| Center
Review, March 2007
New Spirit For
Spokane Major mixed-use redevelopment puts
Spokane, Washington, on the map. Susan H.
Fishman
 |
Inside River Park Square, Spokane,
Washington. | |
Since its redevelopment in 1999, River Park Square has been
a catalyst for the revitalization of Downtown Spokane,
Washington. The regional shopping, dining and entertainment
center has brought a number of new national retailers to the
market, as well as a new wave of residential, commercial,
hospitality, educational and governmental development that has
breathed new life into the city.
Originally developed in 1974 for the World’s Fair, River
Park Square was redeveloped as a joint project with the City
of Spokane to spark a renaissance of the urban core. With
373,000 square feet of retail space over five floors, the
project covers two full city blocks and features close to 50
national and local retailers unique to the region. The
center’s redevelopment opened in 1999 to rave reviews, as many
of the best-known national merchants came to Spokane for the
first time — tenants such as Ann Taylor, Williams Sonoma,
Pottery Barn, Restoration Hardware, Eddie Bauer, Gap and
Abercrombie & Fitch.
Over the course of the next few years, with leasing at
roughly 80 percent, the center needed a strong dose of
marketing, management and leasing. So the Cowles family, who
own and manage River Park Square, brought in Robert Smith of
Centennial Properties to step things up. Currently at 96
percent occupancy, the center was slow to lease up, says
Smith. In search of retailers that would complement tenants
like Nordstrom, Ann Taylor, Chico’s and Williams-Sonoma, Smith
found that many didn’t know Spokane.
 |
Exterior view of River Park
Square. | |
“Many people who would shop for variety and better-priced
merchandise would travel the four and half hours to Seattle,”
he says. “We became kind of a fly-over for merchants who were
going to land in Seattle first and then take a look at
us.”
But once Smith’s team was able to get the retailers’ senior
executives to stop in Spokane and showed them the activity
downtown, the cleanliness of the area and the quality of the
shopping public, they began to realize that Spokane was, in
fact, their demographic. They also discovered that River Park
Square, which is located just 2 hours from the Canadian
border, draws heavily from Canada.
“We offer the only Nordstrom between Seattle and
Minneapolis, so that’s obviously a huge draw,” adds Smith.
“When you couple that with stores like Chico’s, Ann Taylor and
Williams-Sonoma that are very unique, we became a destiny for
a lot of people.”
 |
River Park Square at
night. | |
Since 1999, River Park Square has experienced more than $3
billion of investment in downtown buildings. New residential
properties in Downtown Spokane include upscale condominiums,
lofts and luxury penthouses. More than 568 residential units
have been completed or announced in the past 2 years, and a
10-year, $810 million development near the urban core will
bring an additional 2,600 units.
Hotel redevelopment has also contributed to the economy.
The Davenport, a100-year-old, grand hotel has been completely
refurbished with a new tower, adding 170 more rooms to the
downtown mix. Much like the Davenport, the Montvale hotel, an
old hotel that had fallen into disrepair, has been restored to
its original luster by a local entrepreneur.
In addition, the Opera House and Spokane Convention Center,
which was built for the World’s Fair, have been completely
remodeled and expanded to include tens of thousands of square
feet of display and exhibit space. Other developments include
the Morgan building, which sat empty for a number of years.
Now filled with retail on the first level and condominiums on
the upper level, the renovated building is almost sold out.
And another condo project, right across the river, is
completely sold out and growing rapidly.
West 809 is another recent project, owned by CPC
Development Company and located directly across Main Street
from the front entrance of River Park Square. Built in the
early 1970s, it was originally the JC Penney building. When JC
Penney moved out of the central business district, the
building was converted to a Burlington Coat Factory for a
short while and then sat vacant for about 6 years. The
redevelopment includes quality retail tenants, such as P.F.
Chang’s, Jos A. Bank and 24-Hour Fitness. Centennial
Properties worked with local developer Ron Wells on the
residential portion of the project, which includes 20
condominiums and is still under construction.
 |
Stunning design sets apart River
Park Square and has made it a place that retailers
have to
be. | |
“One of the unique opportunities we had was the fact that
the building had 20-foot high ceilings, so from a residential
standpoint, that gave us the opportunity to make the
condominiums truly loft-style.”
West 809 is also connected to River Park Square via a
skywalk so residents can walk right across the skywalk to
shop.
“With the connection to River Park Square, we’ve really
built in an entertainment value with the condos,” notes Rob
McOmie, general manager for River Park Square.
The entertainment at River Park Square includes a 20-screen
AMC Theater and Kress Gallery, an art gallery and community
meeting space. The center is also adjacent to the Davenport
Arts District, a three square block, urban area with several
live performance venues, numerous nightclubs, restaurants and
eateries. As a Shop America destination, River Park Square has
developed an innovative Stay, Shop, Symphony package that
includes overnight accommodations at the historic,
four-diamond Davenport Hotel, a shopping certificate at River
Park Square and tickets to a performance of the award-winning
Spokane Symphony.
The center also includes the Northwest’s first shopping
center-based wine bar and tasting room, a hands-on children’s
museum and science center, a strategic cluster of children’s
stores and interactive retail outlets and the expansion of
locally owned restaurants and distinctive eateries.
Over the past several months, River Park Square has
welcomed new national tenants, including J. Jill, White
House/Black Market and Canadian-based Chatters Salon, which is
completing a flagship U.S. store. Chico’s has undergone
significant expansion, along with two locally owned retail
outlets, Boehm’s Chocolates and Flowers, and Twigs Bistro and
Martini Bar.
 |
Inside River Park
Square. | |
The center’s award-winning design by Callison Architecture
of Seattle features a five-story glass atrium, which serves as
a plaza for community and special events.
The atrium area sits right across the street from the
Spokane River and Park.
“It’s really an urban setting with a suburban feel,” says
Smith. “It’s very unique and has some throwbacks to an
old-time retail design.”
River Park Square’s traditional, central-business-district
retail design includes large show windows, interesting brick
and cornice work and an interior designed to emulate a
streetscape.
“The work that was done on the tile and the cement inside
makes it look like you’ve got a wet streetscape,” says McOmie.
“The lighting is set with the mood of starlight and moonlight,
almost like a Paris street after a rainstorm. It just creates
some great excitement.”
©2007
France Publications, Inc. Duplication or reproduction of this
article not permitted without authorization from France
Publications, Inc. For information on reprints of this article
contact Barbara
Sherer at (630) 554-6054.
|