Rollins Road Gateway Update – Oct 2013

Well, earth-moving has been well underway for about a month now, with much of the demolition completed. If you haven’t been through the intersection lately, the PNC Bank in the SE corner is gone, as well as the 2-unit strip in the NE which held Payless Shoes.

BTW, because there are some folks who never got to see the project plans, or misunderstood the renderings of the finished project (as shown below):
this project is NOT building a railroad overpass over Rollins Road! Both Rt. 83 AND Rollins Road will be lowered in the vicinity of the intersection, and Rollins Road will go UNDER the railroad tracks!

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The official Rollins Road Gateway Project website has, once it got going, stayed fairly current. Especially helpful is the look at planned work for each up-coming week. You can subscribe to be notified by email when there are updates:
http://www.rollinsroadgateway.com/

RRG_ProjectSite

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The lead contractor for this project, F.H. Paschen, installed two web-connected cameras with which to monitor construction progress; the cameras update every 30 minutes. A increasingly-useful elapsed-time function from each vantage point provides an interesting way of looking at the progress of construction.
http://fhpaschen.workzonecam.com/fhpaschen

WorkCam

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Gene Carey of Round Lake Area News (RLAN) has undertaken the challenge to provide ongoing updates of the Rollins Road gateway contruction and progress. Based on what we’ve seen so far, he and his staff are doing a tremendous job in providing near-daily updates, most with video. The RLAN website has a new page entitled “Rollins Road Gateway Updates“, which is a great way to find out the latest doings, from a resident’s perspective.
http://www.roundlakeareanews.com/rollins-road-gateway-project-updates/

RLAN-RRG

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If you are on Facebook, note that RLAN has started a companion page titled “Rollins Road Gateway Updates“. “Like” that Page to stay updated if you live on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Rollins-Road-Gateway-Updates/161386870734007

RRGU_FB

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With all that coverage, we won’t go into too much detail about the Project itself, but we’ll certainly look at the impact it has on the community and the local economy… especially as it nears completion and starts funneling vehicles through Round Lake Beach at capacity once again!

Posted in Construction / Maintenance, Rollins Road Gateway | 1 Comment

2013 Chili Supper

One of our favorite annual village events is coming up in just a week!

2013 Chili

The Round Lake Area B.E.S.T. Coalition (Bringing Everyone’s Strengths Together) and the Round Lake Area Exchange Club host their 10th Annual Chili Supper on Monday, Oct. 7th.

The event takes place at the Round Lake Beach Cultural & Civic Center, 2007 Civic Center Way, Round Lake Beach. The event is scheduled from 5 to 7:30 p.m.

Each menu item — chili with all the fixings, hot dogs, cookies, and beverages — costs $1. Pay only for items you like; there also will be free student entertainment and raffle prizes.

Suggested admission of $1.00; donations will also be taken at the door. This event serves as a major fundraiser for B.E.S.T. to use in the community for various projects throughout the year, so please attend and bring your appetite (and your family)!

Posted in Community | Leave a comment

Not the first time

Those of you who’ve been residents here for a while probably know this, but our soon-to-depart Round Lake Beach Kmart was originally elsewhere in town.

Here’s a shot of it in its original location (click on it for full size).

Our Round Lake Beach Kmart in its original location.

Our Round Lake Beach Kmart in its original location.

Any ideas as to what’s there now?

Posted in Business | 1 Comment

A Wasted Pop-up Opportunity

This one has everyone in our little group agitated to one degree or another.

By now you’ve seen this building at the northeast corner of Rt. 83 and Rollins Road, a lonely little 2-unit strip site which housed a retailer of window treatments, a shoe store, a cell phone store… things like that.

Northeast corner of Rollins Road and Rt. 83. Vacant for several months prior to start of the Rollins Road Gateway construction project.

Northeast corner of Rollins Road and Rt. 83.
Vacant but useable for several months prior to start of the Rollins Road Gateway construction project.

In fact, thousands of commuters see it every day. Hard to find a more visible retail site in RLB, and hard to overlook the fact that it has sat empty for months.

You know, despite the access issues it has (only one driveway, very close to our nastiest intersection), it is also one of the closest “strip” format buildings to the road, from which driver may clearly see if the businesses are open for the day or closed, clearly read the signage, quickly assess the close-by parking, etc. Most of the factors a driver would need to know if making a quick decision to pull in.

