Development

In addition to offering a selection of premier existing properties, Martin Selig Real Estate is developing three new buildings for Seattle commercial and residential tenants:

635 Elliott

Martin Selig Real Estate has reclaimed this former industrial site to create a three-acre Class A office campus overlooking Myrtle Edwards Park and Elliott Bay. The campus features two efficient buildings flanking a one-acre plaza and sculpture garden. The buildings provide a total of 360,000 square feet of tenant space over below-grade parking for 1,080 cars. Powerful and refined building materials enhance the look, with a color and detail palette featuring stone, stainless steel and glass. The building plans’ simplicity creates a signature environment that extends downtown sensibility to a new urban edge.

Sustainable features include the extensive green roof above the parking space, and high floor-to-floor dimensions with large windows to maximize access to daylight. For leasing information

Third and Battery

This three-story, 70,000-square-foot boutique office building will define the new direction of office development in Seattle’s emerging Belltown neighborhood. Surrounded by residential and retail amenities, the building will house discerning tenants seeking a distinctive identity at a smaller scale than other neighborhood offerings. To optimize the low scale of the project and allow it to nestle into the neighborhood, the third floor is set back along its primary façade facing Third Avenue. In addition, the planted green roof is designed to maximize visual interest from the adjacent taller buildings. For leasing information

3031 Western Avenue

The formerly barren site of the Olympic Sculpture Park has been recently transformed into a significant landscape organized around public art. This bold intervention by the Seattle Art Museum has awakened the slumbering site to the north and created an opportunity to frame the open space with a contemporary building edge. Luxury apartments are planned to take advantage of the unique mix of southern exposure, frontage on the Sculpture Park, and views to Elliott Bay and Seattle’s skyline beyond.

A major design goal is to create a built edge that responds to and enhances the public experience of the Sculpture Park while maintaining a sense of privacy within the dwellings. While the project is in an early programming and conceptual stage, the vision calls for layers of glass “veils” with various degrees of translucency and transparency to create an ephemeral and ever-changing canvas for light and shadow as viewed from the park.  Balconies of each unit will feature floor-to-ceiling glass, blurring the boundaries between interior and exterior spaces while providing further solar shading and privacy.  Various strategies are proposed to maximize the building’s energy efficiency, including solar shading provided by the glass layers, a significant green roof, and redevelopment of a former public right of way into a pervious hard surface and green space. For leasing information

220 Elliott


This building features 75,917 square feet above ground (five comfortable floors) and 110 parking spaces below ground (three floors).
For leasing information

5th and Yesler


For leasing information