Is it because they're gorgeous, or because they're green that Cromley Lofts in Old Town Alexandria have sold like hot cakes - like elegantly bamboo'd, green-roofed, low-VOC'd, rough-hewn-beamed, dual-flush hot cakes?
It's both, no doubt, but, undertaken as the project was, just at the moment the planet's economy began its downhill plummet - a moment that pioneer developer, Bill Cromley, candidly calls "a feat of spectacularly bad timing" - Virginia's first 'Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)' - certified condominiums could have gone either way.
Cromley could have just taken the beautiful bones of the battered 1910 warehouse on Queen Street, and polished-up its 10-foot ceilings, exposed brick, sophisticated lines, and park views. Instead, he stayed true to a Green Building philosophy that nurtures both beauty and utility seeking features like heart-of-pine flooring salvaged from a Georgia textile mill, using rapidly renewing materials like cork and bamboo, sealing ductwork systems, finely crafting complex green design and then sluicing it all with natural light.