If you drive down a “Main Street” somewhere, you would likewise have all the storefronts much closer to you, to where you could gauge such factors for yourself, as you naturally driver slower and safer… part of what makes “Streets” such enjoyable multi-user environments. (Just try determining which stores are open, or having issues,  in a typical shopping center which is set back from the road a hundred feet or more!)

So, our gripe: Why, in the name of the Almighty Dollar, has this building which up until this week…
–  still had utilities to the site and electricity on (lights were on inside 24/7),
– has had normal unhindered access from Rollins from the time it was vacated,
– has had all of its customer parking available,
– didn’t have any construction (or detours) nearby which would inconvenience potential customers,
– has had unprecedented visibility (from the road) compared to our other retail locations,
– and is advertising to everyone driving by that Round Lake Beach has yet ANOTHER retail vacancy…

WHY has it sat vacant all this time?

The obvious answer also completely misses the point of the question: “Well, the Rollins Road Gateway Project required the occupants to relocate because the building will be torn down.”

We’ll buy that as an answer for “Why did the long-term lease-holders move out of the building”? That does nothing however for why this very useable building has sat for so many months contributing nothing to either the local economy or the reputation of the village.

We’ve mentioned the practice of “Business Incubators” and “Buy Local” programs before, both in this blog and on our Facebook page. What a wonderful opportunity this represented for the RLB Village Elders and the Chamber of Commerce to make use of the “economic hit” of the construction project and try to turn lemons into lemonade by making the space available as “Pop UP” Business Sites!

“A “pop-up”, in case you haven’t heard, is typically a restaurant, retail outlet, or art production that occupies an unused building or outdoor space temporarily. Pop-ups can last a couple of days or up to several months.

Pop-ups can be spin-offs of established businesses and brands, or the efforts of people working together for the first time, sometimes to test the water for larger-scale ambitions.”

Pop Up Business for Dummies” puts it this way:

Pop Up Business for Dummies

“To truly qualify as a Pop Up, a project should:

– Use an empty or under-used space.
– Be time-limited, with clear start and end dates.
– Not aim for permanence.
– Be designed for demountability and ease of removal.
– Have the potential to transfer to a different site.
– Be in some way exclusive, distinct or special.”

According to this 13-minute Michigan Radio segment:

It used to be, when you would think of a “pop-up business,” you would pretty much think of those Halloween stores that pop-up each September, or the fireworks tents each July, or the Christmas tree and wreath lots that appear each Thanksgiving.

But the “pop-up” concept is growing, and temporary businesses or exhibitions are gaining traction in cities and towns where the Great Recession left many empty storefronts.

And the pop-up works on so many levels, both for the entrepreneur and the business districts and cities who can see new life being breathed into buildings and areas that have been way too quiet.”

We do seasonally have all three of the Pop Ups mentioned above, with Halloween signage already up on the former Sears Hardware building…

… but NEVER anything else. Why is that?

Even a simple weekend public “Flea-Market” or Swap Meet is a type of pop-up “Bazaar” or market space, which is a given fact of life almost anywhere else in the world.

Flea Market: A very common "Pop Up" business space.

Flea Market: A very common “Pop Up” business space.

Well, it’s rather difficult to get short-term lease/rental agreements from shopping center owners who much prefer to keep units open for potential long-term business franchisees. As we’d rather not have to keep mentioning, if we had a “traditional” business district (AKA: “Downtown”), there would be many shops and storefronts, most (if not all) privately owned, with owners willing to negotiate for shorter-term occupancy which, from THEIR perspective, makes their properties look more marketable than “empties”.

What do we hope to see in a Pop-Up space? Ummm… what kind of stuff are we missing now? What do you have to drive out of town for? We’re certainly not going to follow a formula, or ratios of types of offerings. Part of the beauty of this model is the high degree of responsiveness to local & seasonal needs it can provide. What might make perfect sense in June might be absurd in January.

Christmas shopping madness is just around the corner, and we have many empty storefronts, and beginning business-owners trying to get started. Howzabout something like this:

“If given the chance to hang your own shingle on Main Street with the first few months rent-free [or at least seriously reduced]during the busiest shopping season, would it be enough incentive to start your own business?

