I think the Housley Brothers store between the Courtyard and the demo site would be most important to acquire to build a consistent south face to the property. Also a small piece on the east end owned by View Point Holdings. The Gonzales family (Fire Place Club Inc.) has the Milagros property and I doubt would sell unless they just have to. A couple out of LA owns the IHOP property. I would guess it was probably a 1031 exchange and would create a huge tax consequence if they sell (just speculating).
I'm certain we can find higher and better use in this area. Perhaps not within the next 3 years, but surely within the next 10. When I said "Now's the perfect time" specifically I meant now's the perfect time to buy given how hard this whole thing is going to hit restaurants. Might as well bring all the land together now while it's still relatively cost effective.
IHOP is not exactly local.
I don't know much about Milagros. If it's a place worth keeping, then it's a place worth keeping and I don't imagine they'll struggle to bounce back after this is all over, especially with as much as we love Tex-Mex in Oklahoma + the general lack of Tex-Mex options in the immediate area. I might mention that I live 5 blocks away and I think I've been one time in 10-11 years and generally I don't hear much about the place. I've always just kind of assumed the place is on the later stages of its life cycle, but maybe it benefits greatly from the three hotels in their backyard.
Doesn't sound like they're very good, way more 1-star reviews (that detail why they only gave it 1 star, as opposed to the 5-star reviews that just say "Big margs, great salsa, delicious food, go there") than any decent restaurant should have.
https://www.yelp.com/biz/casa-de-los...t_by=date_desc
Lived two miles away from Milagros for nearly two years, worked in one of the offices buildings on NW Expressway for over four, and never went there either lol
I think we sometimes (often) make the mistake in OKC of thinking every new development has to be HUGE and require the assembly of lots of land. Wipe away existing structures...think grand thoughts... a la Chisholm Creek, OAK, University North Park, but also that failed development north of Quail Springs, etc. Some of that has its place, sure, but it's also possible to take just this 3 acres of land that already exists and do some kind of nice, mid-rise mixed use building. I don't even think it needs retail...we're about to have a glut of retail. Let's fill in some space and add to the density.
You realize, I say "let's" and "we" as if I, or anybody on this board actually owns the land. But I'm tired of thinking about COVID and poisoned by all of those posts over there and it's nice to dream about development again...
To be sure, I'm decidedly in the camp of your opening statement. That being said, IMO, thoroughfares do better with more contiguous development, and if we're serious about the Streetcar passing right through here, it would be great to see everything on these corners maximized.
Just a comment, not much really to do with Horn Seed, but I just remembered when the Classen Circle was there and Big Beef BBQ was right there, used to love eating lunch there.
Ate there 3 times. First time they served me enchiladas that were still frozen in the middle. I waited a few months and went with co-workers that LOVED it (for some reason). The chips were stale and the meal was mediocre. Waited a year and tried a third time. Ordered a shrimp dish. Worst food I've ever had. Needless to say I won't ever be back.
I won't support local business with this type of quality.
Completely gone now:
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^
It used to be Housley Brothers furniture but is now for lease.
Chick-fil-A has filed plans to build on this property.
Prepare for madness at that intersection
Wonder if they'll sell the excess stuff in the back or just have a gigantic parking lot.
Disappointed. That's a very high-profile piece of land. I would have hoped for something more substantive for that piece of property than a fast food restaurant,
boo!
If I had to guess, Chick-fil-A is just going on the pad site fronting NWX. Everything else is still in play. Chick-fil-A is in the chicken business, not the real estate business. They have no need for all of the property. They may not even be buying the land. Tons of fast food restaurants just lease land and build improvements. When the lease is over, the landlord keeps the improvements and the restaurant's hands are clean of the real estate.
seems silly to do that, might as well split the property and sell the land for another hotel back there.
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