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INVESTMENTS IN PROGRESS
Make a Deal, Make a Difference in the Urban Core

BY KEVIN KIPP

There are flowers, said Henri Matisse, for those who wish to see them.

And the local chapter of the Urban Land Institute—nationally a 17,000-member organization intent on influencing land use and policy affecting the built environment—wants developers to see the rich bouquet that can spring forth from the fertile earth of the urban core.


To that end the local chapter of the ULI, in partnership with the Regional Chamber and Growth Association (the publisher of this magazine), and a number of other business and civic organizations in the region, is sponsoring a half-day symposium called “Investments in Progress: Make a Deal, Make a Difference in the Urban Core.”

Chairing the 140-some-member ULI-St. Louis is Lewis Levey. He is the founder and former managing partner of Paragon Group, the St. Louis-based national real estate firm that has since merged with NYSE-listed REIT Camden Property Trust.

Levey says the symposium will introduce a study of development opportunities in the center rings of St. Louis. Wearing the same name as the symposium, the study was commissioned by Civic Progress. Development Strategies conducted the research.

Levey says the ULI hopes to attract an audience that includes developers and “anyone from the disciplines responsible for land use—financial people, design professionals, municipal officials, preservationists”—who would not otherwise be familiar with development opportunities in the city of St. Louis, East St. Louis or inner-ring suburbs like Maplewood, University City, Jennings.

“We want to demonstrate that deals are not nearly as complicated as people think, and there is a lot of help available for developers who are unfamiliar with urban development.”

The ULI Investments in Progress committee has developed three sessions in the half-day program. Each of the first two will present case studies of two projects. After the first session, participants switch. Two times two is four. Those four projects are profiled later in this article.

The final sitting will be for roundtable discussions of the opportunities that exist for investment and profit in the urban core, and everyone will be on his way by 12:30 p.m.

Richard Ward, senior principal at Development Strategies, says, “These four projects demonstrate, ‘Yes, it can be done.’ They are not necessarily the most grandiose, complex projects ever done. But deals like the first retail development in East St. Louis in 50 years—these are opportunities that real estate people can identify with.”

Reading this story from east to west, see what you think of these developments.

STATE STREET SHOPPING CENTER, EAST ST. LOUIS

East St. Louis’ first retail development in 50 years didn’t happen overnight.

But, says developer Jim Koman, president of Koman Properties, each expansion of the shops at State Street and 25th Street was easier than the one before.


Aerial shot of State Street Shopping Center.

He began working the deal in 1995. Now he is looking to add 10,000 square feet to the 70,000 currently under roof at the intersection that Koman says compares to a “mini-Lindbergh and Manchester.”

Phase one was a 15,000-square-foot Walgreens. “That took five years,” Koman says. “But phase two [30,000 square feet of Save-A-Lot grocery, Simply Fashion, State Farm offices and Blockbuster Video] took 18 months. And the last little 10,000 square feet only took eight months. It’s basically finished. We added a Footlocker, Fashion Sense, and hopefully a pizza place. Phase four is across the street.”

Some of the early difficulties can be attributed to opening new frontiers. “Officials in East St. Louis are gaining more understanding of how development gets done. They’re streamlining approvals, getting a more pro-business attitude: ‘Cut the tape, get ’em going, get ’em what they need. Let’s not hold ’em up.’”

Sometimes retailers look at development in core areas as a frontier. “They watch to see if the pioneers make it. Once you start to build in the city, once they’ve seen others be successful, a lot of retailers get very eager.”


JIM KOMAN, president, Koman Properties

Koman credits retired St. Louis County Executive H. Mildford for his initiation to East St. Louis. “He was an advisor to former Mayor Gordon Bush,” Koman says. “He got us involved with the Casino Queen. Then he started talking about retail opportunities, showing me the upside that exists in East St. Louis. We were fortunate to get national retailers to share this dream and go into East St. Louis.”

