CHANGING FROM
WITHIN Western cities upgrade their urban cores
through various redevelopment projects. Brian A. Lee
Western Real Estate Business recently focused on a few
cities to see how their redevelopment efforts are progressing
and what forces are at work in achieving urban renewal. From
the privately led catalyst phenomenon in the Inland Northwest
to the municipally backed residential conversion trend in the
core of the West’s largest city, redevelopment movements
originate from different sources and manifest themselves in
different ways. However, the end goal is the same — the
rejuvenation of real estate that merges profit-minded and
community-based aims.
Spokane, Washington
The western part of Washington undoubtedly receives most of
the state’s real estate attention, but one must look east in
the Evergreen State for a major metropolitan rebirth. Spokane,
the largest city between Seattle and Minneapolis, has welcomed
more than $1 billion in redevelopment projects that have been
planned, started or completed since 1999.
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River Park Square, a $115
million destination retail center, sparked the
rebirth of downtown Spokane,
Washington. | | The
catalyst for Spokane’s business and cultural renaissance was
River Park Square, a $115 million shopping, dining and
entertainment center featuring the region’s only Nordstrom, a
20-screen AMC Theatres complex and 32 other specialty
retailers. The impetus for the massive revitalization effort
began in the early 1990s when two downtown retail anchors —
Frederick & Nelson and JC Penney — left Spokane. The focus
then turned to Nordstrom, a downtown fixture since the
mid-1970s. Its lease was to expire at the end of 1999.
“Nordstrom said to us that something major had to happen to
keep the retail [in Spokane] alive,” says Betsy Cowles,
developer of River Park Square. “So that was the beginning of
looking at what to do with revitalizing the downtown retail
core.”
After years of planning River Park Square, arranging public
support for it and completing the extensive financial package,
Cowles and her company broke ground on the project in fall
1997, with the first phase opening in the summer of 1999.
“It was a unique construction project because Nordstrom had
a store and didn’t want to close down while we demolished the
two city blocks and rebuilt,” says Cowles. “So we had a
shopping center that we had to completely redo while keeping
it open.” The second phase, which was completed at the end of
2000, involved scraping the old 120,000-square-foot Nordstrom
pad and building a new facility to connect to the first phase
construction.
All in all, River Park Square features 373,000 square feet
of retail space covering six levels. However, the effect of
this destination retail development spans an entire city.
“In urban settings, if you have a catalyst project, there’s
a lot of momentum that can happen around it and that was the
vision that we had for River Park Square,” says Cowles.
“Obviously, keeping Nordstrom in Spokane and keeping Bon
Marche downtown was really important but it was also important
because of what it would do for the rest of the downtown core.
There’s been a real renaissance from one end of the downtown
to the other. It’s quite amazing to see the number of older
buildings that have been rehabbed. I think Spokane rehabbed
more historic buildings in the last year than the entire state
of Washington.”
Ron Wells, president and CEO of Wells & Company and
long-time member of the Downtown Spokane Partnership, a
private, non-profit corporation, is an expert on this
revitalization trend in Spokane. “It’s really true — with more
people renovating buildings it almost becomes contagious.
Other people want to see their own buildings fixed up if
there’s opportunity to do so.” As proof, Wells — whose
development company specializes in the restoration and
redevelopment of historic buildings — refers to the
aforementioned enormous sum of investment dollars, most of
which are private funds, that have poured into Spokane since
1999.
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The twin 225-foot smokestacks in
Spokane, Washington, mark the location of Steam
Plant Square, a 74,000-square-foot office and
restaurant
redevelopment. | | Wells’
signature Spokane redevelopment project is Steam Plant Square.
It’s easy to find — just look for the twin 225-foot
smokestacks extending into the Spokane sky. The steam
production facility, which once housed Washington Water Power
and produced heat for all the major buildings downtown, now
features 74,000 square feet of office and restaurant space.
Through a partnership with the utility firm, Wells &
Company began redevelopment on Steam Plant Square in 1997 with
tenants moving into the facility 2 years later.
The property exhibits dramatic architectural
characteristics and is wired for the latest in high-tech
business operations. Steam Plant Grille, which includes a
brewpub, features a 65-foot ceiling that once accommodated the
plant’s massive boilers. A stroll through the facility reveals
much of the old plant machinery left behind, such as the coal
bin that once held 1,100 tons of coal and the many chutes that
fed the boilers. Three of the boilers are now dining rooms in
the restaurant.
