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Culver City to Join Metro Bike Share in 2018

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The Culver City Council has voted unanimously to join Metro's countywide bike share system, paving the way for a launch date in mid-2018.

The expansion of the system - which is still subject to the approval of Metro's Board of Directors - will come in partnership with the City of Los Angeles, and calls for 600 bikes to be placed at stations throughout Culver City and in the adjacent communities of Palms, Mar Vista, Del Rey and Playa Vista.

Following the vote last night, Culver City will begin a yearlong planning process to decide where bike share stations will be located.

Community members can offer input on Metro's crowdsourced station planning map.

Culver City is already in the midst of planning out a variety of related transportation improvements between the Expo Line and its Downtown, including protected bike lanes and a T.O.D. visioning study.


$1.5-Million Upgrade Coming to Culver City Office Campus

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Los Angeles-based private investor Olive Hill Group has announced plans for $1.5 million in improvements to a 200,000-square-foot creative office campus at 200-300 Corporate Pointe in Culver City.

The property is being rebranded as the Courtyard at Culver Pointe, owing to the future renovation of a 30,000-square-foot central courtyard with new outdoor amenities.  Planned features include a food truck loading zone, new seating areas, hammocks in a lounge setting, bike-friendly paths and a bocce ball court.

Olive Hill will also install free Wi-Fi, improved lighting, a fitness center and a bike sharing program.

AKA Architecture is designing the project, which has an estimated completion date of September 2017.

At the time of publication, Courtyard and Culver Pointe is 95 percent leased, with tenants that include Ipsos, Insight, Omnia Media and DataScience Inc.

 

Watch Culver City's Expo-Adjacent Ivy Station Take Shape

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Construction is expected to begin soon for the Expo Line-adjacent Ivy Station development in Culver City according to Killefer Flammang Architects, which master planned the mixed-use complex.

Lowe Enterprises and AECOM Capital are developing the project, which will replace Culver City Station's five-acre park-and-ride lot with five- and six-story buildings featuring 200 residential units, a 148-room hotel and 210,000 square feet of offices above 36,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial space.  The transit oriented development will also include pedestrian paseos, green space and a bike rental hub centered around the Expo Line.

The park-and-ride facility will give way to an underground garage with 1,500 vehicle stalls - including 300 for transit patrons.

In addition to KFA, Ivy Station's design team includes EYRC, Cuningham Group and RELM Studio.

The developers have set up a dedicated construction camera directly across the street, providing frequent updates on the project.

Scheduled for completion in 2019, Ivy Station joins a number of new developments at Culver City Station, including the Platform and a new apartment complex across the street.  Two office buildings are also planned for sites along Washington Boulevard.

Culver City is currently undertaking a T.O.D. visioning study which explores potential mobility improvements for the immediate station area and the surrounding community.  This may include protected bike lanes leading to the city's downtown area.

Expo Line Reaches Ridership Milestone 13 Years Early

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According to Metro’s official ridership estimates, the Expo Line reached an impressive ridership milestone during the month of June. With a daily average of more than 64,000 boardings, Expo is attracting as many riders in 2017 as it was projected to have in 2030. The rail line, which connects Downtown Los Angeles to the Santa Monica Pier, has proven to be a major success with L.A.’s transit riders, despite complaints about the line’s speed and reliability.

Expo has outpaced projections in the past, despite concerns from some quarters about the fitness of rail technology to serve the former Pacific Electric right-of-way. Expo’s first phase, which terminated in Culver City, achieved projected 2020 ridership numbers in 2013, seven years early. The Reason Foundation in 2012 had previously said that the projection of 64,000 riders for the full build Expo Line “should be viewed with some skepticism.” The light rail line has experienced surging popularity since its six-mile second phase opened, and now has eclipsed that mark in just over a year.