Koman says the believing in the project “is the biggest part of working in the urban core, believing that you’ll succeed and that it will help the community you’re building in.” Then dismounting his noble steed, he winks slyly, “It’s even more fun when people tell you you’re crazy and then five years later you can say, ‘We’re there and we’re making money.’”

The $1.8 million Tax Increment Financing for phase one was also crucial in East St. Louis he says. “That’s not money in my pocket,” but it helped make up for the real, additional expense of acquiring contiguous properties to assemble a develop-able site.


Rendering of State Street Shopping Center, East St. Louis, Ill.

A final and ongoing element that has made State Street succeed, Koman says, “is that the people of East St. Louis demonstrated a genuine eagerness to have the development, and they support it. They shop there and they keep it safe. Sales have gone up every year.”

Koman Properties—as distinct from office-oriented Koman Group owned and run by brother William J. Koman Jr.—specializes in retail developments throughout the metropolitan area. “We do a lot of Walgreens,” Jim Koman says.

Which means Koman works everywhere. Among the larger developments—a quarter-to-half-a-million square feet—are Lincoln Place and Crossroads Shopping Center in Fairview Heights, Ill., and Grandview Plaza in Florissant. In Missouri, Koman Properties has developed sites in Creve Coeur, Wildwood, Chesterfield, and Maplewood. In Illinois, they’ve worked in Swansea, Columbia and Granite City.

Koman says he’s also begun a $7 million development at Grand Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. in the City of St. Louis that will feature 43,000 square feet of retail, anchored by Save-A-Lot.

After taking a hard look at the possibilities, Koman is convinced. “No question,” he says. “There’s a market in the inner core urban areas. No question: You can make money in redevelopment.”

And no question, sometimes it’s difficult. “Any development can have hurdles. The action is different in St. Louis County. It’s different in East St. Louis. It’s different in St. Louis.”

And he plans to pursue redevelopment in the future. “We believe this is the last frontier of retail, finishing off the marketplace. It’s infill to capture the last of [retailers’] market share for St. Louis. We’re looking at new ways to recognize that there are 400,000 people in the St. Louis and East St. Louis market who need goods and services, who want to rent a video, buy shoes or get groceries close to home.”

MERCHANDISE MART, ST. LOUIS, MO.

Ron Silverman is senior vice president and regional manager for Historic Restoration Inc., a New Orleans-based full-service real estate development company specializing in adaptive reuse of historic structures.

They worked hard with Kimberly-Clark Corporation throughout 2002 to complete the $270 million Marriott Renaissance Grand convention hotel in mid-February of this year.


Hardwood flooring and brick add to the historic charm of this “Mart” apartment.

Oh, and in their spare time, HRI converted seven stories and 340,000 square feet of a late nineteenth century landmark into 212 one- and two-bedroom apartments, one three-bedroom apartment and an additional 10,000 square feet of street-level retail.

The most imposing building on Washington Ave., as Silverman called the Merchandise Mart, has a footprint of nearly an acre. Its redevelopment represents a $47 million investment.

So why bite off two enormous projects simultaneously? Silverman explains, “Our CEO Pres Kabacoff didn’t understand why so much space around the convention center hotel was vacant and rundown. He wondered what’s the sense of having a shining jewel like the convention hotel if there wasn’t a neighborhood around it?”


RON SILVERMAN, senior vice president and regional manger for Historic Restoration Inc. situated in a newly renovated Merchandise Mart model apartment.

What the heck, let’s make one. After all HRI’s mission statement is “Revitalizing cities by creating diverse, vibrant sustainable communities.”

Built in 1889 for tobacco magnates John Liggett and George Myers, the Merchandise Mart had made its way onto the National Register of Historic Places. And it’s location on Washington Avenue placed it in one of the city’s high profile and highly promising districts.

“It was a huge empty building owned by the City, acquired from a speculator,” Silverman says. “It didn’t help that the building had been vacant for so long, but our company has experience in arriving at solutions for situations like the Merchandise Mart.”


(Left) “The Mart” as it looked around 1900. (right) “The Mart” as it looks today.

