A new owner may mean new renoations and new life for this famous landmark. But, downtownguy has his reservatinos. View his blog: www.downtownguy.blogspot.com

Here's the article from today's Oklahoman:

"New owners to breathe life into historic building
By Richard Mize
The Oklahoman

Oklahoma City's historic but long-empty Plaza Court has new owners, and neighbors hope the building will have new leases on life.
Corsair-Caughron LLC paid $900,000 for the two-story building, constructed in 1927, which is on the National Register of Historic Places.

R.D. Smith, a principal, said long-term plans for the building at 1100 Classen Drive include renovations and a return to its historic office-retail use.

Plaza Court's market value was assessed last year at $667,805, according to county records, which list its size as 39,148 square feet. A new assessment is due next week.

Oklahoma Investment Group, the seller, had the property listed as office space for lease for $6.50 per square foot, with tenants paying for utilities and cleaning.

The property's value to the community goes beyond its monetary worth, a fact reflected in its historic status.

The triangular building once was the home of Oklahoma City's first radio station, WKY-AM. It was a former home to Crescent Market, which opened for business on April 22, 1889 -- the day of the Land Run. Veazey's Drug Store once occupied the ground floor.

The sale comes at a time when the area, known as MidTown, is experiencing something of a renaissance, although not without some pain as construction slows traffic to area businesses.

Plaza Court is at the five-way intersection of NW 10, Walker and Classen Drive, which is being repaved as a traffic circle -- one of many improvements the city is making in tandem with changes at St. Anthony Hospital. The hospital, just west of Plaza Court, after flirting with a move to the suburbs, is staying put and expanding.

"That corner is an important focal point for that area," said Joyce Brown, president of the nonprofit MidTown Redevelopment Corp. Inc. "That building is an anchor. We've always been looking forward to it being developed."

Brown said the purchase made sense because at least one of the new owners already owned property around it.

John Hefner, vice president of the MidTown group, said "we in MidTown are cautiously optimistic" that the new owners will restore Plaza Court "to its former beauty."

"It's a linchpin for the area," Hefner said, and its turnaround would spur more investment in the area. Hefner, who owns property nearby at 1305 Classen Drive, said a restored Plaza Court would aid his own efforts to find investors for Georgian-architecture condominiums he envisions for MidTown. "