A new local development firm’s first project is about to break ground at the edge of Platt Park.
Narrate, led by Adam Fenton, expects to begin work May 17 on a five-story, 73-unit apartment building at 1230 S. Pearl St. and be finished in 15 months.
Fenton purchased the 0.43-acre site for $3.9 million in November 2019. It was previously home to an auto repair shop called Buchtel Motors and a pair of single-family homes. Those structures were recently demolished.
“I think we’ve designed a project here that the neighborhood will be very proud of,” Fenton said Wednesday. “I think it’s something that lines up with modernness but also a very historic feel. It’s an 80 percent brick building, 10 percent windows and 10 percent metal panels. We spent a lot of time with Oz, the architect, on the project to design what we feel is a building that will stand the test of time.”
Shaw Construction will be the general contractor on the 60,000-square-foot project.
The second through fifth stories will be residential, Fenton said, with primarily one-bedroom units mixed with roughly 10 two-bedroom apartments. The site will feature 56 below-grade parking spaces.
“We spent a lot of time on interior design,” Fenton said.
The ground floor will have two retail units. One, which Fenton anticipates will be leased to a restaurant, is about 3,400 square feet, he said. The other is roughly 1,600 square feet. No tenants have been lined up yet.
Fenton worked locally for Washington-based multifamily developer Holland Residential from 2011 to 2015, and for Denver-based developer BMC Investments from 2015 until he founded Narrate.
Fenton said Narrate will focus on smaller projects.
“Our M.O. is these specialty locations and this kind of high-end experience, as compared to the big bombers,” he said.
A new local development firm’s first project is about to break ground at the edge of Platt Park.
Narrate, led by Adam Fenton, expects to begin work May 17 on a five-story, 73-unit apartment building at 1230 S. Pearl St. and be finished in 15 months.
Fenton purchased the 0.43-acre site for $3.9 million in November 2019. It was previously home to an auto repair shop called Buchtel Motors and a pair of single-family homes. Those structures were recently demolished.
“I think we’ve designed a project here that the neighborhood will be very proud of,” Fenton said Wednesday. “I think it’s something that lines up with modernness but also a very historic feel. It’s an 80 percent brick building, 10 percent windows and 10 percent metal panels. We spent a lot of time with Oz, the architect, on the project to design what we feel is a building that will stand the test of time.”
Shaw Construction will be the general contractor on the 60,000-square-foot project.
The second through fifth stories will be residential, Fenton said, with primarily one-bedroom units mixed with roughly 10 two-bedroom apartments. The site will feature 56 below-grade parking spaces.
“We spent a lot of time on interior design,” Fenton said.
The ground floor will have two retail units. One, which Fenton anticipates will be leased to a restaurant, is about 3,400 square feet, he said. The other is roughly 1,600 square feet. No tenants have been lined up yet.
Fenton worked locally for Washington-based multifamily developer Holland Residential from 2011 to 2015, and for Denver-based developer BMC Investments from 2015 until he founded Narrate.
Fenton said Narrate will focus on smaller projects.
“Our M.O. is these specialty locations and this kind of high-end experience, as compared to the big bombers,” he said.
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