(HRI, Silverman reports, owns 1,700 units of residential development, 1,000 hotel rooms and one million square feet of commercial space around the country: Fort Worth, Omaha, Cleveland, Milwaukee and New Orleans.)

Silverman says HRI closed on the property in October 2001, finished the renovation in December 2002, and the first resident moved in in January.

Rents range from $630 for an “affordable alternative” option one bedroom to $2,825 for some of the market-rate two-bedroom apartments. Forty percent of Merchandise Mart units—identical to market rate digs—are reserved as an affordable alternative.

And Merchandise Mart rents parking. Other amenities in-clude dry cleaning, concierge and maid service.

There were challenges to completing a high-class renovation as quickly as they did. “If it were easy, everyone would do it,” Silverman reminds.

It began with the architectural work. Sometimes federal, state and local requirements—worth observing for the sake of tax credits and other financial incentives—were contradictory. “But Barbara Geisman in Mayor Slay’s office helped resolve many of those issues,” he says.

Silverman also threw roses to a dozen other St. Louis officials and offices, including Otis Williams and Dale Ruthsatz in the St. Louis Development Corporation.

He also singled out the Business Assistance Center, calling it “a great tool. They did yeomen’s work steering us through the permitting process. They provided a one-stop shop for our people and helped us with other departments as an advocate.”

Silverman also praises Clayco Construction for adapting to difficult conditions, working along what The New York Times said is one of the few streets in St. Louis to qualify as an urban canyon.

With 450 construction workers at the Mart and 900 at the hotel, conditions got cramped. Think about parking. “Working downtown, construction workers have no—what’s-called—‘laydown space,’” Silverman says.

Moreover, the apartment project was undertaken adjacent to a completely occupied 10th Street Loft. “We were there early in the morning, late at night, loud, tearing up streets, putting them back together,” Silverman says. “We couldn’t have done this if the neighbors hadn’t been generous in their attitude.

“They could see what we were doing is enhancing the neighborhood,” Silverman says. “The rebirth process is painful, but it was gratifying to have the support of neighbors.”

Their patience and municipal cooperation is emblematic of the community’s commitment as a whole, Silverman says, “to a cause-celebre for renovation projects along Washington Avenue from 21st Street to 6th Street. There’s huge attention to the loft district,” including the city’s $17.5 million streetscape renovation project that is just about wrapped up.

The development would also not have taken place without the invaluable Missouri Historic Preservation Tax Credits. "Credits are fundamental to putting these complicated deals together," Silverman notes.

“We’re thrilled that we made true on our promise to the city,” Silverman says. “We’ll start on two additional buildings in 2003 in the Cupples Complex. Hopefully we’ve earned credibility as a mainstream developer here in the City.”

ST. LOUIS COMMERCE CENTER, ST. LOUIS

Steve Brown, president of Balke Brown Associates, like most St. Louisans misses The Arena, and not Pruitt Igoe. But in neither instance is he crying over spilled milk.

He’s building.

Where the Old Barn once hosted Stanley Cup Finals games, Balke Brown plans to break ground in June for 200 apartments. They’ll be called the Highlands Lofts.


(left to right): STEVE BROWN, president of Balke Brown Associates with DON LAND, senior vice president, lead project executive and St. Louis Commerce Center LLC principal, in front of St. Louis Commerce Center II.

On 20 acres, just south of where failed public housing misery once sprawled, are Balke Brown’s St. Louis Commerce Center I & II. Balke Brown closed on the real estate in late 1998. They completed the first building—150,000 square feet of office/industrial space—in February 2000. They completed St. Louis Commerce Center II in March 2002, by which time it was fully leased.

GPX, a worldwide manufacturer and marketer of value-oriented consumer electronics, anchors the second building. Its 190,000 square feet is also the site of 300 jobs. Sigma-Aldrich occupies 140,000 square feet used for storage and distribution. And Bryan Cave uses 20,000 square feet just for storage.

