CONFIDENTIAL - INTERNAL PRE-FINANCING REVIEW
Press House — Location & Market Research
Press House · 331 N Street NE, Washington DC (NoMa / Union Market) · Internal Pre-Financing Review · June 2026
Standalone location/market evidence for the Press House underwriting. Public sources only — no tenant PII. Figures dated where known; items that need CoStar/RealPage/operating statements are flagged. Google Maps links are provided for the asset, comps, and key anchors.
Subject: Press House at Union District — 331 N Street NE, Washington DC 20002 (NoMa / Union Market). 📍 Map
As of: June 2026 (rents Mar–Jun 2026; vacancy Apr 2026).
1. Location & site
- Submarket: NoMa (North of Massachusetts Ave) / Union Market District, NE DC. One block from the NoMa–Gallaudet U Metro (Red Line). 📍 Metro
- Transit: NoMa–Gallaudet averaged ~6,593 weekday entries (2023) — 9th-busiest in the Metro system and the busiest elevated station; the Metropolitan Branch Trail (bike/ped) runs alongside.
- Walkability: Union Market food hall, Trader Joe's, Whole Foods (H St), REI flagship (Hecht Warehouse), restaurants/H Street corridor all within ~5–15 min walk. Strong amenity base.
- Site risk — FEMA flood: 331 N St NE sits inland (~1 mi from the Anacostia) on elevated ground, so it is almost certainly Zone X (minimal hazard, outside the 0.2% / 500-yr floodplain) → no federally-mandated flood insurance. DC's mapped Special Flood Hazard Areas (Zones A/AE) follow the Anacostia/Potomac, not NoMa; the practical exposure here is urban flash / combined-sewer flooding in extreme rain, not riverine. Confirm the exact parcel zone before close at FEMA MSC / dcfloodrisk.org (it drives insurance + lender requirements).
2. Demand drivers — anchors & employers nearby
(why people rent here — the demand side)
| Anchor |
What / scale |
Note |
Map |
| Gallaudet University |
~1,260 students (Fall 2025: 807 UG / 453 grad) + faculty/staff |
Adjacent (800 Florida Ave NE); stable but flat enrollment — a steady anchor, not a growth catalyst |
📍 |
| NPR headquarters |
National Public Radio HQ, 1111 N Capitol St NE |
Major white-collar employer in NoMa |
📍 |
| ATF headquarters |
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives, 99 New York Ave NE |
Federal employer at the Metro entrance |
📍 |
| SiriusXM |
Media/tech office presence in NoMa |
Part of NoMa's media/tech cluster |
— |
| Union Market District |
Food hall + retail/dining since 1871; growing mixed-use |
Lifestyle/retail draw; supports rents & foot traffic |
📍 |
| Downtown / Capitol |
~1–2 Metro stops to Union Station, Capitol Hill, Mount Vernon Sq |
Commuter access underpins renter demand |
— |
Read-through: demand drivers are real and durable (transit + federal/media employment + Union Market lifestyle), which supports the long-term thesis. They do not, however, offset the near-term oversupply (Section 5).
3. Rental market — asking rents by floorplan
NoMa / Union Market, 2026 (free public aggregators):
| Source (date) |
Studio |
1BR |
2BR |
| Zumper — H St/NoMa median (Mar 2026) |
$1,729 |
$2,355 |
$3,013 |
| Apartments.com — NoMa average |
$1,842 |
$2,239 |
$3,184 |
| Press House — in-place (rent roll) |
$2,061 |
$2,341 |
$3,382 (2BR/2BA) |
| Press House — model target |
~$2,287 |
~$2,705 |
~$3,600 |
- Press House's in-place market-rate rents are already at/above the submarket (a Class-A premium). So the value-add upside is occupancy/economic-occupancy, not rate.
- The model's target rents (esp. 1BR ~$2,705 vs ~$2,355 submarket median) sit at the optimistic top of the range in a soft, concession-heavy market.