Project Pop-Up jump-starts … economy by encouraging entrepreneurship and bringing life to vacant properties, which in turn revitalizes our downtowns.”

The Rollins Gateway Project gave us the circumstances to actually try something not rooted in 1970’s thinking (“If it’s not covered by Zoning or the Ordinances, it doesn’t exist”)!

Missed another one! We have GOT to become more willing to take chances, to be creative, and to do things at least a LITTLE differently than the last several decades.

Additional Resources/Reading:

http://smallbusiness.foxbusiness.com/sbc/2012/04/02/how-to-start-pop-up-shop/
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jim-gibbons/pop-up-shops_b_2832768.html
http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/business/2013/06/19/pop-up-ventures-offer-a-test-run.html
http://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog/detroits-amazing-pop-up-anarchy-2/
http://www.wickedlocal.com/brookline/news/x273443430/Pop-up-store-to-offer-rotating-businesses-in-Brookline-Village
http://smallbusiness.aol.com/2010/12/13/why-pop-up-stores-are-popping-up-everywhere/
http://www.morningjournal.com/general-news/20121216/lorain-pop-up-shops-continue-business-downtown-during-holiday-season-with-videos

Posted in Business, Economics, Rollins Road Gateway | Leave a comment

Voice from the Past – 1

"RLB is not well planned."

It’s been 20+ years. Enough time has gone by.  Was she right, or was she wrong? What do you think?

Chicago Tribune article: Summer Resort Develops a New Identity

Posted in Economics, Planning | Leave a comment

Movies In The Park

In our compact little village (only 5 sq. miles or so in size), we should easily find those spaces and places where we come together as community and neighbors. We should

Not quite as easy to find “The Commons” when they weren’t provided for during the  “planning” and development phases. No village square or plaza, no “promenade”, no real, physical Civic “Center”, etc. Without the traditional building form of a “block” (of homes), we miss out on Block Parties as well.

So what can we do in the meantime to have neighborhood places to meet-and-greet, to have fun, that are family friendly, and that are easy to walk/cycle to?

Hmmmm….

Round Rock

Round Rock, Texas.

Well, what other “public” spaces do we have in which to do things? The Round Lake Area Park District (RLAPD) is a FABULOUS organization, with outstanding programs and facilities. However, not much has been done the individual parks themselves; they are quite lacking AS PARKS.

Admittedly, the Park District didn’t design or plan most of the smaller parks throughout the RL area… it inherited them (and their problems) when it was created back in 1974. Many of them remain nothing more than grassy lots with playsets, and a token bench and trashcan, sometimes a picnic table. Several have an ancient chain-link fence circling the perimeter, presumably for safety (“Think of the Children!”) often hampering easy access. The RLAPD doesn’t schedule a lot of events in the neighborhood parks, and  community members don’t feel empowered (or responsible) to do anything.

While we’re looking for ways to get residents together, to give ourselves “Place”, is there maybe some way we could “activate” these parks to become valued community resources, to get residents used to using them?

Parklane

Parklane Park in Portland OR. The park is open until MIDNIGHT every night!

Thee’s obviously not much budget to work with these days. To get an event, or a series of events, in our parks, they’d need to be “Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper“. Something which doesn’t require a major change (or ANY change!) to permanent infrastructure, something which could be set-up and removed quickly, something safe and accessible for everyone, and certainly at as low a cost as possible.

An assembly of villagers getting ready to watch a movie in Braselton GA.

An assembly of villagers getting ready to watch a movie in Braselton GA.

For the best “draw” of people, it should be something suitable to all ages, be “Family Friendly”, have enough “cultural commonality ” that it doesn’t come across as “exclusive” to just one type of people. Since part of what builds the essential “social fabric” of a community is the regular meeting with others (and the bonds which form), there should be opportunity to just chat and mingle for at least PART of the event.

Free Movie Nights in Stanley Park. Donations are accepted to benefit a different local charity each week.

Free Movie Nights in Stanley Park. Donations are accepted to benefit a different local charity each week.

If we’re hoping for even a modest amount of people, we’ll have to deal with one of the most common ammenties (which is one of the most-lacking in Round Lake Beach) in spaces where people congregate: public seating. What could possibly be done to provide convenient, inexpensive, short-term seating for dozens of people (maybe a hundred?) who live walkably-close to these otherwise empty parks? How does Ravinia do it?

