McDonalds coming Downtown

Started by fsujax, June 26, 2012, 08:23:00 AM

thelakelander

Quote from: duvaldude08 on June 26, 2012, 04:55:14 PM
What are the design standards for this particular corridor of downtown? Are they going to give them heck about the design,  like they are doing about that proposed parking garage? I dont know much about this stuff that is why Im asking lol

The property is just outside of downtown's borders (across the street) in a forgotten area that's literally a no-man's land.  They have the flexibility to do just about whatever they want, in terms of site design, as long as they don't exceed 60' in height.

The property is zoned Commercial Community/General-2 (CCG-2) which is described in Section 656.313 of the zoning code.

QuoteD. Minimum lot requirements (width and area). None, except as otherwise required for certain uses.

E. Maximum lot coverage by all buildings. None, except as otherwise required for certain uses.

F. Minimum yard requirements.

(i) Frontâ€"None.
(ii) Sideâ€"None,
(iii) Rearâ€"Ten feet.
(iv) Where the lot is adjacent to a residential district without an intervening street, a minimum yard of 25 feet shall be provided along private property lines adjoining the residential district. No improvements other than landscaping, visual screening or retention may be permitted in the required yard.

G. Maximum height of structures. Sixty feet.

"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

duvaldude08

So the developer said that he wants the project done "right" and its important for the city. We will see what "done right" means.. hummmmm  ;D

Quote

Downtown Family Dollar, McDonald’s could be completed by October
06/27/2012
by Karen Brune Mathis, Managing Editor

Developer J.J. Lamberson said Tuesday that pending permits, construction could be completed by October on the estimated $3.7 million Family Dollar and McDonald’s projects Downtown.

“The City has been working with us and we think we will have it permitted sometime in July,” said Lamberson, president of Twin Rivers Capital LLC and managing member of Market Street Retail LLC, which will own the property and lease to the two national retailers.

Lamberson is based in Charleston, S.C., and said his group is Family Dollar’s preferred developer in the Southeast.

Lamberson intends to buy the 1.6-acre site for the Family Dollar and McDonald’s projects at 233 E. State St. Warren Motors Inc. owns the property and operates a dealership there.

Warren Motors President Ellis Warren said Monday the dealership, which has operated at the site for 23 years, would move to Northwest Jacksonville.

Lamberson said he previously has bought other Warren property for Family Dollar development in Jacksonville.

Lamberson said he has developed 10 Family Dollar stores in the metropolitan Jacksonville area. The Family Dollar website, www.familydollar.com, shows 48 stores in Northeast Florida, including 43 in Duval County.

The Downtown location is north of State Street between Newnan and Market streets. Its northern border will be Orange Street.

Family Dollar was looking for a location in that area, Lamberson said.

“It started with them wanting to be in this general vicinity, but land is scarce and expensive,” Lamberson said. He said the Warren site “was one of the few spots we could find.”

“Mr. Warren was one of the people we contacted who was willing to sell,” he said.

Lamberson said McDonald’s was interested in a store on part of the site, which helps to defray costs.

Misty Skipper, a spokeswoman with the Dalton Agency for McDonald’s, said Monday the company expected to start construction by early fall and open before the end of the year.

The McDonald’s website lists 25 restaurants in Duval County.

Lamberson said he has been working on the deal for a year and a half. The time included securing the land, undertaking due diligence, addressing environmental concerns and designing an appropriate plan for two national tenants to locate on the site.

He said it has been challenging.

“It will be a high-profile site and the City cares about it because it is Downtown and they wanted it done right, and we wanted to meet everybody’s expectations,” Lamberson said.

Lamberson said he plans to start demolition on the site as soon as permits are issued and he buys the property.

Lamberson said his group will own the site. Family Dollar will lease the building and land that it will occupy on the west side of the site, while McDonald’s will build its store and lease the land from Lamberson on the east side.

A drive will cut through the site between the two stores and connect State and Orange streets.

The McDonald’s will be across State Street from Burger King.

Lamberson said his group met several times with regulatory reviewers. “Everyone at the City was helpful,” he said.

“It seemed like they went the extra mile to help us in the right direction so we had a shot to get it approved,” he said.

Lamberson said his group has developed all of the Family Dollar stores in Jacksonville in the past five years or so. He said one was just completed and construction is under way on another.

He estimates he has developed up to 60 Family Dollars in the Southeast.

Most are build-to-suits, meaning Lamberson builds the project to Family Dollar’s specifications and the company leases them. He said some have then been sold to private investors.

He said Family Dollar has been moving toward owning its stores, paying a fee for development.

Lamberson said he began Family Dollar projects in Jacksonville in 2005-06.

“The company is doing extremely well and they were doing well before the economic downturn, doing better during the economic downturn and they are expanding rapidly,” he said.

Family Dollar is based in Matthews, N.C. It operates 7,200 stores in 45 states.

