The back of the proposed development in Clipper Mill. Rendering by Marren Architects.

A plan to construct apartments inside Woodberryโ€™s historic Tractor Building drew both praise and criticism Thursday from Baltimoreโ€™s design review panel, which suggested the developer explore a different approach. 

Panel chair and architect Pavlina Ilieva praised developer Larry Jennings for coming up with a โ€œvery bold approachโ€ to creating market-rate housing inside the cavernous Tractor Building, which dates from 1916 and is the last structure within Clipper Mill that hasnโ€™t been renovated for new uses. 

But panel member Osborne Anthony questioned whether the design team is going about it in the best possible way by taking away the entire roof and other character-defining features of the building. 

โ€œYouโ€™ve got to be a bit careful that this does not present itself as Disney-esque,โ€ Anthony warned the development team. โ€œYou need to be a little bit more true, more respectful of what was there. You need to be a little bit more selective about the pieces you take down.โ€

The presentation to Baltimoreโ€™s Urban Design and Architecture Advisory Panel came two weeks after attorney John Murphy sent a letter on behalf of residents asking Baltimoreโ€™s Commission for Historical and Architectural Preservation to add the Tractor Building to the cityโ€™s potential landmark list, which would protect it from demolition. 

Current residents have questioned whether Jenningsโ€™ plans satisfy the cityโ€™s 2003 Planned Unit Development zoning ordinance for Clipper Mill, which calls for new construction there to be โ€œcompatible with the historic character of the site.โ€

The presentation came as city planners are encouraging high-density, transit-oriented development near light rail stations, including the Woodberry stop near Clipper Mill. Just this week, the city housing department issued a building permit for a 12-unit development called Rockrose View at 2080 Rockrose Avenue in Woodberry. 

Jennings is the principal of Valstone Partners, which in 2017 acquired a tract of land in Clipper Mill in 2017 for nearly $19 million, including the Tractor Building. Valstoneโ€™s plan, drawn up by Marren Architects, calls for a new building with 99 apartments inside the shell of the Tractor Building, and a new parking deck to be built on a parking lot to the west. 

Architect Martin Marren told the panel his team is proposing to save two walls of the Tractor Buildingโ€“the north and east facadesโ€“and remove the roof, including seven large light monitors, to create a seven-level โ€œbuilding within a building.โ€ It would consist of two levels of parking and five levels of apartments. Some apartments would have balconies facing toward the inside of the shell, which would be painted white.

He said the new structure would rise two stories above the shell of the Tractor Building but would be set back from it by eight feet. The new construction is designed to be a โ€œneutral backgroundโ€ to the Tractor Building shell to โ€œset off the masonry and celebrate the masonry,โ€ he said.

For the south side, Marren proposed keeping four brick arches from the original wall, so people who live or visit are โ€œstill anchored to what this used to be.โ€

Ilieva said she is aware of other examples in which developers have built a structure within the ruins of an older building. โ€œThe thing is, once you buy into a concept like that, itโ€™s so powerfulโ€ฆ there is very little room for movement.โ€

Ilieva questioned why many of the apartments with balconies would face north rather than south, toward Druid Hill Park. She suggested the developer โ€œflipโ€ the plan so the apartments with balconies face the park and not the Tractor Buildingโ€™s north wall.

She also asked if some parts of the existing roof and light monitors could be retained to keep more of the buildingโ€™s original profile.

Anthony focused on how much of the Tractor Building would be retained and how well the new construction would fit with it.

โ€œThe massing is just so challenging, so imposing,โ€ he said of the new building. โ€œYou think of this as a ruin to some degree and youโ€™re allowing this intervention to happen. Literally, youโ€™re stripping off the roof and taking this big box and just inserting it.โ€ 

Anthony also asked if the developer had considered keeping some of the roof, and questioned the decision to keep four arches as a remnant of the south wall. โ€œYou talk about these units having a view to the park,โ€ he said to the architect. โ€œYet, in a way, weโ€™re creating an obstacleโ€ by leaving arches that would partially block the view.

Panel member Sharon Bradley said a good landscape design could help integrate the structures.

CHAP director Eric Holcomb, who did not attend the UDAAP meeting, said afterwards that the preservation commission will likely discuss neighborsโ€™ request to add the Tractor Building to the cityโ€™s landmark list at its next meeting on Sept. 10.

If the building is added, any changes to the exterior, up to and including demolition, would have to be approved by CHAP. 

To the neighborsโ€™ complaints about the โ€œhistoricโ€ fit, Chris Ryer, the cityโ€™s planning director, said Baltimoreโ€™s zoning code is not specific about what is considered historic.

 โ€œThe issue is that itโ€™s extremely vagueโ€ he said of the code. โ€œThereโ€™s no definition of that.โ€

Ryer said the residentsโ€™ lawyer, Murphy, is doing his job in raising questions about the projectโ€™s design. But, he added, โ€œI donโ€™t know that it will prevail in court. Thatโ€™s a hard call.โ€ 

Jennings said several times during the meeting that he would consider the panelโ€™s comments and suggestions. At one point, he pointed out that previous owners of the Tractor Building, including developer Bill Struever, had wanted to adapt it for new uses but were unable to do so.

โ€œI understand my challenge,โ€ he said. 

Jennings declined to comment further after the meeting.

Ed Gunts is a local freelance writer and the former architecture critic for The Baltimore Sun.

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