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Originally Posted by
Urbanized
Good grief. This isn't SIM City. It took 50+ years to decimate OKC's core via urban renewal and many other factors. It has been remarkable how much it has bounced back in 25 years (the first downtown MAPS project landed in 1998), and really mostly in the past 10 years on the private side. Rebuilding devastated urban fabric takes time.
While I think it is perfectly legitimate to question the development chops of the Strawberry Fields ownership - especially in light of the recent legal developments - and also to some extent the lumberyard ownership (moreso due to the lack of performance on the Goodwill property), the ownership of the old Ford dealership is among the most proven developers in OKC. Most of what has happened in Midtown - which has been just shy of stunning - has been at the hands of the same group.
The rush to have SOMETHING on some of these sites - ANYTHING - is incredibly short-sighted. Regarding the Ford site there is an amazing amount of churn likely to happen nearby soon; Paycom, PSM, a new arena, but first likely a VOTE for a new arena. All of this will likely dictate what the highest and best use becomes for that dealership spot. And many of the comments I see here are also completely detached from reality when it comes to finance, business case, materials...it is now a very different world than it was even a year ago, much less three. The office market and commercial real estate in general are also very shaky.
And by the way, just because someone CAN AFFORD to build something doesn't mean that they SHOULD, or that it is the correct time for that project. At the end of the day a project simply MUST work in a spreadsheet to justify turning dirt. The bank requires it and the balance sheet requires it. Building something that looks great on paper but which doesn't pencil is the surest route to the poorhouse.
And for some premium properties I would much rather watch them sit unimproved for a few more years than to get the wrong thing, or a thing that isn't as great as it could be, just because someone was in a rush to put up something and to not have to look at an empty lot. I would expect that we won't see or hear anything regarding the old Ford lot until - at the very least - the dust settles on what will happen to PSM, the Paycom Center, and the new arena. And honestly that's most likely the best outcome.
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