“[The power company] fairly early on agreed with me that
the way to really make the place into something special was to
save all the catwalks, pipes, tanks and boilers that they
could and make it distinctive,” says Wells. “One tenant on the
top floor has an incredibly dramatic conference room carved
out of the interior of a boiler so the pipes frame the
conference room all the way around. Then we have a conference
room in another office that’s built inside one of the
smokestacks — a dramatic and interesting space.” Tenants at
Steam Plant Square include an Internet solution provider, a
media production company and other tech-related firms.
Wells’ other contributions to Spokane’s rebirth can be
found in the residential market where he estimates his company
has renovated around 15 downtown apartment projects in the
last 15 years, many of them turn-of-the-century buildings. He
believes the conditions are right for a surge in housing in
downtown Spokane due to the vibrant retail core and the city’s
other attractions.
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The historic Davenport Hotel,
which reopened in 2002, lends its name to
Spokane’s arts and entertainment district. It’s
one of the many downtown attractions to come out
of the city’s recent redevelopment
movement. | | The
emergence of the Davenport Arts District has also boosted the
attractiveness of downtown Spokane. The name Davenport comes
from the elegant Davenport Hotel, which reopened last year to
rave reviews. Numerous studios, clubs and theaters populate
the five-block entertainment area, including the historic Fox
Theatre, one of the largest art-deco theaters remaining in the
West. Built in the 1920s, the theater is currently undergoing
a $24 million renovation, which will be completed in late
2005. Spokane’s symphony orchestra will call the Fox Theatre
home.
“There’s a very exciting energy around the arts and
entertainment part of Spokane,” says Cowles. “In a couple
years, we will have tremendous facilities from a huge arena
that seats 20,000 people (Spokane Veteran’s Memorial Arena) to
an opera house that seats 2,700 people (Spokane Opera House)
to the Fox Theatre, which will be 1,500 seats, to the smaller
theaters in the 400-plus neighborhood. It’s another piece of
the downtown renaissance. It’s an exciting time and even when
the economic times are tough we seem to have almost more than
our fair share of good things happening.”
Downtown Los Angeles
The adaptive reuse ordinance, established by the Los
Angeles City Council in 1998, was the real estate equivalent
of a blood transfusion for downtown L.A. Bringing new life to
Los Angeles’ core, the enactment authorizes downtown property
holders that own buildings constructed prior to 1974 to
redevelop their buildings into whatever is commercially
viable. In addition, building codes were relaxed significantly
to promote renovation and preservation.
“Before that, the city council had enacted these draconian
building codes to a point where it was more feasible to just
scrape the building and rebuild it than to go back in and
renovate it,” says Mark Tarczynski, first vice president at CB
Richard Ellis in Los Angeles. “Now that it’s in line with the
state’s historical building renovation code, it’s more cost
effective for the developer to renovate [a building] rather
than scrape it and build a new one.”
The redevelopment opportunity this measure produced was
enough to make Tom Gilmore leave his New York architectural
firm and start up Gilmore Associates, which has redeveloped
more than 500,000 square feet of buildings in downtown L.A.
“Tom Gilmore began acquiring properties in the historic core
and he renovated the properties and opened up these live-work
loft developments,” says Tarczynski. “He filled them up within
about 3 months. That kind of signaled to developers that
there’s money to be made there. We’ve just been developing
like crazy and nobody’s looked back since.”
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The Brooks Brothers/Brockman
Building at 7th and Grand Avenue in downtown Los
Angeles, will be converted to loft-style
condominiums. | | The
Brooks Brothers/Brockman Building, located at Seventh and
Grand Avenue in the Financial District, is a fine example of
the redevelopment course downtown L.A. is taking. Long Beach,
California-based Urban Pacific Builders recently began
converting the dilapidated 12-story, 135,000-square-foot
structure into 86 loft-style condominiums that will feature
polished floors, brick walls and large windows. Plans for the
building’s rooftop deck include a pool, gym and gathering
areas complete with grills and fireplaces. Built in the early
1920s, the Brockman Building will also have 7,800 square feet
of ground-floor retail.