Expo remains a bright spot for Metro as the MTA’s overall struggles with transit ridership continue. During the 2017 Fiscal Year, which ended in June, Metro’s bus boardings fell 9% from the previous year. Meanwhile, rail boardings increased 6%, with the net gains attributable primarily to Expo. The Gold Line has picked up riders at a more modest pace, while the Blue and Green lines have experienced a concerning trend of rapid ridership loss. The declines elsewhere, combined with a 60% annual growth for Expo, have boosted the Santa Monica-serving line to become Metro’s second-busiest light rail line, despite also being the shortest route in the system.

Scott covers transportation and governance issues from his home in Silver Lake. Follow him on Twitter @safrazie.

Renderings vs. Reality: C3 at Culver Pointe

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IDS Real Estate Group is now wrapping up construction for C3 at Culver Pointe, its new office campus in Culver City.

The seven-story building, located on a three-acre site at Hannum Avenue and Bristol Parkway, features approximately 280,000 square feet of leasable office space.  Architecture firm Gensler designed the 132-foot tall structure as a vertical creative campus, featuring high ceilings and adapatable floor plates that cater to expanding tenants.

A significant portion of the property is set aside for an open courtyard, which will feature space for food trucks and a dog park.

The mid-rise structure closely matches renderings from Gensler, including the array of pedestrian bridges and colorful staircases that adorn its eastern facade.

In May, IDS announced that the companies Henkel and Dentsu Aegis Network/Carat had leased approximately 35 percent of the building.

First Signs of Work at Culver City's Ivy Station

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Five months after Culver City Station's park-and-ride lot was shut down for construction, developer Lowe Enterprises is finally beginning site preparation the Ivy Station mixed-use complex.

The project, which is being developed in partnership with AECOM Capital, will create a series of interconnected buildings featuring 200 residential units, a 148-key hotel, 210,000 square feet of offices and 36,000 square feet of ground-floor shops and restaurants.

The design team of Cuningham Group, Relm Studio, EYRC Architects and KFA has composed a plan which orients itself to the adjacent train station through a pedestrian paseos, a transit plaza and a central green space.

Completion is anticipated in 2019.

For more renderings of Ivy Station, see our past coverage of the project.

First Signs of Work at the Culver Steps

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Protective fencing now encircles Downtown Culver City's Parcel B, signaling the imminent start of work for a long-delayed mixed-use complex.

The Culver Steps development, which is being undertaken by Hackman Capital Partners, will be a four-story structure featuring 65,000 square feet of office space, 45,000 square feet of commercial space and an underground parking structure.

The project, designed by Culver City-based EYRC Architects, is named for its most iconic feature: a 10,000-square-foot a grand staircase which leads to a 10,000-square-foot elevated plaza.

Hackman also owns the adjacent Culver Studios campus, which is slated for a 413,000-square-foot expansion that could begin construction in 2018.

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Surfas to Become Part of New HBO Headquarters in Culver City

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Since selling its longtime Culver City home in 2015, it has been expected that Surfas Culinary District would need to search for a new location.  Situated for 35 years at 8777 Washington Boulevard, Surfas is now without an address, its former building slated for redevelopment as the new Los Angeles headquarters for HBO.  However, it now looks like the beloved kitchen supply store will be sticking around, albeit in a different form.

Surfas has announced a new food concept known as "Best of Surfas," that will be incorporated into the four-story, 128,000-square-foot office building, which is being developed as a joint venture between Clarion Partners and Lincoln Property Company.  Additional details about the new restaurant have not been provided, although it would likely occupy at least a portion of 4,500 square feet of commercial space planned at the building's ground level.

Surfas ownership remains on the hunt for a new location for the kitchen supply store, per the announcement, but has not finalized any deal as of July.  A second location in Orange County was also closed earlier this year, to allow Surfas to focus on its new ventures in Los Angeles.

Clarion and Lincoln paid approximately $25 million to take ownership the property last year, according to a report by the Real Deal LAAlthough an earlier vision for the site had called for a mixture of office space and apartments, the development firms tapped Gensler to redesign the project without residential units.

Demolition of the existing building is expected to occur this summer.

The project follows the recent start of work at the Ivy Station mixed-use complex across the street, which is replacing the Culver City Metro rail station's park-and-ride lot.