Rancho Sahuarita, where residents bring their own folding chairs to "Movies Under The Stars".

Rancho Sahuarita, where residents bring their own folding chairs to “Movies Under The Stars”.

OK, so maybe people bring their own chairs and/or blankets, some grub (maybe pack a picnic basket), bug-spray for sure, and head on out to a specific local park. They can socialize, the kids can run around and burn-off some energy, the old folks can sit and “kvetch“, the local entrepreneurs with “Food Trucks” who are desperately seeking gatherings of people (which we rarely have in RLB) to service (feed) can be parked safely around the perimeter… all we need now is something for these people to DO!

"Hey, is that a 30' inflatable screen with a portable sound system?"

“Hey, is that a 30′ inflatable screen with a portable sound system?”


Got it! 
How about we have some “Movies in the Park”? 

Is that too crazy? Should we wait until someone else tries such a wacky idea first?

2013 marks the 19th year for the free "Movies in the Park" event at Elmington Park!

2013 marks the 19th year for the free “Movies in the Park” event at Elmington Park!

We think this is something that ALL the Round Lake area villages can do .
We also think it is the kind of thing we NEED to do.

So, what next? Some research and some action… by ALL of us!

– Which parks are good candidates? Which neighborhoods are “underserved” by stores, churches, and other “places” to where something like this would be really appreciated?
– Talk-up the idea with some neighbors and see who’s agreeable!
Visit the RLAPD Facebook Page and either send them a “Message” requesting Movies in the Park, or leave a “helpful suggestion”, even if you have to slide it in sideways with another (hopefully-kind-of-related) topic! Every one of you!
– Contact your Park District representatives. (Ultimately, getting a Park Commissioner’s support would be quite helpful!) A good place to start is by contacting Jeff Lurquin, the Parks and Building Services Director. Call 847-546-8558, extension 244 or email jlurquin@rlapd.org

EDITED TO ADD:

Inflatable Screen with  sound system used to show an outdoor movie at the Round Lake Beach Cultural and Civic Center during BeachFest 2012.

Inflatable Screen with sound system used to show an outdoor movie at the Round Lake Beach Cultural and Civic Center during BeachFest 2012.

Logos

Posted in Bicycling, Community, Parks, Walkability | Leave a comment

Food for your Homestead

As the economy continues to stagnate, the “trickle-down” of Federal funds trickles even less due to the “Sequester“, and the State of Illinois falls further behind in payments. Belts are tightened another notch, and the local and regional outlooks for the next 5-10 years aren’t very promising.

Job Line

In the face of all this, while we’re still trying to recover from the collapse of the housing market, what can we do to better take care of ourselves, our neighbors, and our community… and maybe stretch our dollars? A logical first step is to reduce our dependence on systems and circumstances… especially if they make us vulnerable or harm us when they fail. There are many “systems” we could consider: transportation, energy, banking/finance, etc.

How about our Food Supply? We all need to eat, and food costs are a significant part of every household’s budget. How can we take back at least SOME  control of what we eat, where it’s grown, how it’s processed? Having extra stored food on hand is like having an insurance policy, making sure that you can feed your family despite job loss or an accident which knocks-out the “breadwinner” for a while. For the long-term, nothing beats knowing how to grow it yourself.

Conveniently enough, we have an answer! Here are two opportunities for area residents to make themselves more self-reliant, and have a bit of fun in the process!

1. The Prairie Crossing Learning Farm in Grayslake is announcing the fall semester of its “Suburban Homesteading Adult Workshop Series” (listed under “Farm Events“), with five topics designed to help you put part of your property to work (doing something besides growing weeds) and handle your bounty!

All workshops are on Saturday mornings from 9am until noon:

Aug 24: Preserving the Harvest (“As summer advances it’s easy to get ripe, luscious fruit and truly fresh vegetables. You may even have grown your own. What to do with the abundance? Preserve it for the winter by canning, freezing, or drying.”)

Canned Goodies

Sep 14: Growing and Using Grains (“Few gardeners grow any grains.  While most backyards lack the space needed for growing a year’s supply, you might be surprised to find out how much you can grow in a relatively small space!”)

Oct 5: Small-scale Composting (“Feed the soil and the soil will feed the plants – and people.” How to do that? Adding quality compost to our gardens is the best thing we can do for our soil and for the plants that grow in it.”)