According to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Family Dollar states that its strategy is to provide customers “with value and convenience continues to attract a wide range of income” brackets, ethnicity groups and life stages.”

“We serve the basic needs of customers primarily in the low- and middle-income brackets. Typically, our customer is a female head-of-household,” it said.

It said its core customer is a female head of household in her mid-40s making less than $40,000 a year.

As of Aug. 27, 2011, about 54 percent of its customers had an annual gross income of less than $40,000 and about 24 percent had an annual gross income of less than $20,000.

A Family Dollar store is typically between 7,500 and 9,500 square feet in size, averaging about 7,100 square feet of selling space. The State Street site plan shows a store about 9,000 square feet.

The Family Dollar SEC filing said its stores generally serve customers who live within 3-5 miles of the store.

About 63 percent of its stores were in strip malls, 35 percent in freestanding buildings and 2 percent were in downtown buildings.

“The relatively small size of a Family Dollar store allows us to select store locations that provide neighborhood convenience to our customers in each of these market areas,” it said.

The stores generally are open seven days a week and operate with the hours of 8 a.m. and 9 p.m.

Its merchandise focuses on core categories, such as health and beauty aids, packaged food and refrigerated products, home-cleaning supplies, housewares, stationery, seasonal goods, apparel and home fashions.

The majority of the products are priced at $10 or less, with about 22 percent priced at $1 or less. The average customer transaction was around $10 in the past fiscal year.

Company sales have been rising.

For the second quarter of fiscal 2012, the company said net income rose 10.7 percent to $136.4 million from $123.2 million the year before. The quarter ended Feb, 25.

Sales rose 8.6 percent to $2.46 billion from $2.26 billion. Comparable store sales, which are those open at least a year. Rose 4.5 percent.

During the first half of the fiscal year, the company opened 184 new stores and closed 36 stores.

“We are accelerating investments to become more relevant to a broader customer base. In the second half of fiscal 2012, we intend to further expand our assortment in key traffic-driving businesses and introduce new categories to capture a greater share of our customer’s

wallet,” said Howard Levine, chairman and CEO, in an SEC filing.

“As a result of these strategic sales-driving initiatives, we now expect that revenues will continue to accelerate throughout the rest of fiscal 2012.”


kmathis@baileypub.com

@MathisKb

356-2466

Jaguars 2.0

Seraphs

Just saying...  To the Family Dollar haters, I'd rather spend $4.19 in Family Dollar than 3.69 in Walmart.  Time is money, I'm no super, super fan of Family Dollar, but I despise the city within a city Walmarts.

Ocklawaha

Quote from: acme54321 on June 26, 2012, 10:37:40 AM
I can't wait for the Family Dollar.  Those modern steel buildings look just great, and they are so economical!


Actually, Family Dollar, unlike Dollar General, usually builds an attractive store and they tend to use a lot of brick. If it's a metal building, you can't tell. Dollar General stores do have that metal garden shed look about them. 

BackinJax05

Great! 2 more places for the bums to congregate and harass paying patrons.

duvaldude08

Quote from: BackinJax05 on June 29, 2012, 12:08:41 AM
Great! 2 more places for the bums to congregate and harass paying patrons.

Yeahhhh those scary homeless people just wont go away will they? How dare they ask us for money? Who do they thing they are  ::)
Jaguars 2.0

thelakelander

Family Dollar/McDonald's site plan

"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali

Charles Hunter

Would be nice if the Dollar store actually fronted one of the streets ...

darctones


Tacachale

Do you believe that when the blue jay or another bird sings and the body is trembling, that is a signal that people are coming or something important is about to happen?

ben says

For luxury travel agency & concierge services, reach out at jax2bcn@gmail.com - my blog about life in Barcelona can be found at www.lifeinbarcelona.com (under construction!)

Jaxson

Say what you will about McDonald's and the Food, Inc. atmosphere that it feeds, so to speak, but they are creating a presence in downtown that other businesses have thus far have been afraid or unwilling to do.  Let the marketplace decide if this McDonald's deserves to succeed or fail.
John Louis Meeks, Jr.

Tacachale

^I don't care about McDonalds being there, it's just a terrible site design. There are plenty of other businesses who have been successful downtown in downtown style buildings.
Do you believe that when the blue jay or another bird sings and the body is trembling, that is a signal that people are coming or something important is about to happen?

duvaldude08

Okay.. That looks a little... Why isnt anything facing state street? Yeah I hope that is altered before they break ground because that is just crazy.
Jaguars 2.0

thelakelander

There's nothing in COJ's zoning code to drive the site development pattern any other way.  This site officially falls between Springfield and downtown/DDRB's borders.  Unless the family dollar developer wants to move the buildings closer to the street at his own dime, don't expect any changes.
"A man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life." - Muhammad Ali