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The Dripby Edward Gunts12:26 pmJun 24, 20150

More housing slated for Howard Street corridor

A moribund part of midtown is showing more signs of life

More housing is coming to Baltimore’s Howard Street corridor. Around the corner, on Mulberry Street.

Enterprise Housing Corp. is expected this summer to start on a $22.3 million, 68-unit affordable housing development, called Mulberry at Park, at 211 West Mulberry Street between Howard and Park Avenue.

The planned construction comes a week after Washington, D.C., developer Michael Hunter unveiled plans to build 300 apartments in the 300 block of North Howard Street.

The six-story building at 211 West Mulberry Street will not have direct exposure to the 400 block of North Howard Street, but it will be so tall that it will be visible from it.

The project is in mid-town’s former Chinatown district – today an array of mostly vacant city-owned buildings – and will face the legendary (now closed) rowhouse restaurant of the late Morris Martick.

Affordable, Low-Income

Enterprise secured financing for its project last month and is expected to begin construction this summer, with completion by the summer of 2016. Marks, Thomas Architects is the designer. Harkins Builders is the builder.

Residential building planned on Mulberry Street near Howard. Alas, the traffic on Mulberry is mucher busier than this bucolic rendering. (Enterprise Housing Corp.)

Apartments planned on Mulberry Street. Alas, traffic on Mulberry Street is a lot busier than shown in this serene rendering. (Enterprise Housing Corp.)

When complete, the building will have 34 one-bedroom, 27 two-bedroom and seven three-bedroom apartments, of which 13 will accommodate people with physical disabilities.

The architecture was designed to be eco-friendly and to fit in with the historic buildings in the immediate area.

Amenities will include a cyber cafe, outdoor terrace, fitness room and underground parking.

Bank of America will provide $15.8 million in construction financing as well as tax credit equity and permanent financing.

Additional construction financing will be provided by the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development ($1.5 million) and the City of Baltimore ($870,000).

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