Oct 26: Backyard Chickens (Backyard chickens are become increasingly popular in both urban and suburban areas! We will discuss the basics of backyard chicken keeping – including chicken breeds and behavior, where and how to obtain your hens (or chicks!), how to feed and house your backyard flock, local ordinances, and other things to consider before you get your own hens.)

Nov 16: Home-made Yogurt & Granola (You’ll see several methods for making yogurt – both with pots you’re likely to have at home, and with different types of yogurt makers – and discuss the pro’s and con’s of each.  You will witness the first part of the process, which is “the work” and you will get to see the end result.)

2. The 2013 Mid-America Homesteading Conference in Joliet IL on Sat Aug 31.

The schedule includes topics on canning, beekeeping, soap-making, gardening, compost, “companion planting”, and more. Though you’ll also see some topics dealing with keeping larger livestock for food and fibre, every learning session time-slot will have one or two topics perfectly suited for the “suburban homesteader” on a typical in-city lot.
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Don’t forget about the year-round learning opportunities here as well!

The Lake County Beekeepers Association is one of the friendliest groups of folks you’ll ever meet, ready to help you learn about this unique “Micro-Livestock” which is not only essential to the health of our environment (and a big part of the economy), but also has taken some “hits” lately and could use a helping hand.

The College of Lake County has also recently expanded its offerings, both in formal courses, and periodic workshops as well. Their Horticulture Department offers:

CLC-Foodie

Many of the older folks in the Round Lake area villages still remember how to garden, how to “put up” their harvest, and tend the bunnies and the chickens. Their skills haven’t been used (or seen) much because our area was developed expecting a bright glorious “World of Tomorrow” where food would be the least of our problems. We know how THAT worked out!

As you drive around the neighborhoods, you’ll see more and more gardens, and even several discrete hutches leaning against homes and garages. If you want to learn, there’s hardly a better way than speaking directly to the folks doing it every day.

Posted in Economics, Local Food Production | Leave a comment

Roundabout: Half-time Update

With a scheduled re-opening date of Thursday August 15th, the project to convert the 4-way “STOP” intersection of Monaville and Cedar Lake Roads in about half-way through the alloted project time. Several of us have been checking out the progress on the weekends and taking a couple of photos along the way.

Let’s see what’s been done so far…

On June 23rd we had the intersection as we knew it… just without the pavement! The ground-up pavement was being held on the still-paved sections as “fill material”.

On June 30th, after scraping-away even more, it was time to start on the new infrastructure. You can see sewer/drain-pipe sections and some cofferdams prestaged along Cedar Lake Road, looking north from the south side of the intersection.

By the next weekend July 6th, most of the underground utility work looked to be about finished.
Just some small-scale installs remaining. We noticed on this visit that some of the utility poles had been replaced, with at least a couple in new positions to help “open up” the intersection.
(Think of the corners of a square moving out to become corners of an octogon!)

View of the same, looking to the south from the NW corner of the intersection.
Actually “corner” is no longer correct because the “rounding” has started to occur.

“Rounding-off the edges” in progress. Looking to the NW corner…

Which brings us to just a few days ago. On Saturday July 13th, all the old ground-up pavement which was presumably being held as “back-fill” material was being scooped-up and hauled away. So as not to get squooshed by earth-moving equipment, we came back on Sunday and took these remaining photos.

Looking north into the center of the intersection. You can see the inital layout-markers for the dividers which will guide all traffic into the counter-clockwise direction. Once they are laid-out, the forms for the curbing can be erected.

Looking south onto Cedar Lake Road from the NW corner. The earthen “fill” for the Roundabout is quite visible, and finally gives the intersection the look we’ve been expecting.

Looking across the Roundabout to the east down Monaville Road from the NW corner. You can see just how closely the roadway eats-in to the property there on the NE corner!

So there you have it!

Would it have been just a little quicker (and much less inconvenient to area drivers and residents) to just install traffic signals at that intersection? Probably. The intersection does get a LOT more traffic now since the WalMart relocated, and too many drivers have shown that they just can’t reliably count to “Four” (the skill needed to safely navigate a 4-way intersection with “STOP” signs).

Do keep in mind though that since Lake County DOT owns those roads for maintenance,  it is making use of this project to incorporate now what would have been road-closing work anyway… including the repaving of Monaville Road between Cedar Lake Road and the railroad tracks.

