Showing posts with label goodyear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label goodyear. Show all posts

Sunday, May 26, 2013

New builder starts work in Surprise's Greer Ranch


Dallas-based homebuilder Gehan Homes is ready to start construction on scores of homes for its Hacienda at Greer Ranch community in Surprise.

Gehan Homes CEO Tim Gehan, who co-owns the company, said he wants to take advantage of a new growth cycle as Surprise’s master-planned communities begin building again, waking up from the recession’s dormant period. The Gehan Homes building plans extend beyond Surprise.

The builder is constructing homes in Bridges of Gilbert, Peoria’s Vistancia and Goodyear’s Palm Valley. Model homes should start going up in Vistancia in June or July, with building on all sites starting by the end of the year.

Read more: New builder starts work in Surprise's Greer Ranch

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Goodyear and Glendale are years behind in building proposed hotels, restaurants and shops that were to surround the multimillion-dollar stadiums in the Cactus League.

Three years after the training ballparks were built, fans are left with little more to do than walk to and from the parking lots.

Land that had been planned to house a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices became mired in foreclosures, bankruptcies and legal wrangling.

Leaders in both cities worry how they will pay off the complexes. Dwindling tourism-tax revenue collected by the Arizona Sports and Tourism Authority has meant a funding shortfall for stadium improvements.

Glendale and Goodyear are on the hook for $63 million and $43 million in stadium costs, respectively, that city leaders had expected would be paid by the tourism authority.

With a legal battle over development rights winding down, Goodyear Mayor Georgia Lord talks of circumstances beyond the city's control.

"It's a very emotional time," she said. "Some of those memories and heartaches are going to linger, but I think this is the time to finish it up, and we'll just get on with whatever next is going to happen with our stadium."

Glendale is also deflated over expectations surrounding its spring-training complex, Camelback Ranch Glendale. The city borrowed $200 million for the project. Sales taxes from surrounding amenities were expected to help pay for it.

"Camelback Ranch to me is the big drain," Glendale Mayor Elaine Scruggs said two months ago during discussions on how the city could restructure its debt.

But both cities are taking steps to jump-start construction. Goodyear recently settled a lawsuit, a move city leaders hope will pave the way for commercial development around its remote ballpark southeast of Estrella Parkway and Yuma Road. And land surrounding Glendale's ballpark, once tied up in foreclosure, is up for sale again. Much of the land surrounding the stadiums is on the market again or is expected to be soon.

Goodyear earlier this month approved paying $1.1 million to settle with a bank and landowner, a move that will soon put roughly 100 acres around its $123 million ballpark up for sale.

For Glendale, the lender that foreclosed on a huge chunk of land was the only bidder to buy it. A key 70-acre parcel next to the stadium was put on the block two months ago.

"We've had offers," said Mark Winkleman, chief operating officer of ML Manager LLC. "Nothing that we've accepted yet, but we hope to before too long."

A Main Street never built

Camelback Ranch, at Camelback Road and 107th Avenue, is surrounded by 166-acres that was to be called Main Street. Developers spent $120 million on land and zoning to build a sprawling, sports-themed office, shopping and resort complex. The land could support 2.8 million square feet of development.

But when the market crashed and developers defaulted on loans, ML Manager, successor to lender Mortgages Ltd., began foreclosure proceedings. ML Manager has control of roughly 86 acres near the ballpark, including a 70-acre site on the southwestern corner of 99th and Maryland avenues.

The city hopes the land will ultimately contain mixed-use development primarily focused on employment, residential, lodging and higher-end retail.

The complex is on land owned by Glendale, but the land is actually in Phoenix.

A broker offering the land has plans to approach a new ownership group of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who share Camelback Ranch with the Chicago White Sox. There are several groups of bidders vying for the Dodgers.

"There is a need out there today for amenities and housing for the teams," said Brent Moser, Cassidy Turley executive vice president.

The other option for the area is a limited-service hotel, Moser said. The developer has taken calls from those who want land to build higher-end hotels closer to Loop 101 and Westgate City Center, in time for the area to host the Super Bowl in 2015, Moser said.

