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Walmart Stores Go Small and Urban <br />http: I'plannersweb.com/2014.102/walmart-stores-go-small-urban/?prin... <br />The 83,000 square ft. store built in partnership with JBG Rosenfeld is in a mixed use building topped by <br />four stories of apartments. Instead of acres of asphalt, the parking is underground. In addition to the <br />Walmart, there is another 10,000 square ft. of retail space wrapped around the outside of the retail giant. <br />Retail tenants currently include a Starbucks and a bank, with more to follow. The residential portion of <br />the building contains 303 apartments, a fitness center, a lounge area, a roof deck, and a swimming pool. <br />View of roof deck and pool on top of the H Street Walmart in Washington, DC. Photo <br />courtesy of JBG Companies. <br />The main store entrance sits right on the sidewalk and shoppers will use an escalator to reach the store <br />level. The store itself offers more groceries than a typical Walmart and the shopping floor is day lighted <br />by real windows. <br />Designed by MV+A Architects and the Preston Partnership, the H Street Walmart is a handsome urban <br />building with traditional human scale details. It includes cornices, individual multi -pane windows, an <br />interesting corner feature at the main entrance, and a separate entrance for residents. It is a fully urban, <br />pedestrian friendly building. Whether you love them or loathe them, this building proves that Walmart <br />— one of the most recognizable symbols of modern suburbia — is going urban. <br />While the H Street store is by far the better of the two new urban Walmares in Washington, the other <br />new store on Georgia Avenue, NW is also a significant departure from the typical suburban store design. <br />Built on the site of an abandoned car dealership, the Georgia Avenue Walmart is a 102,000 square foot <br />store on a four acre site. <br />2 of 7 2/28/2014 11:50 AM <br />