First Look at Downtown Culver City "Brick and Machine" Development

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Culver City has published an initial study that offers up a first look at Brick and Machine, a new office and retail building proposed in the city's downtown area.

The project, which comes from Clarett West Development, is slated for a .66-acre property at 9735 Washington Boulevard.  Plans calls for the construction of a three-to-four-story building that would feature 60,000 square feet of office space, approximately 13,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial space and parking for 228 vehicles.  The proposed building would also include a large terrace garden and courtyard, providing outdoor dining space for tenants.

Abramson Teiger, a Culver City-based architecture firm, has imagined the building with two interlocking, but distinct components. 

Brick, which anchors the northern side of the project site, would be clad with bronze panels, expose concrete and thin bricks.

Machine, which fronts Washington Boulevard at the south side of the property, is a more pedestrian-oriented structure with a concrete frame an exterior of blue anondized aluminum panels.

An initial study points to an approximately 20-month construction timeline for the project.  An existing parking lot and small commercial building would need to be demolished prior to begining work.

Downtown Culver City is also seeing new office space a short distance east at the long-empty Parcel B, where Hackman Capital Parters is building approximately 65,000 square feet of rentable space over retail.

Micro Unit Apartment Complex Proceeds in Culver City

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Culver City's shuttered Westchester Hotel is now midway through its transformation into a micro-unit apartment complex.

The two-story building, located at 5630 Sawtelle Boulevard, is being redesigned by the architecture firm Shubin Donaldson to contain 35 furnished apartments with an average floor area of 200 square feet.  Per a project page from the architect's website, the 10,000-square-foot building is also being improved with a common kitchen area, laundry facilities and central green space.

The exterior of utiliarian hotel is being reclad materials such as trespa and metal.  A former one-story lobby area was demolished to make way for the construction of a new entry building.

Per the Real Deal LA, the project is being developed by developer Robert Herscu through his firm HQ Creative.

 

Apartments and Retail Planned South of Westfield Culver City

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At a community meeting today, developer HSH Management Group, LLC will unveil plans to redevelop a Culver City shopping center as part of a mixed-use development featuring apartments, retail and open space.

The six-acre project site, located at 6221 Bristol Parkway, is currently known as Fox Hills Plaza.  HSH proposed to redevelop the site with a series of low-rise buildings featuring 750 rental apartments, approximately 20,000 square feet of community-serving shops and restaurants, and three acres of publicly accesible open space.

R&A Architecture and Design envisions the Bristol Parkway development with a permeable, open layout guided by the topography of the surrounding Fox Hills.  Building heights are stepped back from the street, and are capped at a maximum of 56 feet above grade.  The collection of low-rise structures are oriented around multiple paseos, which connect the adjacent residential community to the south with the Westfield shopping center to the north.

According to representative Eric Shabsis, HSH's project was informed by the changes seen on the Westside in recent years - particularly the influx of technology firms into Venice and Playa Vista.  With Playa Vista now mostly built out, property owners in adjacent neighborhoods are seeing an opportunity to creative housing for employees of these companies.  Other developers - including Equity Residential and Mill Creek Residential - have picked up on this trend across the 405 Freeway at the Howard Hughes Center.

HSH is crafting a transportation demand management plan for the project, including car-share, rider-share pickup areas, and improvements to pedestrian and biycle infrastructure surrounding the property.  The exact scope of the plan will be refined through community input, according to Shabsis.

The project is currently in the earliest phases of Culver City's approval process, with the initial meeting today preceding the formal application to the city.  Additional meetings and hearings will occur as the HSH moves through the environmental review process.

Tonight's meeting will run from 6:30 to 8:30 pm at the Four Points Sheraton at 5900 Green Valley Circle in Culver City.

Preliminary Recommendations Released for Culver City TOD Visioning Study

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The Culver City TOD Visioning Study took a step forward last month with a presentation of preliminary recommendations to the Culver City Council.  The study, a six-month effort led by Johnson Fain, examines mobility and circulation surrounding the Expo Line, as well as potential linkages between Downtown Culver City and surrounding communities.