Apartments would likely be the easiest to build on land near the stadium, but "I don't know if that's the highest and best use for this property long-term," Moser said.

The White Sox believe growth around the stadium is only a matter of time.

"Certainly, more stores, shops, restaurants and hotels benefit White Sox fans during their visits to spring training, but that scale of economic development benefits Glendale and the residents of the West Valley year-round as well," said Scott Reifert, team spokesman.

'No win here'

At Goodyear Ballpark, where the Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians train, attendance has been at the bottom of the Cactus League for two consecutive seasons.

Development plans around the stadium called for a hotel and convention center, restaurants and offices.

But legal battles between a bank, city and family landowners broke out over costs associated with streets, utilities and other work needed to develop land around the stadium.

When the disagreement threatened to delay construction of the ballpark, Goodyear took control of the loan and finished the job.

In June 2009, the bank sued, saying the city's action accelerated the due date on its loan to the family, and they defaulted in 2008. The suit was part of the bank's effort to foreclose on the land surrounding the stadium and south of Lower Buckeye Parkway.

The family filed a lawsuit against the city in January 2010, arguing the city received benefits it did not pay for.

The settlement agreement reached by the City Council earlier this month clears up all the issues related to the title of the land and its development rights.

The bank plans to market the property as soon as a bankruptcy court agrees to the settlement.

City officials say there has been development inquiries about the land, but it has been tied up in litigation. They want to put the issue behind them.

"Unfortunately, there is no win here in this situation," said Vice Mayor Joanne Osborne before approving the settlement.

by John Yantis - Mar. 26, 2012 09:32 PM The Republic | azcentral.com




Goodyear, Glendale eye vacant land near ballparks

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Dick's Sporting Goods Inc. has completed the purchase of a 60-acre site in Goodyear to build a 600,000-square-foot fulfillment and distribution center expected to employ about 300 workers beginning in early 2013.

The sale first was reported in local real-estate publication Business Real Estate Weekly of Arizona and was confirmed Friday by a real-estate broker involved in the deal.

Dick's, a national retail chain based outside Pittsburgh, reportedly paid about $5.8 million for the property, located inside a 1,600-acre office and light-industrial park along the Loop 303 freeway alignment, about 2 miles north of Interstate 10.

The business park is called PV303 and was developed in 2008 by SunCor Development Co.

The seller was a joint venture involving Scottsdale-based Sunbelt Holdings LLC and Dallas-based Rockpoint Group LLC.

Commercial-real-estate broker Jones Lang LaSalle of Phoenix brokered the deal.

Sunbelt and Rockpoint acquired the property as part of a $65 million portfolio of commercial-real-estate assets SunCor sold to the joint venture in 2010.

Construction on the $30 million distribution center is scheduled to begin before Jan. 1 and wrap by January 2013.

Dick's, a publicly held company listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol DKS, owns and operates more than 450 Dick's Sporting Goods stores in 42 states, according to the company's most recent financial-disclosure statement.

It also owns Golf Galaxy Inc., which operates about 80 golfing-equipment stores in 30 states.

Internet commerce outlets such as Amazon.com are driving a dramatic resurgence in demand for warehouse space in the Phoenix area, particularly in the West Valley.

Users of industrial real estate snapped up 1.6 million square feet of empty space in the third quarter, which marked the seventh consecutive quarter of rising demand, according to a recent report from commercial-real-estate firm Colliers International in Phoenix.

The Colliers report said industrial tenants have absorbed about 9.3 million square feet of vacant space during the past seven quarters.

The surge in demand is likely to continue, as large e-commerce providers continue to seek additional space for order-fulfillment and distribution centers to serve Arizona, California and other Western states.

Seattle-based Amazon.com announced plans in July to open a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution center at 800 N. 75th Ave. in Phoenix, its fourth such facility in the Phoenix area.

The company ultimately plans to expand its West Valley presence by another 2 million square feet, area brokers have said.

Several retailers also have opened or expanded regional distribution centers in the West Valley recently, including Gap.com and Macys.com.

Most fulfillment- and distribution-center jobs are relatively low-level positions involving unskilled labor.

