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HOME: NOVEMBER 30, 2007: NEWS
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More Trouble on Second Street

BY RICHARD WHITTAKER

Members of the first wave of retail tenants in the 2nd Street District were nicknamed pioneers. Now some are quitting frontier life, replaced by a second rush of stores. Hot on the heels of DJ culture store Gomi terminating its lease after a dispute about estimated utility bills (see "Second Street Snafu Clarification," Nov. 23), Sage Salon moved back to its original location on 42nd Street over the weekend. Property managers Urban Partners said Ducati motorbike dealership Moto Austin is negotiating an "exit strategy" from its lease, while management at Octane boutique confirmed the store will close and relocate to Dallas in the new year. Speaking confidentially, other tenants are concerned that there's no interest in keeping them in business and that the lack of parking in the area makes life as a retailer virtually impossible. One shop owner said, rather than matters improving, the Thanksgiving holiday and Black Friday were actually the worst weekend since opening.

Speaking for Urban Partners, leasing agent Frank Seely stressed that some firms are thriving. Milk + Honey day spa is expanding to take more than half of the premises formerly occupied by shoe store Lucky Soles. Incoming tenants include Málaga Tapas & Bar, which is relocating from Fourth Street, and several other leases are being negotiated with local, national, and start-up retailers and restaurants. Speaking for district landlords AMLI Austin Retail, development manager Craig Brockman said, "Every vacant space in the district is being negotiated right now," and he expects the area to be completely leased out by early next year.

There is already one big new tenant: Skiwear store St. Bernard Sports opened Nov. 16 and will hold a grand-opening party Nov. 29. However, the high-end activewear store is a major change from the stated intention of Urban Partners. Company President Robert Bagwell said the survival of retail in the district depends upon a critical mass of tenants and doorways and that Urban Partners wants a large number of local vendors and small chains, rather than a handful of large retailers. While the average district retail tenant only rents 1,200 to 2,200 square feet, St. Bernard takes up 8,550 square feet on the north side of AMLI on Second, a vertical mixed-use residential/retail development between Guadalupe and San Antonio – shown on the original plans as broken up for multiple tenants.


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COMMENTS
5
 
guest Nov 29, 2007 - 09:56 am
Parking! When the owners and or operators of these parking challenged businesses park their own vehicles in the few spaces available for hours on end, should we listen when they cry? I am referring to the curb parking just in front of their cute little whatsit shops.


Special Interest Avenue Parking Shocker Nov 29, 2007 - 09:31 pm
There should no street parking on 2nd Street between between Colorado and Lavaca period.

Those business owners chose to there knowing beforehand about the parking.

Those businesses should have their employees and customers park in the AMLI or City Hall garage.

With the money your Council gives the Downtown Alliance to enhance this area, more trees, park benches and disabled access public restrooms equipped with showers be in place of those parking space.

It's only right, that Austin's homeless have the right use public property without the fear of Wynn's Downtown Gestapos chasing ordinary austinites away from his heaven for Special Interest.



I'm with Shocker! guest Nov 30, 2007 - 10:28 am
SHOCKER FOR MAYOR!


guest Nov 30, 2007 - 02:14 pm
SHOCKER!! wish I'd said that.


guest Dec 01, 2007 - 11:34 am
Most people I know wouldn't touch the Warehouse District with a barge pole, and I, who used to frequent the area at least twice a week, include myself with them. I agree with the poster below who stated that the businesses who moved there should have known about the parking situation. It's not like they chose their location in Austin circa 1986, when there was nothing in that area except an emapanada shop.




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Keywords
for this story
2nd Street District
Gomi
Sage Salon
Urban Partners
Moto Austin
Octane
Frank Seely
AMLI Austin Retail
Craig Brockman

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