According to urban designer David Alpaugh with Johnson Fain, the goal of the study is to increase the viability of alternate transportation modes for residents and visitors to Culver City.  It looks to establish the already-existing TOD zone as a pedestrian-first environment, with provisions for first/last mile connections, cycling and a diversion of traffic flow away from abutting residential neighborhoods.

Recommendations from the study include:

Servicing the downtown/commercial core and the eastside employment centers from the perimeter, protecting interior neighborhood circulation from cut-through traffic.

Alpaugh notes that at the east end of Culver City, residential neighborhoods are surrounded by major employment centers such as the Hayden Tract, which draws substantial cut-through traffic.  A potential mitigation measure could be shared parking garages on the perimeter of these employment centers, with shuttle service to office sites.

Redesigning street intersections in the district for pedestrian priority with more frequent and improved crosswalks and implementing neighborhood protection interventions focused on the safety of pedestrians.

Similar improvements have been implemented in Los Angeles through the Vision Zero program, including restriped crossings and bollards.  Traffic calming mechanisms have also been recommended for internal residential streets and some more heavily-trafficked thoroughfares.

Establishing a system of flexible, on-demand micro-transit for area residents and employees and facilitating the efficiency of transit and micro-transit through dedicated street lanes and strategic connections

This concept would consist of six-to-eight-passenger vehicles that could provide on-demand services, similar to an Uber Pool.  At a future date, these could be autonomous vehicles that operate within a geofenced area, centered on the Expo Line and employment centers.  They could be operated by Culver City or a corporate entity.

Improving the Washington/Culver corridor as the city’s major local east/west bike spine and developing a network of bike lanes, paths, and sharrows to connect local and regional systems with additional connections to the Ballona Creek Bike Path.

Planning is already underway for protected bike lanes connecting Downtown Culver City to the Expo Line via Washington Boulevard.  Further bicycle infrastructure could build provide similar treatments to other parts of Washington and Culver Boulevard.  Portions of Culver already feature a median bike path on a repurposed railroad right-of-way.

Working toward a peripheral shared parking plan with congestion pricing, connected with the proposed micro-transit system.

Peripheral parking could alleviate cut-through traffic through residential neighborhoods, and work in concert with on-demand shuttles.

Planning for more substantial infrastructure improvements including additional crossings of Ballona Creek for vehicular access to east side employment centers and coordinating with other jurisdictions toward an improved through-traffic bypass solution.

The presence of Ballona Creek funnels all automobile traffic through the Hayden Tract onto Higuera Street, National Boulevard and Duquesne Avenue.  Additional crossings would alleviate the rush-hour traffic crush that frequently overflows into adjacent residential neighborhoods.  However, creating new bridges across the creek would require some acquisition of private property.

Implementing over time a ‘complete streets” design for Washington Blvd., placing priority on enhancing the convenience and safety of the pedestrian experience, facilitating use of the street by transit and other high-occupancy vehicle circulation, and providing a safe and connected place for cyclists.

This would involve the segment of Washington Boulevard running east from the Expo Line to the Culver City - Los Angeles border.  The area, considered the Culver City Arts District, features a long stretch of commercial buildings flanked by residential neighborhoods.  A complete streets makeover for Washington would calm traffic through the area, and create better pedestrian connections to the Downtown area.  While there is some potential for redevelopment along this stretch, the narrow lot sizes will likely prohibit larger mixed-use construction, according to Alpaugh.

Expanding the existing TOD district boundaries and adopting a TOD ordinance including urban design guidelines, re-defined parking requirements, and encouragement of affordable housing.

The study recommends expanding the current TOD district west across Robertson Boulevard to include the block which stands between the Expo Line Station and Downtown Culver City.  This effort would echo a similar plan from the City of Los Angeles, which is looking to rezone properties north across Venice Boulevard as part of the Expo Transit Corridor Neighborhood Plan.

