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Real Estate Quarterly: The Art
of The Deal
Corporate location revives Gordonsville's
downtown
by Donna C. Gregory
Virginia Business
December 2005 THE DEAL: The creation of a corporate campus for PBM
Products. The renovation of six historic structures and
construction of a new building revitalized downtown Gordonsville.
The multimillion dollar investment by PBM, a manufacturer
and distributor of private-label infant formula and other
pharmaceutical products, attracted other investors. By
the late 1990s the Main Street of this old railroad town
was dotted with empty, neglected buildings. Then Paul
B. Manning, president and CEO of PBM Products, decided
to make Gordonsville the home for his new business, sparking
downtown's rebirth. He discovered the town, located in
the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near Charlottesville,
while visiting friends in the area.
KEY PLAYERS: Manning, Gordonsville's mayor and town
council, local development consultant Bruce Gupton, his
wife, Jacqueline, and son, Garrick.
HOW THE
DEAL UNFOLDED: Gord-onsville's town leaders
struggled for years to revive their ailing downtown.
With a dwindling tax base, they hoped private investors
would take notice of Gordonsville's potential with its
convenient location off Interstate 64 - two hours southwest
of Washington, D.C. - and its historic antebellum homes
and hotels. Manning had moved to the area in 1996 and
was looking for a home for his newest venture, PBM Products.
He purchased the Linney House on Main Street for $99,000
- a price that would be hard to find in a metropolitan
area - and restored the circa 1842, two-story home as
PBM's headquarters.
As the private consumer products company grew from three to 100 employees,
Manning purchased several more buildings, all north of the railroad tracks
that slice through the center of downtown. He converted each one into offices
for PBM's employees, taking care to preserve the properties' historic integrity.
For instance, the company's marketing department is housed in what used to
be the former Old Oaken Bucket Hotel. Town leaders were thrilled. "Without
what he did, the other things wouldn't have happened," says Gordonsville
Mayor Bob Coiner.
About the same time, local development consultant Bruce Gupton and his family
began buying properties south of the railroad tracks, which they renovated
and leased to small retailers. That side of town now includes a French restaurant,
art galleries, gift shops and other specialty shops. "We both simultaneously
had the same vision," says Gupton. "We met early on, and I think
we both have this vision of a working town that is creating jobs and is a nice
place to live."
Town leaders worked with Manning and
the Gupton family, helping them realize their mutual
dream of a downtown revival. "In a small community, they
are diligent about what they want done, but they're also interested in accommodating," says
Manning. "It's provided a great partnership between our company and
the community."
ECONOMIC
SIGNIFICANCE: Property
values along Main Street have tripled over the last
decade, and vacant properties
are harder to find. "I've slowed down, because other
people are buying and fixing up their properties," says
Manning. "Residential is now developing too, because
Main Street is redeveloped." Manning recently purchased
Gordon House, a small assisted-living facility on Main
Street that had fallen into disrepair and was financially
troubled. He plans to renovate and expand the facility,
adding 15 rooms and building 12 cottages and 23 apartments
for independent living. "[The project] means the
facility can stay open…that most of the people
employed there can still live here in town, because they
still have jobs," says Marilyn Stinke, general manager
of the Village at Gordon House. The project is just one
example of how Manning has played a significant role
in the town's comeback, says Coiner. "His work has
contributed to our overall tax base, because it's made
the town more viable. They [Manning and Gupton] just
really saved the town."
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