Veteran developer returns to Bricktown
By Steve Lackmeyer Business Writer
Veteran Bricktown developer Chuck Ainsworth is returning to the entertainment district after a two-year absence and is partnering with property owner Jeff Moore for a proposed renovation of the former Bunte Candy Building into housing and retail.
Property records show the building at 1 E Sheridan, built in 1911, was sold by Moore’s Bricktown Square, LLC, to Candy Factory Lofts, a partnership between Moore and Ainsworth, on Jan. 17 for $2.2 million.
Ainsworth was a leading developer in Bricktown throughout the 1990s and until 2005, when he sold his share of properties along the Bricktown Canal to then-partner French Hickman. Moore, meanwhile, is a homebuilder who in November 2005 bought an entire square block of Bricktown bordered by Oklahoma Avenue, Sheridan Avenue, Main Street and the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad at auction for $10.9 million.
That purchase included 1 E Sheridan, which last was occupied in the early 1990s by the Bunte Candy Co. Ainsworth said he was surprised by the sale price, which he credits to the city’s Metropolitan Area Projects program.
“I think our expectations have probably exceeded what we dreamed might happen,” Ainsworth said. “It’s been a combination of public and private working together, and Oklahoma City should be extremely proud.”
Moore said Ainsworth called him shortly after the sale, and talks ensued over a year.
“I’ve admired what he did with other buildings in Bricktown,” Moore said. “I’m excited to try to put a deal together between the two of us.”
Ainsworth and Moore said they are finalizing redevelopment plans, which they hope to announce within 45 days. They confirmed housing and retail are a likely mix for the six-story building.
“Housing seems to be a major ingredient that needs to be included in the overall redevelopment of Bricktown and downtown,” Ainsworth said. “It will add stability and continuity to everything we’re doing. If you look across the United States, this is the trend — bring people back downtown to live.”
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