Oh, a reminder that this will be a SINGLE-lane Roundabout, which is much less of a challenge for drivers new to the concept than the big-city multi-lane traffic circles. As long as LCDOT keeps the “island” mowed to keep the sight-lines open… we’ll do fine with this, and even wonder in a couple of years why we were ever worried about it!

Additional information:
Lake County Roundabouts” [.pdf] – Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning
WTH Is a Roundabout?” – Lake County Division of Transportation

Posted in Construction / Maintenance, Planning | Leave a comment

Rollins Road Gateway Update – July 2013

Rollins Road Gateway Update:

We contacted the Lake County Division of Transportation earlier in the week re: getting ANY kind of news or updates regarding the Rollins Road Gateway project, especially since construction is publicized to begin in July of 2013 (Hey, that’s NOW)! Based on the reply…

– Lake County received very competitive bids for the project and has recently awarded a contract to the qualified low bidder, F.H.Paschn, S.H.Nielsen & Assoc., LLC. LCDOT will meet with the winning bidder next week for a pre-construction conference with the contractor.

– To help with public outreach, Lake County will be hosting a public “Open House” for those interested in the project to attend sometime in the next few weeks (date to be finalized). This will be a great opportunity to learn more about the specifics of the project and to meet the professionals that will be managing the construction phase.

– The construction webpage for the project will be activated next week, and will be an important tool for keeping area residents, businesses and motorists updated on the project and the status of construction activity. Info should be reflected on the project FB page as well.

–  The project is expected to begin “very soon”.

Posted in Rollins Road Gateway | Leave a comment

Thoughts on the old Applebee’s location

… and an update. It wasn’t just the RLB Applebee’s. The Franchise holder for all Applebee’s in Illinois went bankrupt a few months ago. There was a sale of assets, during which potential new owners would have a chance to make offers on any or all of the IL locations. The most profitable ones were snapped up quickly by another large Midwestern Applebee’s franchise holder; the rest were shuttered.
___________________________________________________

The recent Facebook post we made about the RLB Applebee’s closing generated our most views yet (just shy of 3,000!), and many comments. Also a question:

“Is there any plan to take a ‘survey’ of the RLB residents to find out what THEY think should take the place of Applebee’s?”

We started to answer this as a “Reply” to the FB post, but it got long enough to qualify as a Blog Post… so here we are.

[Caveat #1: Remember as we comment that none of our group are village officials.]
[Caveat #2: It’s going to sound like we’re slamming the idea of shopping centers, strip-malls, and franchises. That’s not our intent, we’re focusing on the misapplication of such entities. Some of them are great community partners, and go out of their way to ensure they work with whatever municipality they’re in, and provide fundraisers, “Cause Awareness”, donate food, provide meeting space, etc.]
[Caveat #3: We’re not worshipping the idea of a traditional small-town downtown as the ultimate fix-for-what-ails-us, but we do mention that model a lot because, in this part of the world, a “downtown” is what historically has come to serve as the marketplace for a village / town / city.]

We’re going to say “NO survey!“, based on recent and previous discussions w/village staff. The #1 rule (which goes very far in explaining why things are the way they are) is:
“We can’t tell people what to do with their property… unless they’re homeowners”.

Here’s the short answer, after which we get wordy: From the village’s perspective, there already is a plan in place: someone else owns the property, and it is their best interest to fill the vacancy quickly. Our zoning states what kind of businesses are allowed in each area. Businesses look for new locations with compatible zoning. The property manager shops for these businesses which will be a good fit for their properties. Ka-POW! We have a new Franchise! Simple, right?

This is a trade-off of having a shopping center… heavy loss of local control. Not only is all the real estate owned by “outsiders”, but a dozen or more businesses at a time as well constrained to play by “Franchise Rules”, and sending franchise fees out of our area instead of reinvesting them locally. Heck, we even lose the street space (where life happens) and the traffic and transit connections which would have been there. In a community setting, certain influences play a much larger role in deciding what to do with a property, like what types of businesses are already in adjacent buildings and storefronts.

