
New apartments, enterprises and a salon come to Boise region
Sixty rental units on 47th Street in Garden City would bring extra housing close to Chinden Boulevard. The style of the buildings involves enclosed bike parking.
Erstad Architects
The most recent proposed developments, housing and other building projects, and new enterprises about Idaho’s Treasure Valley:
Boise
Aviva Childress with Studio H Architects has filed a request for permit for Villa Divina Salon at 219 N. 27th St., situated involving West Bannock and Idaho streets.
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The new salon would occupy a space in an current workplace developing, previously a actual estate workplace. “The current five,974-square-foot developing involves roughly four,500 square feet of salon space on the ground floor and 1,474 square feet of tattoo shop and mechanical/storage space in the basement,” according to the application.
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Meridian
Steve Thiessen, of Silvercreek Realty Group, desires to construct a small business center at 5317 W. Franklin Road, in the city of Meridian’s Ten Mile Interchange Precise Location program, the region close to Ten Mile and Interstate 84 that Meridian has mapped out for industrial development.
The small business center would involve a warehouse and a self-storage small business. It would have ten buildings and be on 14.five acres.
Thiessen plans to add landscaping and a suitable-of-way, the application stated.
The Meridian Arranging and Zoning Commission is scheduled to hear the proposal at six p.m. on Thursday, June 1, at City Hall.
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Garden City
Sixty rental units on 47th Street in Garden City would bring extra housing close to Chinden Boulevard. The style of the buildings involves enclosed bike parking. Erstad Architects
A proposed apartment developing can move forward right after the Garden City Council authorized the building’s style on Monday.
The buildings, at 233 E. 47th St., would bring 60 rental units to the northwest portion of the city, close to Chinden Boulevard. Immediately after the city’s Style Critique Committee permitted a reduction in the site’s essential parking, a neighbor appealed, asking that it be elevated and that a trash enclosure close to his house be moved.
On Monday, the City Council voted to permit the parking reduction to stand and permitted for the trash enclosure to be taller than it initially was, Hanna Veal, with improvement solutions, told the Idaho Statesman.
The house is owned by March Capital Fund, of San Francisco, and developed by Boise firm Erstad Architects.