A high percentage are seasonal, lasting only through the busy holiday shipping season from October through January.

Because of growth in the distribution-center sector, the vacancy rate among industrially zoned properties in Maricopa County has plummeted from nearly 18 percent in the first quarter of 2010 to 14.6 percent at the end of the third quarter this year, a recent Colliers International report said.

High demand also is driving new construction, according to Colliers' third-quarter analysis, with nearly 3.7 million square feet of warehouse and distribution-center space under development.

The industrial sector has not seen such a high level of activity since before the commercial-real-estate market crashed in 2008, brokers said.

In general, most e-commerce providers have chosen not to locate their West Coast distribution centers in California because of its much higher real-estate costs.

Analysts said many online and catalog retailers have settled on a two-pronged strategy, with order-fulfillment centers in metro Phoenix to serve Southern California and in Reno to serve Northern California.

by J. Craig Anderson The Arizona Republic Nov. 19, 2011 12:00 AM



Dick's Sporting Goods buys W. Valley warehouse

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Phoenix-based developer Westcor will begin construction of the Estrella Falls mall as early as 2012, and the long-awaited regional mall is expected to open in 2014, Goodyear officials said Wednesday.

Construction of the mall has been delayed three times. The Goodyear City Council approved the most recent delay in 2009, when Westcor said tenants were reluctant to commit to an opening date.

Westcor paid Goodyear about $1.3 million in plan-review and permit fees in exchange for an extension into 2014. The company would have had to pay Goodyear $1.25 million this year if the project were stalled any longer.


"Westcor has confirmed for us that Estrella Falls mall will be here in Goodyear in 2014," said John Fischbach, Goodyear city manager. "We're expecting that construction will get started next year."

Macerich, Westcor's California-based parent company, announced the move last week.

"We will, in fact, be developing in that Arizona marketplace because the time will be right for us to do it," Macerich said in a statement.

"By the end of this year, we will pull the trigger on our Goodyear development."

The mall is planned northwest of McDowell Road and Bullard Avenue.

Previous plans included tenants such as Dillard's, Macy's and Harkins Theatres.

Westcor officials declined to comment on tenant commitments.

Karen Maurer, a Westcor representative, said the company would not disclose retail companies until nearly a year before the project's completion.

Estrella Falls mall is projected to have about 1.2 million square feet of retail space.

by Eddi Trevizo The Arizona Republic Feb. 17, 2011 12:00 AM





Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Phoenix-based developer Westcor will begin construction of the Estrella Falls mall as early as 2012, and the long-awaited regional mall is expected to open in 2014, Goodyear officials said Wednesday.

Construction of the mall has been delayed three times. The Goodyear City Council approved the most recent delay in 2009, when Westcor said tenants were reluctant to commit to an opening date.

Westcor paid Goodyear about $1.3 million in plan-review and permit fees in exchange for an extension into 2014. The company would have had to pay Goodyear $1.25 million this year if the project were stalled any longer.


"Westcor has confirmed for us that Estrella Falls mall will be here in Goodyear in 2014," said John Fischbach, Goodyear city manager. "We're expecting that construction will get started next year."

Macerich, Westcor's California-based parent company, announced the move last week.

"We will, in fact, be developing in that Arizona marketplace because the time will be right for us to do it," Macerich said in a statement.

"By the end of this year, we will pull the trigger on our Goodyear development."

The mall is planned northwest of McDowell Road and Bullard Avenue.

Previous plans included tenants such as Dillard's, Macy's and Harkins Theatres.

Westcor officials declined to comment on tenant commitments.

Karen Maurer, a Westcor representative, said the company would not disclose retail companies until nearly a year before the project's completion.

Estrella Falls mall is projected to have about 1.2 million square feet of retail space.

by Eddi Trevizo The Arizona Republic Feb. 17, 2011 12:00 AM





Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Phoenix-based developer Westcor will begin construction of the Estrella Falls mall as early as 2012, and the long-awaited regional mall is expected to open in 2014, Goodyear officials said Wednesday.

