Edit at Streetsense, the interior design arm of placemaking firm Streetsense, took on the challenge of creating an amenity package that stands out from the crowd for a new high-rise in Arlington, Virginia’s Courthouse area.
Project Details
Location: Arlington, Virginia
Developer: Greystar
Architect: Cooper Carry
Builder: John Moriarty & Associates
Interior Designer: Edit at Streetsense
Number of Units: 423
Located on the dense transit-oriented Rosslyn-Ballston Corridor, The Commodore—from developer Greystar, architect Cooper Carry and builder John Moriarty & Associates—comprises 423 units, ranging from studios to three-bedroom units.
The interior amenity spaces were designed to provide a lived-in coziness and a sense of hospitality, evoking the warmth and character of single-family homes. The designers imagined the kind of lives residents would see themselves having decades down the line, not a yearlong stop in life. The spaces were scaled to feel like a sequence of smaller rooms rather than large open-flowing amenities, increasing the number of discrete areas.
Jason Varney
“The amenities at The Commodore have set a new standard for the area, helping to drive the highest rents in the busy Arlington, Virginia, submarket and providing a new benchmark for upcoming developments,” says Brian Miller, principal at Edit at Streetsense. “With less square footage than other buildings of a comparable unit count, the emphasis was on truly desirable standout spaces, from the moody kitchen to the street-facing mailroom to the arts-driven playroom.”
According to Edit at Streetsense, the amenity spaces are serene and welcoming as well as dark and moody instead of light and bright. A Nancy Meyers-esque kitchen provides a dramatic backdrop for entertaining with a 16-foot-long island; the mailroom offers a library-like appeal and wraparound wallcovering frieze; the fitness center has patterned wall coverings and a broad welcoming table; and the children residing in the high-rise have a studio playroom of their own with the same sophistication as the rest of the building.