Mid-City Santa Monica may be on the verge of adding a prominent housing location, while another proposal for the area was recently shot down by the city’s Architectural Review
As city officials slowly come to terms with new state mandates that allow builders to double the density of proposed projects, some residents are balking at the implementation of other
Late last fall, a Southern California developer dropped more than a dozen mammoth building proposals on the city of Santa Monica that were all but designed to get attention
In Tuesday’s lengthy meeting Council voted unanimously to bring 13 Builders Remedy projects back into the regular development pipeline through incentives created as part of a settlement with the developer WS Communities
Matthew Hall SMDP Editor SMDP is continuing its coverage of the Builder’s Remedy projects with an ongoing series focusing on each project. In today’s edition, y
16 large-scale projects proposed in Santa Monica will dwarf nearly every other development in the city. These projects violate every zoning code, height restric
As the retail outlet gets razed, we compare the architectural renderings of what’s to come to what we’re used to seeing on the corner of Lincoln and Broadway
Colliers’ multifamily team recently executed a $25 million all-cash transaction of a classic Mid-Century Modern apartment building located on Santa Monica’s Ocean Avenue, one of the most sought after
A four-story building will replace a popular gift store on Wilshire Boulevard, near Santa Monica’s border with Los Angeles.
The building at 3223 Wilshire Blvd. will add 53 apartments,
Editor's note: This story is part of an ongoing series that tracks the city's expenditures appearing on upcoming Santa Monica City Council consent agendas. Consent agenda
Adaptive re-use. Re-purposing. Remodeling. Addition. Re-habilitating. Restoring. All these phrases are terms that describe breathing new life into older buildings. Some developers and building industry professionals talk of buildings as
The Planning Commission's meeting last Wednesday provided more evidence of how out of sync commissioners are with the community. The occasion was the crafting of final recommendations for