Another notable conversion project, according to
Tarczynski, is the long-vacant 1100 Wilshire Blvd. building,
which has never been occupied since its construction in 1986.
Bob D’Elia, a condominium developer, is in escrow on the Class
A office tower, located on the west side of the Harbor
Freeway, and plans to redevelop it into 450 condominiums. “I
think it will probably be one of the better projects in Los
Angeles County,” says Tarczynski.
This residential conversion trend has caught on in other
places in the City of Angels. The city council recently
extended a form of the adaptive reuse ordinance to cover all
of Los Angeles. Consequently, many developers are able to
apply the same conversion approach seen downtown to areas like
the Wilshire Corridor. An example of such a redevelopment
project is the old Getty Oil Company building, which is being
converted by Upside Investments into the Wilshire at Western,
a 260-unit luxury apartment complex featuring high-end retail
on the bottom three floors. The Wilshire at Western will open
its doors to tenants this spring.
Due to the high vacancy rate in L.A.’s office sector and
the moribund hotel industry, the only thing commercially
viable in this redevelopment market is multifamily, most of
which comes in the form of loft-style conversions. Tarczynski
says the new multifamily units are approximately 90 percent
rental and 10 percent condominium. “However, we see that
shifting this year significantly because property prices have
risen at a fast clip and now it looks as if condominiums are
the only way to make redevelopment properties pencil,” he
says. “We still have a very acute housing crisis in Los
Angeles County and I believe that the interest rates are going
to stay fairly low for rest of this year. Those two things
combined, I think, are going to drive housing sales [and]
drive people to look to downtown as a potential living
alternative.”
While new entertainment and cultural attractions like the
Disney Concert Hall, the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels
and Staples Center have made a difference to restaurant
business downtown, Tarczynski says the influx of residents to
Los Angeles’ core originates from somewhere else.
“I don’t know that there’s any kind of a nexus between the
cultural facilities and the demand for housing in downtown Los
Angeles,” he says. “I think it has more to do with people
readjusting their lifestyles and realizing that traffic just
isn’t going to get better in Los Angeles County and Orange
County. They’re sick and tired of driving 2 hours each way to
and from their jobs.” Tarczynski is quick to point out that
there are 500,000 people that come into and leave downtown
everyday, a substantial market for multifamily redevelopers to
target.
Covering all the residential needs, the CIM Group has
targeted that market with South Village, a $250 million,
7.2-acre development located in the southwestern part of
downtown. The first of four phases involves the $48 million
conversion of three historic Southern California Gas Company
buildings to The Gas Company Lofts, which feature 250 rental
units with a retail component. The second phase will include
the construction of a 50,000-square-foot Ralphs supermarket,
with retail shops to each side and 300 new loft-style
apartments on top.
“All in all, they’ve got about 1,200 units that are
entitled for that project, which is about one-third of the
market that Ralphs needs in the first place,” says Tarczynski.
“So a third of their market is going to be right on top of
them. I think that the supermarket is the last major obstacle
to making the decision to live in downtown Los Angeles. I mean
the first thing that everybody thinks about is, ‘Well, where
do I get my food? I have to eat.’” With the opening of Ralphs,
downtown’s denizens will no longer have to travel the 10 miles
to the nearest supermarket.
Tarczynski predicts an interesting 2004 for downtown Los
Angeles. With most speculative landlords out of the market and
active developers taking their place, more and more renovation
and revitalization in the urban core will be forthcoming.
“We’re probably going to see around 2,500 new [residential]
units come on line in the next 12 months, which is quite a
lot,” says Tarczynski. “The interesting question is — will
those units be absorbed or will they go looking for tenants or
buyers? My opinion is that they will be absorbed.”
Riverside, California
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The renovated Riverside Plaza in
Riverside, California, will feature a Main Street
U.S.A. component complete with restaurants, shops
and a 16-screen Signature Theatre complex. The
variety of styles and colors in the streetscape
will add to the appeal of the regional
mall. | | For
a city accustomed to rapid expansion, Riverside shows that it
knows about smart growth. The large number of current
redevelopment projects, which are recreating the city’s inner
core, are evidence enough. Perhaps the signature example of
this movement is the massive Riverside Plaza redevelopment,
located on Central Avenue, just northwest of the 91 Freeway in
the Magnolia Center area.
