Navy Yard Growth: New Businesses & Renovations

by Samantha Reed - Chief Editor
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More than a dozen businesses are opening offices and locations in a growing creative hub tucked between the peninsula and Park Circle.

Construction is well underway at Navy Yard Charleston’s Design District, with large-scale renovations to the historic buildings and roads of the campus, breathing new life into former industrial spaces adjacent to Riverfront Park.

Since the beginning of August, the site has welcomed new locations for businesses like Textures, a luxury hardwood company; Artis Construction, a construction company specializing in historic restoration; and Kravet, a leader in home furnishings. More are on the way.

Photo by Skyler Baldwin
The glass building (top) in Storehouse Row will soon house Second State Coffee, while the first finished showroom (above) is home to hardwood
company Textures | Photo by Joseph Bradshaws

“Just seeing, in the few days I’ve been here, how these organic interactions happen especially between all these creatives … has been wonderful,” said Britni Johnson, vice president of public relations and communications for Jamestown, the real estate investment company behind the Design District. “For up and coming areas, the creative people are always going to be the first to come in and really establish a place. That’s literally happening right here, right now.”

Johnson, who normally works from Atlanta, has spent the last several months seeing the Design District from a computer screen, photos and videos. Seeing it in person for the first time in September, she said, changed the way she envisions the project and how it connects to the rest of the Lowcountry.

“It’s a lot to take in,” she said. “All the different pieces of the Navy Yard — people don’t realize how connected everything is. I’ve been trying for so long to understand this by looking at a map, and everything seemed so much more spread out. But everything is really just right here.”

Further closing the distance is the newly opened bridge connecting the Navy Yard to Cosgrove Avenue, giving residents and workers easier access to and from West Ashley, North Charleston and Interstate 26.

Familiar faces, new locations

The redevelopment of the historic storehouses Eight and Nine and the refurbished outdoor courtyard nestled between the two buildings is already complete. Together, they feature 32,000 square feet of creative office space, 7,200 square feet of first-floor restaurant space and 86 luxury apartments. They also are home to the newly opened businesses.

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