Commerce Center I is home to Gateway CDI, Killark Electrical Products, Swank Motion Pictures and McLeod USA Telecommunications.

Balke Brown has historically been a developer of commercial and office/industrial buildings, Brown says. The firm, which he and Gary Balke (see profile story on page 76) own in 50-50 symmetry, has built more than five million square feet of such space, and currently manages a three million-square-foot portfolio of it.

About half of their efforts are in Illinois, and half in Missouri. With the office and warehouse glut of the last two years, the company has begun to develop multi-family housing for sale and for rent, he says.

Besides the Highland Lofts, Brown’s company is working with Taylor Morley Inc. to bring 500 residential units to market in O’Fallon, Ill.

Even with three buildings in the Fountain Lakes development along Highway 370 in St. Charles, Brown says the Missouri half of his company’s work is concentrated in St. Louis.

There, they also built a 150,000-square-foot office building at the 26-acre Highlands site. They are scheduled eventually to add 850,000 more. And Balke Brown is the developer of the 415,000 square feet at Union Station Office Center, completed in 1985: four office buildings—including their own quarters—and a theatre.

St. Louis Commerce Center’s site, part of the city’s Martin Luther King Jr. Industrial Park vision, was a mixed blessing. “The nice thing was that it was owned by one owner: the city,” Brown says.


Lammert Pharmacol building implosion. Site of St. Louis Commerce Center II.


Current site of St. Louis Commerce Center II, GPX Distribution Center.

And the bad news? “The site was an environmentally contaminated combat zone,” he chuckles in sad remembrance. “Burned-out buildings with environmental issues, six blocks crisscrossed with utilities and old alleys, and we had to pay for remediation and utility relocation. It was a mess!”

Among the site’s ecological joys were the corpses of junkyards, dry cleaners, plating companies, a nine-story Lammert Pharmacol building and gas stations. And in their wreckage was asbestos, lead and corroding underground tanks.

Even the residential cadavers presented problems. “We uncovered basements filled with trash,” Brown says. “We had to relocate 100-year-old garbage.”

Altogether, remediation cost $2.5 million. But a state Department of Economic Development brownfields remediation tax credit of about $1 million and “a similar contribution from the city through purchase price considerations,” helped take the sting out of the extraordinary site preparation costs.

“At the end of it, the city was able to present us with a 20-acre buildable site,” Brown says.

He credits the St. Louis Commerce Center’s speedy completion to “the commitment to the project by Mike Jones, then in the mayor’s office, and Phil Hoge, then interim director at the St. Louis Development Corporation.”

He also credits the SLDC staff. “They were easy to work with, friendly and eager to do business. And the project managers, guys like George Kerry, are really a qualified bunch of professionals.”

Along those same lines, Brown offered kudos to his colleague—senior vice president, lead project executive and St. Louis Commerce Center LLC principal—Don Land for stellar work.

More generally, Brown says, “The redevelopment process could use a little streamlining in the approval phases. But the rewards far outweigh those minor inconveniences.”

Brown says he likes the new guy at SLDC, Rodney Crim. “We’ve already developed a close professional relationship with him working on the Highlands. And Mayor Slay’s office has also demonstrated a pro-development attitude. They’re helping us identify future development sites for both commercial and residential projects.”

ALEXANDRIA PLACE AND RIVER ROADS, JENNINGS, MO.

Some redevelopments are easier than others. Mark Morley, president and COO at homebuilder Taylor Morley Inc., has both kinds on his hands.


Taylor Morley will build attached town homes on 44 acres that was once the North Twin Drive-in.

He’ll build 137 attached town homes and 81 single-family homes on 44 acres that was once the North Twin Drive-in.

“It’s a little unusual to call it redevelopment,” he says. “It’s simple. We’re going to knock down the screen and the popcorn stand, and the site is ready to go.”

Just across Halls Ferry, on the site of the old River Roads Shopping Mall, Taylor Morley plans to develop a different 44 acres for homes, plus 12 acres of commercial. Preparation will be considerably more complicated.

