


#Spectra apartments movie#
The building features a 35-seat movie theater, a 24-hour hardwood basketball court, fitness center and library conference rooms - a popular attraction among graduate students who account for a fair percentage of the building's occupancy. In terms of market value, downtown Hartford apartment rents typically go for around $2 per square foot.Īnd amenities are where Spectra has tried to differentiate itself.
#Spectra apartments driver#
He noted that while there is a broad range of apartments - from modern to rehab to new construction - amenities are a big driver of demand. “At certain points, was doing 40 to 50 new units a month, which was four or five times the rate we expected to do,” Freimuth said. That's been changing in Hartford, which has seen more than 1,000 new CRDA-supported apartments hit the market in the past few years. “For years people were saying nobody's going to rent downtown, but the problem was there was nothing to rent.” “Young professionals both nationally and in Connecticut want to go into an urban core,” he said. Those numbers don't surprise Michael Freimuth, executive director of the Capital Region Development Authority (CRDA), a quasi-public agency created to invest in projects that convert downtown properties into housing units. “And that's where a lot of the economic and social growth and change comes from in any developing city.”ĭowntown's rising population of young professionals, and others, has been a strong driver of demand for Spectra Boutique Apartments, which has consistently had occupancy rates of 95 percent or higher since leasing started in 2015, according to Laurie Waddell, the building's property manager. “We wanted to create a destination that would enhance our apartment building and create foot traffic and buzz because there are a lot of young people in the city,” Doscas said. “We've created an all-purpose café where working people can stop for coffee and breakfast in the morning and we also serve wine and beer so it's a place for people to go after work as well,” Ravetz said.Ĭhris Doscas, an associate with Girona Ventures, said his company's newest offering is meant to be an amenity for the building's tenants, but also to Hartford's downtown community. This past September, two years after the completion of Ravetz's Spectra Boutique Apartments project - which was developed in tandem with Joseph Klaynberg's New York-based Wonder Works Construction - Spectra Wired Café debuted, a modernly designed venue with cement floors, wooden shelving and partitions and ample casual seating. “We initially thought we'd lease it to a retailer,” Ravetz said, “but as we spent more time in Hartford, and saw the positive things unfolding, we decided we wanted to create an active community space that would enhance the city in a way that a traditional retailer could not accomplish.” When Jeff Ravetz, president of New York-based Girona Ventures, first acquired the former Sonesta Hotel on Constitution Plaza in 2011 - with the goal of converting the building into 190 upscale apartments - he did not have a plan for the building's 5,000 square feet of street-level space.
