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New chapter: Groups come together for renovation, bookstore in Brady Arts District
By: Molly M. Fleming The Journal Record March 9, 2016
TULSA – Three organizations are working to fill a gap in the Brady Arts District.
Brady Arts District Business Association President Bob Fleischman said the area near the BOK Center needs more retail. Tulsa Literary Coalition Executive Director Cindy Hulsey said the nonprofit organization’s leadership thought there was a lack of literary arts.
Hulsey said the George Kaiser Family Foundation wanted a bookstore in an empty building it owns on E. Archer Street, between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Detroit Avenue.
The 72,000-square foot building is undergoing a $30 million renovation into a retail center, with 14 second-floor apartments and 35 artist studio spaces.
The anchor retail tenant will be the literary coalition’s Magic City Books. The for-profit bookstore will operate as the endowment fund for the coalition. The nonprofit has raised $200,000 toward its $1 million goal to open the store.
“(The $1 million) will cover our startup costs as well as sustain us until the bookstore becomes profitable,” Hulsey said.
The 3,600-square-foot store will sell fiction and nonfiction adult titles, matching the group’s mission to work with adults and older teenagers. It will also have a cafe that sells coffee, tea, wine, beer and snacks.
“There’s really kind of a gap when it comes to adults and literary pursuit,” she said.
People can buy books, as well as discuss them during events. The organization is working with Booksmart Tulsa to host writer discussions.
Booksmart Tulsa founder Jeff Martin is the literary coalition’s board president.
“(The coalition) wants to develop plans to work with other organizations and offer a wide array of services to book groups already out in the community,” Hulsey said.
The bookstore’s announced neighbors are Glacier Chocolates and Holy Mountain Records, with others to fill the space as well.
Lilly Architects Principal Chris Lilly designed the renovation to the 1920s-era building. He used a 3-D scanner to look at the structure’s bones and see what was hiding behind the brick walls. The scanner gives more exact measurements for the facility’s size as well.
The building’s exterior is currently all white, with covered windows. Lilly’s plans call for stripping the exterior down to the brick and reopening the windows. Construction starts this month and the facility is expected to open in early 2017.
Lilly frequently works on old building renovations. He said he enjoys the work because there are not a lot of original downtown buildings remaining.
“(The buildings) were torn down for parking lots or new buildings,” he said. “To be able to play a part in the few buildings we have left is really gratifying work.”
Once Lilly’s work is complete and the building comes back to life, Fleischman said the new retail strip will help people make a day in the district.
“We’re going to have more daytime activities than we do right now,” he said.
Fleischman is co-owner of Chrysalis Salon & Spa in the district. He said the retail building will improve the livability of the neighborhood. He said it’s a continuation of more than $200 million invested in the last 15 years within the area by business owners.
“I’m excited about the concept,” he said. “It’s definitely a world-class operation that’s coming into the district.”
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