Although the Edmond Planning commission has denied a request from Sooner Investments to build another Utica Square style shopping center near Hafer Park (this would be another in the area near 15th and Bryant........a 3rd development.....2 are already there, 1 completed- Spring Creek Plaza, and 1 nearly completed- Spring Creek Village).
I really think Edmond City residents are holding progress back by denying this new proposal. Guess it shows you again how backwards Oklahomans are.
Now, what OKC needs to do is contact Sooner Investments and offer them similar land on the Oklahoma River to build their proposed concept on!! lol! Boy, don't you love that thinking?
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"Down But Not Out: Despite planning commission’s rejection, Edmond council keeps hope alive for Sooner Investment’s the Bridges at Spring Creek
By Pamela Grady
pgrady@okcbusiness.com
Sooner Investment partner Brad Goodwin remains optimistic about his plans to build The Bridges at Spring Creek near 15th and Bryant.
That optimism comes even after the Edmond City Planning Commission declined 5-0 Sooner Investments’ request to rezone the property where the development would be built. The Edmond City Council tabled last week the company’s proposal for a tenant-driven development until its June 27 city council meeting.
Residents voiced concerns about the potential retail development during the council’s meeting last week, indicating they believed more commercial activity in the area could cause traffic problems, create detention or drainage, and compromise tree preservation and Hafer Park.
Sooner Investment plans to build The Bridges at Spring Creek as an infill project modeled after Utica Square in Tulsa. The idea is to situate the upscale lifestyle shopping center on 32 acres totaling 200,000 square feet with one anchor, three junior anchors and small shops ranging from 1,400 to 10,000 square feet.
The shopping center would have an architectural style of a brick facade similar to Terryl Zerby’s Spring Creek Plaza and Charles Ballenger’s Spring Creek Village. The project also would have a minimum of 14 percent landscaping with plans to build a pedestrian and a vehicular bridge. Both would resemble the bridges in Bricktown.
Randel Shadid, representative for Sooner Investment said rezoning is required for a department store tenant that is interested in anchoring the center and currently in talks with the property development company.
While he declined to reveal the name of the potential tenant, he said, the department store is comparable to Dillards and would require for its operations a two-story building totaling 75,000 square feet at the center of the proposed development.
In addition, Shadid said the developer has talked to a bookstore and a financial institution about possibly agreeing to the location should the development be approved.
During his presentation at the city council meeting last week, Shadid several times stressed the importance of the developer wanting to attract upscale retailers similar to the ones found at Utica Square and how that could be a further benefit for the 15th and Bryant area, rather than a detriment.
Goodwin said, “We’d have a nice anchor that would generate and cause for continuous clientele to frequent this location which in turn would help Spring Creek Plaza.
“For example, people who would go to the mall at Quail Springs might come here instead and shop in this area versus going to the mall, because the anchor tenant would be able to satisfy some of their other needs that currently can’t be met.”
When asked if it’s more difficult to get rezoning in Edmond compared to other parts of the metro area, Goodwin replied, “Edmond is a reasonable city to deal with. They have requirements like any other city. They may vary. One ordinance may be a little stiffer than the other one. But overall I think they’re quite fair. If we didn’t [think so], we wouldn’t continue to do business there.”
He added he was still optimistic the development ultimately would be approved by the city council. And, if things go as planned, he said, Sooner’s development company will break ground by the end of the year and need only nine months to complete the project.
If The Bridges at Spring Creek gets the nod from city leaders, Paris Projects will be the development project manager and Little & Associates out of Charlotte, N. C., will head up architectural efforts.
Carter & Burgess has been selected for the engineering and Sooner Investment Realty will manage the property."
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