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Commercial Real Estate:
Art of the Deal
Watkins Centre
New project expected to create jobs that will keep
Chesterfield commuters at home
Virginia Business
December
2006
THE DEAL: Development of an 800-acre lifestyle center
at the intersection of Route 288 and U.S. 60 (Midlothian
Turnpike) in western Chesterfield County. The project
will combine retail, office and light industrial. Construction
is scheduled to start during the first quarter of 2007.
When built out, Watkins Centre could be the county's
version of Innsbrook Corporate Center, a 700-acre office/business
park in Henrico County that's one of the region's most
popular business locations. The county has paid all rezoning
costs associated with Watkins Centre, because it's expected
to generate $11 million in additional tax revenues. The
1.3 million-square-foot retail portion of the centre
known as Westchester Commons could include up to 13 big-box
retailers. Best Buy and Target are sought-after tenants.
Plans for Watkins Centre also include a Main Street component
with small, boutique-style shops. Westchester's developer
also is recruiting Consolidated Theatres to locate at
the project.
KEY PLAYERS: The retail portion is a joint venture of
Metropolitan Partnership, Ltd. of Reston and the Zaremba
Group of Cleveland, Ohio. Other players include Watkins
Land LLC, primary owner of the property, headed by state
Sen. John Watkins, R-Powhatan (about 520 acres of the
property is controlled by Watkins' family); the Chesterfield
Board of Supervisors, planning commission and planning
department.
HOW THE
DEAL UNFOLDED: Years
before Route 288 was extended to connect Chesterfield
and Henrico counties, county leaders planned for an
office park at its interchange with Midlothian Turnpike. "Given the availability
of vacant land, it was a logical location for that," says
Faith McClintik, development manager for Meadowville
Park and former assistant director of economic development. "It
is very much one of the key gateways to Chesterfield
County." After a lengthy zoning process, county
supervisors finally gave the project their blessing earlier
this year.
CHALLENGES: Rezoning of the properties owned by Watkins
Land and other smaller owners took about nine months.
At issue was transportation - how and where roads would
be built and who would pay for them - and the scale of
retail at Westchester. Roads will be funded jointly by
the developer, and the creation of a county community
development authority. The CDA will allocate a portion
of the tax revenue generated by the retail to pay down
debt that will be issued by the authority. Midlothian
Planning Commissioner Dan Gecker and former Supervisor
Ed Barber both expressed concern that Westchester would
hurt business at nearby Chesterfield Towne Center, five
miles east on Midlothian Turnpike. But in the end, the
promise of potentially thousands of new jobs and millions
in additional tax revenues won out. County leaders ultimately
approved the zoning last February with Barber casting
the lone dissenting vote.
ECONOMIC
SIGNIFICANCE: If all
goes as planned, Chesterfield finally gets a major,
mixed-use corporate center. "This
project puts Chesterfield on better footing with Henrico
in terms of shopping and office park development. In
other words, it will allow Chesterfield to be in a more
competitive position," says Cary M. Euwer, Jr.,
president and CEO of Metropolitan Partnership. Retail
at Watkins Centre is expected to support the creation
of a 2 million-square-foot office park, which would provide
jobs for county residents who currently commute to downtown
Richmond and Henrico for work. Village Bank has already
announced its intention to relocate its headquarters
there. Will Davis, director of Chesterfield's Department
of Economic Development, sums up the project this way: "It
will allow people living in that area to also work in
that area with a lot of amenities."
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