“The TIF was absolutely necessary to help with demolition and environmental abatement,” Morley says. “We’ll have asbestos, mercury, Freon. Then we have utilities above and below ground: gas, phone, sewers, storm water. We’ll have to reconfigure everything.”

In both instances, however, Morley says “Having the large tracts of contiguous land means we can ‘appreciate’ the neighborhood.”

Appreciate? “Values can go up,” he clarifies.

Simple or TIF-reliant, Morley praises both the City of Jennings and St. Louis County for cooperating with him, as well as one another. “The County and City both ran out the red carpet for us. I’ve never seen a project before where there was so much cooperation to make a redevelopment happen.

“The Jennings TIF commission and the Jennings City Council approved the River Roads TIF,” Morley says. “And we’re fine tuning the redevelopment plan.”

Morley expects to develop 59 50-foot lots for single family homes; 55 60-foot lots for single family homes; 62 villa products, attached or detached; and 40 town homes on the old mall site.

He was also delighted to report that several civic-minded, publicly traded St. Louis corporations—not all of them banks—have expressed interest in purchasing the $1 million of environmental-abatement TIF bonds.

(According to Morley, finances were also a little simpler at Alexandria Place: “Wehrenberg had the property up for sale. The price was right.”)

After dispatching details of the plan and the bonds, Morley expects to begin demolishing the retail center in August or September.

Morley says, “We had been analyzing River Roads for redevelopment. It had been one of the area’s first regional malls, and when I-70 cut off a lot of traffic from Halls Ferry and Jennings Station Rd., it began to decline. Malls are normally right at the highway for a reason. This one had been closed for about 10 years.”

Morley continues: “The city master plan calls for this to be residential to recover some of the population they lost in the last census. As a ‘pool city,’ their population affects the revenues they receive from other malls in St. Louis County.”

Morley made prominent mention of the fact that “not one resident will be displaced by the River Roads redevelopment.”

He cites another bonus. “By bringing back rooftops,” he says, “commercial will follow.”

He says what will emerge on the remaining 12 acres that are earmarked for commercial will be more neighborhood-friendly than regional malls: perhaps a day care, cleaners, or a dentist and—in accordance with city wishes—“a sit-down restaurant rather than a drive-through, perhaps an Applebee’s or a TGI Friday.”

Towards the end of the project, Morley expects to build 100 market-rate units for seniors. “There is an assisted-living facility across Halls Ferry Road. We don’t know yet if ours will serve the go-go, the slow-go and no-go, but it will be for the elderly.”


MARK MORLEY, president and COO at homebuilder Taylor Morley Inc.

Morley says the 137 attached town homes in Alexandria Place will have three stories: a garage and unfinished basement, a living area, and upstairs bedrooms. The homes will be priced between $90,000 to $115,000, he says, affordable to those whose incomes range from $35,000 to $40,000.

The 81 single-family homes will range from $140,000 to $160,000. All the homes will be market rate.

“If you can build a value-oriented home and keep it price sensitive, people will move into the area,” Morley says. “We studied it, and saw that it worked in Alexandria, Va.—which is where we got our name for our project—and Atlanta.”

CDC Corporation, Taylor Morley’s minority partner, will build 20 homes in Alexandria Place, and a similar, though yet to be determined, proportion of the units in River Roads.

Alexandria Place will also feature five acres of commercial redevelopment, and River Roads will boast a two-acre park.

“We have three schools within walking distance,” Morley says, citing for example a Microsoft grant that provided “Northview Elementary School with more computers than students.”

Several hundred Taylor Morley homes will help rebalance that.


Kevin Kipp runs Bubble Communications, a creative services and community relations firm in St. Charles.



The entire Investments in Progress inventory of completed projects and available sites throughout the region’s inner ring, is posted on the RCGA website, stlrcga.org/investments_in_progress, and will be kept up-to-date by the RCGA Economic Development staff and their local economic development partners in the City, St. Louis County, St. Charles County, Madison County and St. Clair County.

 

 

 


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