UPDATE: UNC is buying University Square and Granville Towers.
Anyone want to guess what this is about?
Representatives from UNC-Chapel Hill and the Town of Chapel Hill will hold a joint news conference at 1 p.m. today to announce details about a major real estate acquisition. The event will be held at the Chapel Hill Town Hall.
The news will have "significant positive implications" for the future of the downtown Chapel Hill business district, UNC officials said this morning.
Speakers will be UNC Chancellor James Moeser, Chapel Hill Mayor Kevin Foy and UNC Board of Trustees Chair Roger Perry.
- newsobserver.com: UNC, Chapel Hill mayor schedule announcement, 6/13/08
I got nothin'.
Issues:
Comments
My theories
I am just guessing here...
- UNC sells the storefronts/offices it owns on the 100-block of E. Franklin Street, to return them to local and state tax rolls.
- UNC buys a municipal parking lot to build offices or a parking deck.
- UNC sells the 440 W. Franklin building to the Town.
- UNC buys the old town hall building that currently houses the IFC homeless shelter and soup kitchen, and does something more shopper-friendly with the space.
- UNC sells Carolina Inn to a private party.
- UNC buys old Post Office building???
Could this be a tit-for-tat on UNC's long-term loan of land on Homestead Road for the shelter that was announced last month?McCorkle Place
Granville Towers & University Square
All of my guesses were wrong. Shock.
I just learned (via Twitter!) that UNC is buying Granville Towers and University Square. Will they refurbish it or redevelop?
Here's more
Not many answers in this quick report filed by Jesse James Deconto of the CH news/N&O:
I can't wait to see how the local papers investigate and analyze this deal. Oh wait.
Doesn't this now make these properties exempt from taxes
If the two together are worth $45 M, that must have been a big property tax bill for someone to pay. How does this purchase help revitalize the downtown?
John Rees
Good question
Yeah, I'm going to have to hear a lot more about his before I buy that it's helping the town. In fact, it feels more like UNC is eating our downtown.
Will there be new development at University Square? Will it continue to be housing & retail? How will it interface with the redevelopment of Lot 5 across the street? And of course: how will the UNC make up for the lost tax revenue? In 2007, the owners (US GT LLC) paid $868,279.23 to Chapel Hill and Orange County.
This is just the kind of back-room deal that the Chancellor and Mayor seem to think constitute healthy town-gown realtions. I don't get that.
$4 million question
more to come
We're going to see even more acquisitions of this sort by the University in the next few years as UNC gears up for unprecendented enrollment growth (as much as 25 percent over the next 10-12 years).
yup
Granville Towers and University Square. It'll stay on the tax rolls. Film at 11.
What looks like a large redevelopment, including parking, is in a very early stage with UNC and the town promising wide community input on what goes there.
kmr
Thanks
You're welcome
Just trying to earn my 'A.'
The big question here for me is not so much the Franklin side — UNC is promising to retain and enhance commercial frontage on Franklin Street — but Cameron Ave. If a major parking facility goes on the lot (it's 12 acres BTW), there would almost certainly have to be some circulation involving Cameron. That's going to have a very significant impact on an area that is already serious flux.
Anyone remember when you could cut through the GTowers lot from Cameron to Franklin? We have a long conversation ahead of us.
Test of Joint News Release
The text of the Joint News Release, which should answer many of the questions raised here, can be seen at http://uncnews.unc.edu/. Just scroll down to Latest News.
Linda Convissor
UNC PR
The permanent link to the press release Linda mentions is here. It sayeth:
jim (above) wins
y'all thought Carolina North was the end?
just for fun...move HWA closer to downtown.
you know, for retail redevelopment ..blahblah...
Granville has already Grandfathered the highrise potential.
Sounds like it's a good deal
Tectonic shift?
The vagueness of announced plans for the site may be obscuring a fairly substantial shift in what Franklin Street will feel like in the future. Talk about moving stores closer to the street is, it seems to me, something of a red herring in light of what the history of Granville-plus-Plaza has been to the campus if not the town.
I think of all the student residents of Granville Towers -- a large number who straddle Town and Gown spheres of activity and influence. Will they keep their crypto-dorm-but-independent life? If not, where will they all go?
And I think of the Plaza, which until fairly recently had provided both students and town residents with an interesting and useful set of stores -- quick photo finishing, hair dressing, quick-mart store, midnight food, ice cream, a BLT, tux rental for the proms, eye glasses, etc. But who among us town residents has not been caught by the tight parking and the Parking Lot Enforcers, one way or another? -- And now with spots dedicated to the upscale, exclusive boutique stores, it's even worse.
I used to frequent several of the more egalitarian concerns there and made a point of chatting with the owners as, one by one, they were forced out in favor of the upscale places now there. Their stories were pretty much the same, and the pressure to leave was acute -- not only did rents skyrocket, parking was squeezed away from non-preferred tenants. And I remember a published interview with Mrs. Kenan about the changes there and how they might affect students (esp. Granville residents). If I'm not mistaken, her response was something like "I really don't care about the students."
The press release says that this sale to the University follows Frank Kenan's wishes and loyalty to UNC, but I can't help wondering which part of the University that loyalty targets. Much as I want to see downtown revitalized -- and that will require better parking (I'm heartbroken to see the Courtyard being slowly murdered on that issue) -- I worry on behalf of the students as well as the town about just what will be there five years from now.
I concur on the small shops getting squeezed
I never bother to stop in university square anymore, so I am not sure what shops, or restaurants are there. The last time I was there, I found the marking of parking spots so ambiguous, I was concerned that I’d get towed away even *if* I was actually patronizing a business there.
John Rees
My thoughts
My thoughts on the deal, at my new blog location (breaksthenews.blogspot.com):
http://breaksthenews.blogspot.com/2008/06/thoughts-on-uncu-squaregranville-towers.html
Redevelop the Towers to be more pedestrian friendly
Personally, I think the Towers and Square, seriously cut into the downtown's pedestrian friendliness as it does not front directly onto Franklin St. With the parking lot and the empty gas station across the street, they cut off the pedestrian areas on either side from each other. I really hope they demolish the current set up and make it better partner to the rest of downtown.
-- www.timobrienphotos.com