Background The Bel-Red area (named for its location along Bel-Red Road between the city centers of
Bellevue and
Redmond) was originally developed in the 1960s for
light industry, such as
warehouses, as well as some pockets of commercial and office development. The area accounts for more than a quarter of Bellevue's industrial land. In 2005, with businesses moving out of the area, The Bellevue City Council adopted a rezone of the Bel-Red area in 2009, allowing for buildings up to 13 stories tall, approximately , as well as
mixed-use development incorporating residential units and retail.
Spring District plans In December 2007, Seattle-based
real estate developer Wright Runstad unveiled plans for a transit-oriented
urban village named the "Spring District" to be located in the Bel-Red industrial area. The firm had, together with
Shorenstein Properties, bought a lot in the Bel-Red area in May 2007 for $68 million; the land was formerly owned by
Safeway, who had a
distribution center for its
supermarkets at the site. The first phase of the project was to be completed in 2010, pending zoning changes approved by the city, and replace existing warehouses and light industry with 1,000 residences and of offices along with of open space. A
master plan for the Spring District was unveiled by
NBBJ in 2008, taking inspiration from the
Pearl District in
Portland, Oregon, and was approved by the City of Bellevue in 2012. In March 2013, it was announced that Security Properties would develop the first phase of the Spring District, beginning with a five apartment buildings with 316 units. A second developer,
AMLI Residential, announced its intention to purchase a parcel in the Spring District for $13.3 million; AMLI built a 204-unit apartment building on its site that opened in 2020.
Opposition and controversy The development of the Spring District, and its use of public funding to build roads and a light rail station to serve it, was opposed by Downtown Bellevue real estate developer
Kemper Freeman. Freeman funded the campaigns of a set of
Bellevue City Council candidates in the 2011 elections, while Spring District developer Wright Runstad funded a set of opposing candidates. Freeman had filed an appeal with the city prior to the election, arguing that the environmental impact of additional automobile traffic generated by the Spring District would require further study than the current master plan. It was settled in 2012, with the city requiring a future study of traffic impacts in exchange for the withdrawal of the appeal.
Sound Transit's decision to build a light rail operations and maintenance facility adjacent to the Spring District was opposed by Wright Runstad, who argued that the facility would be damaging to the developer's vision and plans for the area. Bellevue's abandonment of plans for
low-income housing in the district, allowing Wright Runstad to pay into a development fund instead, was criticized in a piece on
Crosscut.com as part of trend with private developers shying away from building affordable housing around transit.
Construction A
groundbreaking ceremony was held on September 16, 2013, to celebrate the start of site demolition at the future Spring District. Demolition of the Safeway distribution center was completed in January 2014, and construction of the first phase, a 79-unit apartment building, began in June 2015. Construction of all five buildings in the first phase will be finished in 2017. The second phase began construction in November 2016. Construction of the Spring District is expected to last 15 years, ending by 2028, and be divided into three phases. The first phase will open from 2017 to 2022 and primarily consist of residential buildings and office spaces on the southernmost and easternmost blocks; the second phase will open from 2019 to 2022 and primarily consist of commercial space in the centrally located blocks; the third phase will open from 2022 to 2026 and include residential and commercial buildings as well as a
hotel adjacent to the light rail station on the north end of the site. ==Design and features==