bailey’s Pub and Grille or a latte at Caribou Coffee. The new restaurants and bars opened since September are part of an effort to transform Arlington’s largest urban neighborhood —where about 60,000 people work and live — and to update its image.

More changes are on the way. Billionaire and CNN founder Ted Turner plans to open a restaurant later this year, a new bakery will open in the spring, additional retail is planned, and the Public Broadcasting Service plans to move its headquarters from Alexandria to Crystal City by next year. The changes will convert Crystal Drive into a two-way main street and bring improved lighting and signage, free parking after 5 p.m., and improvements to several parks. Charles E. Smith Commercial Realty, which owns about 70 percent of the 10.6 million square feet of commercial space, has spent tens of millions on the improvements, and also is underwriting a marketing campaign to get the word out about the “unknown Crystal City.”

It’s a great story to tell, says Mara Olguin, vice president of marketing for Charles E. Smith. Besides a good location with views of the airport and the Washington Monument, Crystal City offers proximity to the Pentagon and Washington, attracting government agencies and contractors. It’s also on the Metro and the Virginia Railway Express, which carry thousands of workers daily. “We started out with a base of transportation, location, views, thousands of workers, and we’re trying to make it into a cool, new urban neighborhood,” Olguin says from an office that enjoys an amazing view of the airport even on a rainy day.

The big question, many people ask, is what took so long to develop such prime real estate? “It was a pretty sterile environment,” says Clyde (Tom) Newman, the commercial real estate specialist for Arlington Economic Development.

For many years, there wasn’t much incentive for change. Crystal City’s location worked like a magnet, drawing tenants who wanted to locate just outside Washington and offering rents that were cheaper than a presence in the capital city. New buildings would lease before they were completed. “We never had to stop and back up and say, ‘Let’s start from scratch. What works well about Crystal City and what needs improvements?’’’ says Jim Creedon, Charles E. Smith’s vice president for commercial leasing. Historically, occupancy hovered between 96 to 99 percent,
That comfortable paradigm changed when the U.S. Patent and Trade Office decided to relocate to Alexandria, vacating nearly 2 million square feet — more than one quarter of Charles E. Smith’s Crystal City holding. The patent office decision was like a slap across the face. “When you’ve got 2 million square feet coming vacant, obviously you take a hard look at it,” says Creedon.

While studying how to reposition Crystal City for the next couple decades, Charles E. Smith came to the same conclusion as some of Gemma Meloni’s friends. Despite its location, “It was not considered a cool place to have your office,” says Creedon. When Crystal City began rising in the 1960s, the underground tunnels feeding the Metro surrounded by about 200 nearby restaurants and stores were seen as futuristic. By the 1990s, though, it was hard to persuade executives to relocate from Washington and the area lacked the retail and downtown streetscapes that are popular today.

Besides the physical improvements, Charles E. Smith wants to alter the area’s character as well. It began an outdoor concert series last year and has been trying to attract a new mix of tenants beyond government agencies and contractors. Talks are already under way for a summer film festival co-sponsored by PBS. When it moves into 130,000 square feet of space next year, PBS will not be among the largest tenants but its 480 workers are younger, more creative and tech savvy, and they will help create a new atmosphere, say executives with Charles E. Smith.
“We each had our own motivations… ” Barbara Landes, PBS’ senior vice president, says of the decision to move from Alexandria. “The fact that people can walk downstairs and have a choice of places to eat and a supermarket and a book store and dry cleaners…this is heaven to us,” she says.

Another mostly unspoken reason for all the change is competition. The development of Potomac Yard, which straddles the Arlington/Alexandria line, will add millions of square feet of development. Construction has already begun on the Arlington portion, which will add 2.8 million square feet of office space, 1 million square feet of residential properties, 60,000 square feet of retail and 625 new hotel rooms. Charles E. Smith officials like to point out that Crystal City already has many of the amenities the new site will offer, plus lower rents and easier Metro access.

Arlington County has no objections to the makeover Charles E. Smith is financing. The approach fits the county’s “Live, Work, Play” theme that encourages development of urban villages around Metro stations. Plus, Smith’s redevelopment of Crystal City has allowed the county to focus on rounding out development of the Ballston neighborhood. Recently, five years of talks produced an exciting development: an agreement to build the Washington Capitals hockey team’s headquarters and practice facility atop the Ballston Common Mall parking lot. The $42.8 million development includes two NHL-sized rinks that will be available for use by teams, leagues and the general public. “We think it’s going to bring in high-end spenders to the Ballston Mall and it’s a big advertisement for Arlington,” says former county board Chairman Barbara Favola.

Just North of Crystal City, Arlington is also moving forward with a $50 million plan for a sports and recreation complex. The North Tract proposal calls for four swimming pools, basketball courts and at least four soccer fields on 28 acres of industrial land along the bike trail leading up to the 14th Street Bridge.

Arlington, part of the original District of Columbia before being carved out, clearly benefits from its proximity to the nation’s capital, the Pentagon and tourist sites, which help fill its 10,000 hotel rooms. The federal government (which employs about 110,000 people in Arlington), the Metro and Ronald Reagan National Airport are the engines that drive the county’s economy.

While efforts are under way to revitalize areas such as Rosslyn, most development in the last four decades has occurred along Metro routes, such as the Rosslyn-Clarendon-Ballston corridor or near the airport and Crystal City. These days the bigger challenge facing the county is to redevelop rundown areas such as Columbia Pike, which was passed over when Metro’s Orange Line was being planned.

Local leaders support development but want to retain the Pike’s flavor and international feel. “It’s one of the best places in the region to go to restaurants since there are over 120 nationalities living around Columbia Pike,” notes Richard C. Litman, chairman of the county’s economic development commission.

With most of the county nearly built out and Columbia Pike offering an affordable alternative, many real estate and economic development officials say it’s only a matter of time before the area takes off. “By the time it’s over, it’s going to be a jaw-dropper,” says Rich Doud, president of the Arlington Chamber of Commerce.

The county has approved incentives for developers, funded improved bus service along Columbia Pike and is studying light rail. A few developers have proposed small residential or mixed use projects but, so far, the diamond in the rough is a hard sell. “The trick is to convince a company they should locate their headquarters on Columbia Pike instead of Courthouse or Clarendon,” acknowledges Newman. Maybe developers should mention all the good ethnic food.

Return to Virginia Business - February 2005


Virginia Business Online | Contact Us | E-mail the editor

VirginiaBusiness.com is part of the GatewayVa network.

©2007, Media General Operations Inc., publisher of Virginia Business.
Use of this website is subject to certain terms and conditions.