4. Comparable rental properties (NoMa Class-A)
Building-level units/year where confidently known; "—" where exact figures need CoStar. Concessions are current (Jun 2026) and are the key signal — the submarket is giving 1 to 2½ months free.
| Property |
Units |
Yr |
Dist. from subject |
Occupancy |
Current concession |
Map |
| Press House (subject) |
356 |
2021 |
— |
~87% phys / 65% econ |
~2 mo free, ~20% below area avg |
📍 |
| The Belgard |
346 |
2018 |
~2 blocks |
high-90s (stabilized) |
— (stabilized) |
📍 |
| Flats 130 (Constitution Sq) |
643 |
— |
~3 blocks |
~95% |
— |
📍 |
| Union Place |
— |
new |
NoMa |
— |
~2½ months free |
📍 |
| Loree Grand at Union Place |
— |
~2010 |
NoMa |
— |
1 month free + waived app fee |
📍 |
| The Hale |
— |
new |
NoMa |
— |
up to 2 months free + $1K fast-lease |
📍 |
| Tribeca NoMa |
— |
— |
NoMa |
— |
up to 2 months free |
📍 |
| The Gantry (Union Market) |
— |
~2021 |
Union Market |
— |
(check leasing) |
📍 |
Concession takeaway: market is at ~1–2½ months free (≈ 8–20% of annual rent). The proforma's 1.5% concession at stabilization assumes the giveaways largely disappear within 24 months — aggressive while the pipeline is still delivering.
5. Supply, absorption & vacancy (the near-term risk)
- Pipeline (the headwind): NoMa/H-Street holds 5,556 of DC's ~15,810-unit 36-month pipeline — the largest of any DC submarket. NoMa has overtaken Capitol Riverfront in deliveries/absorption (Skanska, Jair Lynch, et al. — Delta Associates).
- Vacancy: NoMa/Union Market ~10.8% overall / ~10.0% stabilized (Apr 2026) vs DC metro ~7%.
- Concessions: widespread 1–2½ months free (Section 4).
- Rents: DC asking rents fell ~2.2% in 2025; mid-tier vacancy rising.
- Absorption (the offset): while DC absorption fell ~40% YoY, NoMa absorption was ~unchanged (Delta) — the submarket is still leasing, just at concessions.
- Outlook: pipeline eases later in 2026; if completions slow and household/job formation hold, occupancy could rebalance into 2027 — i.e., the back half of Press House's 24-month plan is when the market may help.
6. Demand-supply demographics
| Geography |
Population |
Median age |
Median HH income |
Renter-occupied |
| ZIP 20002 |
69,422 |
33.0 |
$120,337 (2024) |
— |
| Near Northeast |
68,201 |
33.5 |
$98,391 |
61.6% |
| NoMa neighborhood |
42,816 |
31.1 |
— |
renter-heavy |
- Profile: young (median age ~31–33), affluent (~$98–120K HH income), renter-majority — a healthy renter base. Rent-to-income on a ~$2,500 unit ≈ 25–30% (affordable band).
- Supports long-term demand; the constraint is near-term supply, not demand fundamentals.
7. Other income / ancillary (per-unit & % of revenue)
- Press House (actual, from proforma): other income ≈ $65K/mo (~$0.78M/yr) ≈ 7–8% of EGI — parking, storage, bike, fees. Parking/storage is only ~36% leased (156 of 428 items) → genuine unmodeled upside.
- Class-A benchmark: other income typically runs ~5–10% of EGI (parking, storage, pet, amenity, application/admin fees, and RUBS utility reimbursement). Press House sits mid-range with room to grow ancillary as occupancy rises.
- Comp-level other-income %: not publicly available — requires CoStar/RealPage or the comps' operating statements. Flagged for paid-data verification.
8. Implications for the Press House underwriting
| Model assumption |
Market reality (this doc) |
Implication |
| Stabilized vacancy 4% |
NoMa ~10–11% (Apr 2026) |
Aggressive; lease-up to 4% through a 10.8% market is the core risk |
| Stabilized concession 1.5% of GPR |
Market ~1–2½ months free (≈8–20%) |
Understated; model real free-rent during lease-up |
| +3% rent growth |
DC rents −2.2% in 2025 |
Optimistic near-term; growth more plausible 2027+ |
| Target rents at top of range |
In-place already at/above submarket |
Upside is occupancy, not rate |
| Ancillary modest |
Parking/storage 36% leased |
Conservative — real upside |
9. Sources & data quality
- Free / verified: Zumper, Apartments.com (rents & current concessions); Bisnow, UrbanTurf, Hoodline, Delta Associates citations (pipeline/absorption/vacancy); washington.org & NoMa BID (anchors); WMATA/Wikipedia (Metro ridership); Census/Point2/zipdatamaps (demographics); Gallaudet Office of Institutional Research (enrollment).
- Needs paid/primary data (CoStar / RealPage / operating statements): building-level unit counts/vintages for several comps, building-level occupancy & effective (net-of-concession) rents, and comp-level other-income %. These are the professional-grade inputs for the appraisal.
- Note: concession figures are point-in-time leasing promotions (Jun 2026) and move week to week; treat as directional, not contractual.