Enacting a Transportation Demand Management (TDM) ordinance and establishing a Transportation Management Association / Organization (TMA/TMO) to manage a Mobility Fund, develop an education and outreach program, and introduce “smart” way finding and information systems

Similar policies are already in place in neighboring jurisdictions.

The recommendations were presented informally to the Culver City Council in August for initial comment and review.  A final report and recommendations are anticipated to be submitted to Council in October.

Fresh Renderings for the Culver Studios Expansion

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The Culver City Planning Division has published an updated draft environmental impact report for the proposed expansion of the Culver Studios campus.

The project, which comes from Hackman Capital Partners, would add approximatley 413,000 square feet of rentable space to the 14-acre property at 9336 W. Washington Boulevard.  Plans call for a the construction of seven new buildings - replacing several smaller structures - as well as the refurbishment of historing components of the campus.

A new parking garage is planned along Van Buren Place, as well as underground garage toward the north side of the campus.  The property would have toal accommodations for over 2,300 vehicles.

Architecture firm Gensler is designing the project, which would feature buildings and production facilities up to four stories in height.

Construction of the Culver Studios expansion is anticipated to occur over approximately 32 months, beginning in early 2018 and ending in 2020.

Multiple reports have indicated that both Amazon and Apple have considered leasing space at the campus for their production arms.

Hackman is also developing an adjacent property with offices and retail space as part of the Culver Steps project.

Expo-Adjacent Offices Getting Underway in Culver City

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A parking lot and a pair of small commercial buildings near the Expo Line's Culver City Station have been fenced off, signaling the start of construction for another commercial development.

The properties, located at 8888 Washington Boulevard, are slated for the construction of a four-story building featuring 68,000 square feet of offices above 6,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial uses.  Plans also call for an automated subterranean parking structure, with accommodations for up to 231 vehicles.

Abramson Teiger Architects is designing the low-rise structure, which is named Synapse.  A project page describe the building as featuring an exterior of custom molded glass fiber reinforced panels, giving it a glossy white appearance.  LED lighting strips will be integrated into the facade, mimicking nerotransmitters.

Runyon Group, the California-based firm behind the adjacent Platform development, is the developer of Synapse.

Townhomes Under Construction on Grand View

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Local developer LIDO Equities Group has broken ground on a new rental development in Culver City, just east of Centinela Avenue.

The project, located on a rectangular site at 4025 Grand View Boulevard, will consist of 36 three-story townhomes over an underground parking level.  Each unit will feature three bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms.

Pleskow Architects designed the new development, features two rows of 18 townhomes arranged perpendicular to Grand View.  Renderings show contemporary low-rise structures, clad with a brick facade and wood panels.

LIDO recently completed two apartment buildings on Culver Boulevard in the Del Rey community.

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Culver City Market Hall Heads to Planning Commission

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Later this month, the Culver City Planning Commission will consider Regency Centers' proposal to construct Market Hall, a new commercial development at two corners of Washington Boulevard and Centinela Avenue.

The project, which would rise upon two vacant lots totaling 1.6 acres of land, calls for the construction of low-rise buildings featuring nearly 30,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space.

  • Site A, located at the northwest corner of Washington and Centinela, is imagined as a one-story building featuring 21,605 square feet of space for artisanal food vendors, attached to a four-level parking structure with 184 vehicle stalls. 
  • Site B, located at the northeast corner of the intersection, is described will feature two one-story buildings offering 5,230 square feet of commercial space, with a 20-stall surface parking lot located at the back of the property.

Renderings of the project, which is designed by JRDV Architects, portray outdoor seating along Washington Boulevard, with greenery used to mask the adjoining parking garage.

Amazon Studios Relocating to Historic Culver Studios

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Amazon Studios will lease 280,000 square feet of space at the historic Culver Studios, relocating and expanding from its current facilities in Santa Monica.

The 14-acre campus, located at 9336 Washington Boulevard in Culver City, was founded nearly a century ago by the filmmaker Thomas Ince, and has been the site of several notable films and television shows, including Gone with the Wind and Citizen Kane.  Developer Hackman Capital Partners purchased the Culver Studios in 2014, and has since announced plans for a substantial expansion of the property's current leasable space.

