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Work starts on store at Nichols Hills Plaza
By Brianna Bailey
Oklahoma City reporter. Contact: 405-278-2847, brianna.bailey@journalrecord.com, @briannabailey80.
Posted: 07:13 PM Friday, August 31, 2012
NICHOLS HILLS – Plans are moving ahead for a Chesapeake Energy-run grocery store at Nichols Hills Plaza, but it remains unclear when the new market might open.
Chesapeake Energy promised the city of Nichols Hills last year that a new grocery store would be open in Nichols Hills Plaza by fall 2012 after the long-running Crescent Market closed its doors there. In preparation, demolition work recently began on the now-vacant space that Crescent once inhabited at the Chesapeake-owned plaza.
Kelly Hurley, a building inspector for Nichols Hills, said a contractor for the new grocery store told him that formal plans and building permit applications should be submitted to the city in about six weeks.
Nichols Hills Mayor Peter Hoffman said the city is pleased Chesapeake has continued with its plans for the store. The company has been a good neighbor to the city, he said.
Chesapeake has invested money in numerous improvements at Nichols Hills Plaza over the past several months, including new landscaping, parking and security lighting, and is actively recruiting new tenants for empty storefronts there, Hoffman said. However, the city has not been told when the store might open.
“Chesapeake is continuing to develop the concept so that it will ultimately be the best possible store for Nichols Hills and the surrounding area,” Hoffman said.
Two to three Chesapeake employees hired to run the store work in an office in an upstairs corridor at the plaza, but declined to comment on an opening date. Jim Gipson, a spokesman for Chesapeake, said, there is no firm timeline.
Jay Black, owner of Nichols Hills Drug, which was once supposed to be relocated inside the new grocery store, said his drugstore is no longer included in Chesapeake’s plans. A soda fountain that had been in operation at Nichols Hills Drug since 1963 closed at Nichols Hills Plaza last year when the drugstore had to move to a new, smaller storefront in the plaza to accommodate construction plans.
The gourmet food retailer Crescent Market closed its doors at the end of October, leaving a vacant storefront that used to generate sales tax revenue for the small city, which only encompasses a few square miles.
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