A 7-Eleven property in Remington. Photo by Ed Gunts.
A 7-Eleven property in Remington. Photo by Ed Gunts.

The 7-Eleven convenience store in Remington closed permanently this month, a sign that the property owner is moving ahead with plans to replace it with a six-story apartment building.

Workers have placed two large dumpsters outside the entrance and stripped the storeโ€™s orange, green and red sign from the top of the building at 211 W. 28th St.

The triangular parcel is owned by Seawall, a local developer thatโ€™s working on the 28th Street project with Charm City Buyers. The team has unveiled plans to replace the store with a $19.3 million apartment building containing one or two commercial spaces at street level, 60 apartments on five floors above and a parklike community space called The Plaza at the south end, where the communityโ€™s โ€˜Rโ€™ sculpture stands. PI.KL Studio is the architect and Floura Teeter is the landscape architect.

The property is bounded by W. 28th Street, Remington Avenue and Cresmont Avenue. Seawall initially didnโ€™t intend to include 7-Eleven as a tenant of the replacement building but reversed course and said it was committed to bringing 7-Eleven back after community residents expressed strong support for keeping a branch of the store in Remington.

But last spring Seawall partner and co-founder Thibault Manekin told the Greater Remington Improvement Associationโ€™s land use committee that 7-Eleven didnโ€™t want to lease space in the new building. He said company executives didnโ€™t want to open a new store that didnโ€™t have a gas station or parking with it and that wasnโ€™t part of the plan for Remington so they’ve ruled out returning to the site when construction of the apartment building is complete.

A rendering depicts a proposed Remington apartment building with a colorful identity. Credit: PI.KL Studio.
A rendering depicts a proposed Remington apartment building with a colorful identity. Credit: PI.KL Studio.

The store was originally expected to close at the end of 2024, when its long-term lease expired, but its managers agreed to stay open until Seawallโ€™s team was ready to move ahead with construction of the replacement project.

A representative for 7-Eleven confirmed that the company wonโ€™t be coming back to the 28th St. location. Manekin indicated in his remarks to the land use committee last spring that his team would seek other tenants for the first-level commercial space so the project can move ahead.

โ€œThe goal was to have been under construction starting in March [of 2025] and to be delivering the finished building in the spring of 2026,โ€ he said in May. โ€œWe hit a major stumbling block when 7-Eleven pulled out of the deal inโ€ฆDecember [of 2024.] We designed a full building around them. We had a lease out for signature and they made the decision that they werenโ€™t doing anything that didnโ€™t have a gas station involved in it or that didnโ€™t have parking, and the newly designed Plaza and 7-Eleven project had no gas station or parking. Major blow. I know how important 7-Eleven has been to the community. I know that was one of the pillars of that project.โ€

Manekin said in May that 7-Elevenโ€™s decision left his team with no retail tenants for the 28th St. project but he expressed optimism that others will emerge.

With โ€œthe energy that has been created over the last year or so along Remington Avenue, I donโ€™t think that it will be hard to put retail tenants in,โ€ he said. โ€œBut Iโ€™m really aware of how important 7-Eleven has been to the community and how big a part of the project they wereโ€ฆWeโ€™re working with our investors and our lenders to have them agree to continue to move forward with the project without the 7-Eleven tenant, and the goal is to be able to start construction towards the end of this year on the project and move it forward.โ€

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

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1 Comment

  1. O really wish cities like Baltimore embrace the European shop
    Model of small 6-7,000 sq ft stores that sell everything for the single personโ€ฆ we have SPAR, CASINO, (in Irelandโ€ฆ CENTRA and SUPERVALU) โ€ฆ all stores with everything inc bakery, deli, wine and beer, fresh produce, and even post offices!!

    This space is perfect for all thatโ€ฆ and the one on the corner of 33rd and Universityโ€ฆ

    Time to encourage a rethinkโ€ฆ.

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