Hackman is currently pursuing entitlements to add 413,000 square feet of production and office space to Culver Studios, including five new media buildings and two parking garages with space for nearly 2,000 vehicles.  If approved, the Gensler-designed project is expected to begin construction next year and be completed by 2020.

Amazon - which employs 700 people at its Santa Monica facility - is expected to begin moving by the end of 2018.  In addition to Amazon Studios, employees of IMDb, Amazon Video, and World Wide Advertising will also be relocating.

Finally: Construction Begins for the Culver Steps Development

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After four months of anticipation, Hackman Capital Partners has made it official: construction is now underway for the Culver Steps development.

The project, located at Downtown Culver City's long-vacant Parcel B, will consist of a four-story building featuring approximately 75,000 square feet of office space, 40,000 square feet of retail space, and a 35,000-square-foot public plaza.  The new plaza area will be integrated with a grand staircase, cascading down the side of the building to create landscaped terraces and seating areas.

EYRC Architects is designing the project, which will feature an exterior of charcoal-colored brick and steel to complement neighboring historic buildings such as the Culver Studios Mansion and the Culver Hotel.

Construction is expected to take place over 18 months, with an opening anticipated by 2019.

Approval for the Culver Steps development was granted by the Culver City council nearly six years ago, but a combination of foul market conditions and the dissolution of the redevelopment agencies statewide resulted in a multi-year delay for the project.  Hackman acquired the property in 2016.

The groundbreaking comes in the wake of Hackman signing Amazon Studios and other Amazon subsidiaries to a 280,000-square-foot lease at the adjacent Culver Studios campus.

Mixed-Use Project Planned Near Helms District and Culver City Station

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Karney Properties Co. is the latest developer to try its hand at a mixed-use complex near the Expo Line's Culver City Station.

Their project, known as the Wesley, would create 234 apartments, 45,000 square feet of ground-floor commercial uses, underground parking and 30,000 square feet of publicly accessible open space at 8700-8750 Washington Boulevard.  The approximately 3.6-acre site - bounded by Washington, Wesley Street and Helms Avenue - is currently improved with a collection of low-rise commercial buildings.

Los Angeles-based Koning Eizenberg Architecture is designing the project, which conceptual sketches shows as a collection of four- and five-story structures, built around landscaped paseos and courtyards.

Karney gave an initial presentation about the Wesley to community members on November 9 at the Helms Design Center, located directly across the street from the development site.

A number of similar projects are in varying stages of development on nearby properties, including the Access Culver City apartments, which were completed across Wesley Street in 2016.  Construction is currently ramping up for the $300-million Ivy Station complex at Culver City Station, while a new office building that will house HBO is gearing up to begin work across the street.  A smaller residential-retail development is also proposed for a vacant lot at 3434 Wesley.

The Wesley development dovetails with Culver City's ongoing T.O.D. visioning study, which reimagines mobility and transportation between the Downtown Culver City, the Expo Line, the Arts District and the Hayden Tract.  Washington Boulevard, in the initial recommendations presented to the Culver City Council this year, is proposed as a complete street with a mix of uses.

Karney, based out of Los Angeles since 1952, owns and operates over 100 properties between Los Angeles and Orange Counties.

Construction Begins for Culver City's Pennylane Development

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Four months ago, developer CityView cleared away a series of commercial buildings at the corner of Washington Boulevard and Inglewood Avenue.  The Los Angeles-based firm has now commenced with construction for a residential-retail complex in their place.

The mixed-use project, known as Pennylane, will consist of a five-story edifice containing 97 studio and one-bedroom apartments, in addition to 15,000 square feet of ground-level retail space and underground parking for 200 vehicles.  Plans also call for four units of affordable housing.

PK Architecture is designing the low-rise complex, which spans across an approximately 1.2-acre site located in both Culver City and Los Angeles.  Renderings show a contemporary design, with residential units wrapping around a central courtyard.

The project follows the Oliver apartments, a smaller mixed-use development located across Washington Boulevard.

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