The 21-story, 382-room hotel at the corner of 15th and Stout Street is starting to go vertical. In addition to the building going vertical, we have some additional details on the project. This dual-branded hotel will be operated by Hilton with both their Home2 Suites and Tru brands under the same roof. It will not be the first dual-branded hotel as it is just a block away from the Le Meridien/AC Hotel and just down the street from the Hyatt House/Hyatt Place.
Currently, the concrete structure is up two stories with work beginning on the third. As a refresher, floors 2-6 will provide vehicle parking vehicle parking, floor 7 will have pre-function and meeting space and some guest rooms, and the remaining guest rooms will reside on floors 8-21.
Here are two more vantage points of the project from a little higher up.
It’s exciting to see another parking lot bite the dust, especially on 15th Street which is riddled with surface lots.
And still no renderings of this project?
eehhh, every city needs it’s options of cheap hotels, this will do
When is a rendering going to come out of this project? Surely there must be dozens of them somewhere!
Any plans for the ugly Tarantula building across the street, this could really use a new skin or exterior update.
Ken/Ryan,
Do you think there is any chance of 650 17th street still could be alive? Or is it safe to assume that it’s dead?
looks like a worthy 21 story development
There are renderings online, just do a search
There are early renderings online, but they aren’t the final renderings and the developer/architect asked us not to publish the early ones.
Makes sense. I was wondering why my link wasn’t published. 🙂
I’m curious how the windows on the adjacent building are going to be addressed with this project, (or how that is done generally), it looks like the buildings are flush with one another. Are they joining together to merge the two projects or will they all be walled off? While I’m excited about filling in another parking lot, I can imagine the loss of natural light in a large portion of an existing building is quite a hit to that property.
Good question, Cindy. The buildings will touch on the ground level where there are no windows on the historic building. Then on the floors above, the new building is stepped back about 20 feet or so to provide a gap so that both the historic building and the new tower can have windows that receive natural light.