Opening Soon

Now if the Rollins Crossing shopping center acreage was more conventional in build, a multiple-user, multi-story, nicely-dense, shared-parking format (like, oh, say a traditional small-town downtown, or it at least had STREETS), there would be a dozen or two different property owners, each with different degrees of attachment to the community, but each literally invested in the success of their endeavor or their business tenants. You might go to church with a building’s owner, or have them as a neighbor; they would be part of the community, be more accessible, and understand local issues.

Copyright Kevin Steele ; “Portraits of Queen West”

As opposed to corporate property owners, there’d be at least a little more willingness to entertain specific requests for types of shops or meet local needs, things like:
– something specifically different than all the same-across-the-country strip-mall offerings, a place with character, or soul, something unique to the village
– setting up a temporary art gallery while a retail space is empty (just the window space, or the entire ground floor)
– sidewalk sales
– place for a Farmer’s Market
– short-term rent option (as a “Business Incubator” practice) to help give a new local business an affordable start with facility and exposure, while shopping for a long-term tenant
– allowing local non-profit groups some short-term space to display and fund-raise…
– maybe even allowing two complimentary businesses like a coffee shop and a desert maker to share a storefront which individually they might not be able to afford.
– local museum

We’re CANNOT get ANY of these in a shopping center location (and only with a lot of work in a strip-mall), unless we (group of individuals or the village itself) buy back some of the property ourselves! The Corporate property owners (guaranteed to not be from around here)  are looking for guaranteed profitability, and loathe taking these icky, local risks… even if the local Franchisee is in favor.  For instance, the management of the local Buffalo Wild Wings would LOVE to expand to include outdoor seating, but as renters… “what’s built is built”.

BWW Patio

Buffalo Wild Wings patio and outdoor seating area. (Not ours, unfortunately…)

Sales of individual buildings to individual LOCAL owners can bring in a lot of life, and a lot of change. There could be an actual, effective “marketplace” and a new type of player at the table in the economic life of the village besides strip malls and shopping centers. Go anywhere in the world and you’ll find downtowns, public markets, bazaars… SOME kind of marketplace for each municipality, ’cause that’s what we humans DO! There is an intrinsic preferred “human scale” of size we prefer for the places in which we live and gather. Use-based zoning does not support that, but for many reasons is what gets built!

– When’s the last time you cut through an alley between buildings to get to the entrance of the dance club in the basement under the bakery?
– Sat outside and enjoyed a coffee with some friends at one of our sidewalk cafes?
– Window-shopped?
– Get drawn inside an eatery by the fabulous odors wafting out the door?
– Saw the storefronts of a whole side of the street decorated for the RLHS High School Homecoming?
– Enjoyed the local street musicians?

Enjoying the street musicians

[Photo: Dennis Proud]

We have virtually none of that.

MUCH tougher for us to do. These mono-block properties are zoned for certain uses, and (on behalf of the property owners), the property manager seeks appropriate tenants. Since it is a shopping center, that’s the “flavor” they’re looking for, serving customers who are driving to the location. (They’ll serve pedestrians and cyclists too… if they can make it there alive.)

The owner, manager, and whoever the renter (retailer) will be all want a profitable arrangement; a nationally-recognized franchise is usually the best fit because, frankly, that’s what all those acres are designed for! The village administration is also happy because they’re getting property and sales taxes. A vacant property, whether from a business outgrowing its site or failing, is still a vacant property.

If the village surveyed us as to what we wanted at the former Applebee’s location, and we asked for something which differed from the intended uses allowed by zoning, the Village Elders are put in a tough place. In trying to give us what we want, they’d be effectively “changing the rules” during the game, which the franchisees and property owners would not take kindly to at all. They’re trying to do business and make profit thanks to the very stability provided by large-scale property ownership and clear-cut zoning as provided by the village.

Now you want to change it? What else are you going to ask us to change? How many more times? Change is costly! Maybe we shouldn’t invest in RLB any more…”

All of this is an outgrowth of, decades ago, not having a plan for village growth or even just obtaining and holding on to some land for when proper planning could occur. Since we didn’t have a established plan for potential property owners and investors to consider and work with, they effectively ended up telling US what each property would be used for. The end result is what we have now. (This applies to the mish-mash of subdivisions as well!)

It’s nice to think about what could go into the vacant shopping center property… as a first small step towards redirecting the village towards what it could have been all along. However, unless some private investors lay down a LARGE chunk of change and purchase the property, it probably won’t start with the former Applebee’s location.

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