Construction of the mall has been delayed three times. The Goodyear City Council approved the most recent delay in 2009, when Westcor said tenants were reluctant to commit to an opening date.

Westcor paid Goodyear about $1.3 million in plan-review and permit fees in exchange for an extension into 2014. The company would have had to pay Goodyear $1.25 million this year if the project were stalled any longer.


"Westcor has confirmed for us that Estrella Falls mall will be here in Goodyear in 2014," said John Fischbach, Goodyear city manager. "We're expecting that construction will get started next year."

Macerich, Westcor's California-based parent company, announced the move last week.

"We will, in fact, be developing in that Arizona marketplace because the time will be right for us to do it," Macerich said in a statement.

"By the end of this year, we will pull the trigger on our Goodyear development."

The mall is planned northwest of McDowell Road and Bullard Avenue.

Previous plans included tenants such as Dillard's, Macy's and Harkins Theatres.

Westcor officials declined to comment on tenant commitments.

Karen Maurer, a Westcor representative, said the company would not disclose retail companies until nearly a year before the project's completion.

Estrella Falls mall is projected to have about 1.2 million square feet of retail space.

by Eddi Trevizo The Arizona Republic Feb. 17, 2011 12:00 AM





Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Phoenix-based developer Westcor will begin construction of the Estrella Falls mall as early as 2012, and the long-awaited regional mall is expected to open in 2014, Goodyear officials said Wednesday.

Construction of the mall has been delayed three times. The Goodyear City Council approved the most recent delay in 2009, when Westcor said tenants were reluctant to commit to an opening date.

Westcor paid Goodyear about $1.3 million in plan-review and permit fees in exchange for an extension into 2014. The company would have had to pay Goodyear $1.25 million this year if the project were stalled any longer.


"Westcor has confirmed for us that Estrella Falls mall will be here in Goodyear in 2014," said John Fischbach, Goodyear city manager. "We're expecting that construction will get started next year."

Macerich, Westcor's California-based parent company, announced the move last week.

"We will, in fact, be developing in that Arizona marketplace because the time will be right for us to do it," Macerich said in a statement.

"By the end of this year, we will pull the trigger on our Goodyear development."

The mall is planned northwest of McDowell Road and Bullard Avenue.

Previous plans included tenants such as Dillard's, Macy's and Harkins Theatres.

Westcor officials declined to comment on tenant commitments.

Karen Maurer, a Westcor representative, said the company would not disclose retail companies until nearly a year before the project's completion.

Estrella Falls mall is projected to have about 1.2 million square feet of retail space.

by Eddi Trevizo The Arizona Republic Feb. 17, 2011 12:00 AM





Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Goodyear targets 2014 for mall

Phoenix-based developer Westcor will begin construction of the Estrella Falls mall as early as 2012, and the long-awaited regional mall is expected to open in 2014, Goodyear officials said Wednesday.

Construction of the mall has been delayed three times. The Goodyear City Council approved the most recent delay in 2009, when Westcor said tenants were reluctant to commit to an opening date.

Westcor paid Goodyear about $1.3 million in plan-review and permit fees in exchange for an extension into 2014. The company would have had to pay Goodyear $1.25 million this year if the project were stalled any longer.


"Westcor has confirmed for us that Estrella Falls mall will be here in Goodyear in 2014," said John Fischbach, Goodyear city manager. "We're expecting that construction will get started next year."

Macerich, Westcor's California-based parent company, announced the move last week.

"We will, in fact, be developing in that Arizona marketplace because the time will be right for us to do it," Macerich said in a statement.

"By the end of this year, we will pull the trigger on our Goodyear development."

The mall is planned northwest of McDowell Road and Bullard Avenue.

Previous plans included tenants such as Dillard's, Macy's and Harkins Theatres.

Westcor officials declined to comment on tenant commitments.

Karen Maurer, a Westcor representative, said the company would not disclose retail companies until nearly a year before the project's completion.

Estrella Falls mall is projected to have about 1.2 million square feet of retail space.

by Eddi Trevizo The Arizona Republic Feb. 17, 2011 12:00 AM





Goodyear targets 2014 for mall