According to Bill Kenney of Kenney Company, developer of
the project, the original community-based center was
constructed in stages, starting in the 1950s. As the city of
Riverside expanded, Riverside Plaza began to lag behind newer
developments such as Tyler Mall, an enclosed mall with three
department stores located on the west side of the city.
“Riverside Plaza had two department stores, but they
weren’t in the dumbbell position,” says Kenney about the
property, which was enclosed in the mid-1980s. “That is they
weren’t at the ends. So it was a poor layout for a regional
mall. The [previous] developer attempted to make Riverside
Plaza compete with Tyler, which it really couldn’t do.”
In 1991, when Tyler Mall was renovated and redeveloped into
the Galleria at Tyler, a super-regional mall with a new level
and new retail tenant Nordstrom, Riverside Plaza went through
a period of decline. Seven years later, Kenney Company got
involved with the property.
“We looked at the trade area, we looked at the shopping
center and we said it cannot compete with the Galleria at
Tyler, so don’t even try,” says Kenney. “Our goal was to make
Riverside Plaza the antithesis of the Galleria at Tyler. Make
it everything that Tyler was not.”
When the Kenney Company went to work on Riverside Plaza,
its tenants included Gottschalks, Montgomery Ward, a small
Vons supermarket, Trader Joe’s and Sav-On. Kenney and his
colleagues went about negotiating terminations with other
remaining tenants before deciding on a shopping and
entertainment niche that would elevate Riverside Plaza.
“There were some theaters [in the market] that were old and
dated that would be closing, so we knew there wasn’t a place
for people to congregate,” says Kenney. “People were spending
their dollars at Tyler but weren’t spending their time there.
Riverside Plaza has a very busy downtown during the day, but
it isn’t energized at night or on the weekends. So it was our
determination that bringing in entertainment, in the form of a
state-of-the-art, surround-sound multiplex cinema, and
creating a downtown type of area, a Main Street U.S.A., would
create a project that would serve the needs of the community.
It would bring something new and unique to Riverside, and
would be non-competitive with the Galleria at Tyler.”
The new Riverside Plaza, featuring 500,000 square feet of
restaurants, theaters and retail stores situated on 35 acres,
will offer three different components to the consumer. One of
those includes the grocery and convenience-oriented stores
like the brand new Vons supermarket, Sav-On and Trader Joe’s.
Kenney also knew there’d be a need for the mid-sized lifestyle
retailers that don’t typically inhabit malls, so the developer
designed a retail area around Gottschalks where there could be
a power or lifestyle center setup. Finally, Kenney Company
planned the Main Street environment featuring “a street with
angled parking, with the cinema, retail, restaurants and shops
along the main thoroughfare, just like you would find in small
town U.S.A.” A 16-screen Signature Theatre complex will anchor
this part of Riverside Plaza. The town center streetscape will
charm visitors with an eclectic mix of colors and eight
different architectural styles, including mission and
renaissance motifs.
Architects Orange designed the project, and the general
contractor is Anaheim, California-based Lyle Parks Jr. Inc.
Several challenges arose during the redevelopment planning
process, including dealing with Montgomery Ward’s closing,
devising the critical phases of the project that would keep
current tenants operational and repeating the entitlement
process. Plus, the volatile theater market during the
construction delay added to the project’s complexity.
Nevertheless, the Kenney Company personnel kept their focus on
the redevelopment and how it would fit into the Riverside
community.
“Our goal with Riverside Plaza is really to energize not
just a dying shopping center, but a whole area within the
city,” says Kenney, who points to the advantage of Riverside
Plaza’s location just 2 miles west of downtown. “Our hope is
that Riverside Plaza will evolve outside of its boundaries and
re-energize the whole Magnolia Center area of Riverside.”
Phase I of the redevelopment project is now complete with the
balance of it — the Main Street component with the theaters
and restaurants — to be finished this fall.
“We really do think we can have a place where people will
gather throughout the day and on the weekends,” says Kenney.
“They can also do their grocery shopping, take care of their
pharmacy needs, dine and visit specialty shops — things that
wouldn’t typically be in a regional mall. So we want to bring
a different retail venue to Riverside than what exists today.
Riverside Plaza has three separate but distinct pieces that
all interconnect [plus] the fun atmosphere that you can’t get
in a structured project like a regional mall.”
©2004 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.
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